PRESS STATEMENT

24 September 2009

BURMA

A week after releasing a new report; On the Edge of Survival: The Continuing Rat Infestation and Food Crisis in Chin State, Burma, Chin Human Rights Organisation (CHRO) Executive Director Salai Bawi Lian Mang is in London briefing British Parliamentarians. On 23 September, Salai Bawi Lian Mang met with Shadow Foreign Minister Keith Simpson MP and the Chairman of the Conservative Party Human Rights Commission, Tony Baldry MP. He also met Burma Campaign UK, and was interviewed on Premier Christian Radio. Today, Salai Bawi Lian Mang will be meeting officials at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department for International Development, and will also brief Baroness Cox, Chief Executive of the Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART) who has visited Burma’s borderlands many times. Salai Bawi Lian Mang is in London on a two-day visit facilitated by Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW).

For further information or an interview please contact Theresa Malinowska, Press Officer at Christian Solidarity Worldwide on 00 44 (0) 20 8329 0045 / 00 44 (0) 78 2332 9663, email theresamalinowska@csw.org.uk or visit www.csw.org.uk.

CSW is a human rights organisation which specialises in religious freedom, works on behalf of those persecuted for their Christian beliefs and promotes religious liberty for all.

Chin Human Rights Organization

2 Montavista Avenue, Nepean, Ontario K2J 2L3, Canada

Tel: +1.613.843.9484

www.chro.ca

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Victor Biak Lian Za Uk Ling

Canada Canada

Mobile: +1 613.796.9514 Mobile: +1 807.577.2120

Tel: +1 613.422.0590 Tel: +1 807.577.4903

E-mail: vblian@chro.ca E-mail: zauk@chro.ca

Van Biak Thang

United Kingdom

Tel: +44 772.839.3517

E-mail: vanbiak@gmail.com

UPDATED CHRO REPORT ON FOOD CRISIS IN CHIN STATE, BURMA

SHOWS FOOD SHORTAGES AND HUNGER CONTINUES

17 September 2009

Ottawa, Canada: The Chin Human Rights Organization (CHRO) released an updated report on the continuing food crisis in Chin State, Burma. The new report, entitled, On the Edge of Survival: The Continuing Rat Infestation and Food Crisis in Chin State, Burma, finds that food shortages have spread to seven townships in Chin State as well as parts of Sagaing Division. Up to 82 percent of the farmland has been destroyed in certain affected regions of Chin State, and large numbers of people are struggling with severe malnutrition, disease, and death. Several thousand Chin have fled their villages to search for food elsewhere.

“People have nothing to eat,” said Salai Bawi Lian Mang, Executive Director of CHRO. “They are hungry, malnourished, and in a state of desperation. Meanwhile, the military regime has turned this natural disaster into a manmade disaster by ignoring and exacerbating the situation in western Burma.”

While the immediate cause of food insecurities in Chin State is rooted in the cyclical flowering and dying of bamboo in the area, the continuation of severe human rights violations and repressive economic policies by Burma’s military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), has aggravated conditions in the affected areas. SPDC has denied repeated requests for food aid, even as it reports a rice surplus and exports increasing amounts of rice to markets abroad. Practices of forced labor, extortion, and confiscations of land and property continue within the affected areas, effectively undermining people’s livelihoods and food security.

While many Chin villagers are completely dependent on foreign food aid for their survival, local authorities have issued a ban on foreign aid, threatening reprisals against anyone who accepts foreign aid.

“The Chin people have suffered decades of abuse and repression at the hands of the military regime. Denying emergency food aid and obstructing relief efforts is just one attack against the ethnic Chin people of Burma,” said Salai Bawi Lian Mang.

While international aid organizations have started to take notice of the situation, the response remains limited and problematic in certain aspects. Relief is largely provided through “work-for-food” and “work-for-cash” programs within communities where forced labor is high and people have little time or energy left to work their own farms. Civil society groups have organized relief teams to reach hard-hit and difficult to access areas. These teams are responsible for delivering over 30,000 kilograms of rice to 54 villages in six townships from May to July 2009 alone, but their continued operation requires sustained support from the international community. Despite the best efforts of relief groups working both inside and along the border, many remote villages severely affected by the food crisis have not yet received any aid or assistance. For now, these communities are living on the edge of survival.

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The Chin Human Rights Organization (CHRO) is non-governmental, not for profit organization legally registered in Canada with offices in Canada, the United States, Thailand, and India. CHRO works to protect and promote the rights of the Chin people of Burma. For more information, please visit CHRO on the web at www.chro.ca

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