Families Unplanned in Kachin IDP Camps

Families Unplanned in Kachin IDP Camps

Holding her eight-month-old baby close to her chest, young mother Roi San chased after her other child, a toddler running in front of her. The toddler ran barefoot across the ground.
Married at 16, the 20-year-old had two miscarriages before giving birth to her two children. Roi San is one of the 708 people living in Zilun Baptist camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Kachin State capital Myitkyina.
The Irrawaddy visited three camps in Kachin State’s Waingmaw and Myitkyina townships last month —St. Joseph Mai Na, Zilun and Madaing—and met with displaced families fleeing conflict between the Myanmar Army and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) since 2011. The ongoing conflict has displaced more than 100,000 persons in Kachin State to date.
Women and children are a common sight in IDP camps as men leave to work while wives and daughters tend to take care of their children, younger siblings and household chores during the day. At St. Joseph Mai Na Camp, sheltering 1,472 people, nearly 200 are under five years old.
Many mothers who talked to The Irrawaddy said they were terrified of becoming pregnant again. Reproductive issues are seldom addressed as a priority in IDP camps, but poor family planning adds hardship to the desperate situation of the families living there, as they struggle to arrange childcare and feed extra mouths.
According to Htoi Gender and Development Foundation, which has been working with women in the region—both in IDP camps and local villages—advocating for reproductive rights and awareness of gender issues since 2011, women living in displaced persons camps in particular need birth pacing and family planning. In these contexts, parents are often unable to provide enough nutrition to their children while struggling to earn money for everyday expenses and rely on donors to live.
“Population increase is not a problem. The problem is that an increasing number of children do not get access to the food, nutrition, and education that they deserve,” Nang Pu, founder of the Kachin State Women’s Network and the director of Htoi, told The Irrawaddy.
In an email to The Irrawaddy on Wednesday, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) said it had already reached out to 10,800 women and girls living both in camps and in host communities by conducting awareness sessions on family planning, as well as other sexual and reproductive health and rights, including different types of contraceptives, pregnancy-related complications and gender-based violence.
Besides the UNFPA’s provision of contraceptive choices and family planning options, women and girls living in IDP camps where there are government health workers can request contraceptive pills and injections from midwives and nurses. A health worker from Madaing camp in Waingmaw Township confirmed this to The Irrawaddy during the visit to the camp.
According to the UNFPA, 17.9 percent of women in Kachin State have an unmet need for contraceptives. Although they would like to access them, they cannot due to barriers such as cost, supply, logistics and cultural norms. Countrywide, this figure is slightly lower: 16 percent of women in Myanmar want contraceptives, but have been unable to obtain them.
“Women and girls need to know the choices that are available to them. But they also need to be empowered to make the choices they want for their health and their future,” Janet Jackson, UNFPA’s representative for Myanmar, told The Irrawaddy in an email.
A key component of the gender equality work is, UNFPA said, to engage men and boys in family and gender-related issues that range from family planning and contraceptives to gender equality and domestic violence. It said that conducting such sessions on Sundays could increase male participation in discussion as families often go to the session together after visiting church.
However, including men is still a difficulty as they are often absent or think family planning does not concern them, and they tend to leave the discussions, Htoi’s Nang Pu said.
“Even when women know what they should do for birth control, they can’t always convince their husbands,” Nang Pu said, referring to experiences that mothers had shared with her.
Cultural and religious concerns in the community are also hindering her efforts to raise awareness, Nang Pu said, explaining that community leaders often misunderstand her intentions and think she is discouraging population growth among the ethnic community.
Vulnerable populations are most affected by war—women, girls, and the elderly—she said. “Women are the ones who always suffer most but are also the most resilient.”
Acknowledging the strength of women—often forgotten and overlooked at the tables of peace talks—The Irrawaddy highlights the struggles of six displaced mothers.Living at the Zai Awng camp on the China-Myanmar border since 2011, 22-year-old mother of three Pawk Seng Pang had to flee from the camp in January this year after Myanmar Army troops attacked the KIA’s Lai Hpawng outpost. The young mother gave birth to the girl she is holding in the picture on the road during her flight from Zai Awng to Mai Na camp in Waingmaw Township.

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The young mother discovered in 2015 that her husband had infected her with HIV. Even though she took contraceptives to prevent pregnancy and, thereby, the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, she stopped taking them due to the heavy bleeding that was a side effect of contraceptives. She became pregnant with her youngest daughter. She is now hoping that her six-month-old is not HIV positive. The couple has been taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) to treat the HIV infection.
When asked what makes her resilient to so many hardships, she looked at her daughter and responded, “My children are the reason I’m still alive.”
Originally from Nam San Yang village close to the KIA stronghold of Laiza, 27-year-old mother of two Htusan has been displaced to Mai Na camp for six years now. She gave birth to her first child when she was 18 years old. Holding her 15-month-old boy, she said: “Life is hard. And we can’t provide our children with a good education.” Living hand-to-mouth and fending for the family, her husband works as a driver outside of the camp.
“I also want to work outside the camp like my husband, but there is no one who would take care of my two children while I am not around,” Htusan told The Irrawaddy.
Due to the difficulties she and her husband have been facing in the camp, she is considering not having another child. The 27-year-old mother of three Marip Nu Ja has been displaced since 2011. She got married when she was 18 in 2008, and her first child is now nine. Holding her nine-month-old daughter, Marip Nu Ja said long-term displacement fills their lives with uncertainties and insecurities.
“I’m afraid that life will get more and more difficult when the children grow up,” she said.
Htu Ling, a 33-year-old mother of four, gave birth to her youngest daughter just five months ago in Mai Na camp where she has been living for six years. She gave birth to three of her older children in her native Nam San Yang village—a 2-hour drive from Laiza—before fleeing the war. Since her second pregnancy with twins ten years ago, she has decided to use birth control, saying that she wanted to be a dedicated mother to her older children. Having heard that long-term birth control medication could increase her risk for ovarian cancer, Htu Ling and her husband decided to have another child.
She said she felt guilty for using contraception, since the church taught her that it is sinful and immoral to prevent “a new life” from being created. “I know that I have sinned and I will take it with me. But my children will suffer less this way,” she said.
Thirty-four-year-old mother of three Dai Tse moved to Madaing camp in Waingmaw Township from Zai Awng camp in 2015. She gave birth to her last child last year in Madaing camp. She wants to have a contraceptive implant in her arm as a preferred method of long-term birth control but the cost is preventing her from doing it.
“One of the women here told me that it cost her 55,000 kyats (US$40). It is equal to the cost of one month’s food for my family,” Dai Tse said.
“I don’t want to give birth to more children if we have to continue living like this. It’s like letting them feel they are living in hell after they are born.”
Seeing less and less hope of returning to her native land, Dai Tse has learned skills in sewing and has been thinking of starting a new life, integrating into the host community in Waingmaw Township. However, relationships with the locals in the area have been strained.
“People discriminate me for living at the camp. I don’t want to hear the word ‘IDP’ anymore. If that word is a stain, I want to wash every part of my body. I wish that the storm would take it from my body,” she said.
Je Muk is a 32-year-old mother of two girls; she is currently taking hormonal birth control since both she and her husband could not go work outside of the Madaing camp and have to rely on donors to take care of their children. She is worried that hormonal birth control pills will have unpleasant side effects and hopes for a safer, alternative family planning option.
Je Muk said that her two-year-old daughter has a partial hearing impairment. She wants to go outside of the camp to be able to find a job so that she can save some money to treat her younger daughter’s hearing loss.

By Tin Htet Paing 10 August 2017 – WAINGMAW & MYITKYINA, Kachin State

 

Tin Htet Paing The Irrawaddy Tin Htet Paing is Reporter at the English edition of The Irrawaddy.

 

A woman and her child in Mai Na IDP camp in Waingmaw Township, Kachin State

Pawk Seng Pang, a 22-year-old mother of three.

The young mother discovered in 2015 that her husband had infected her with HIV. Even though she took contraceptives to prevent pregnancy and, thereby, the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, she stopped taking them due to the heavy bleeding that was a side effect of contraceptives. She became pregnant with her youngest daughter. She is now hoping that her six-month-old is not HIV positive. The couple has been taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) to treat the HIV infection.

Htusan, 27-year-old mother of two, in Mai Na camp

Originally from Nam San Yang village close to the KIA stronghold of Laiza, 27-year-old mother of two Htusan has been displaced to Mai Na camp for six years now. She gave birth to her first child when she was 18 years old. Holding her 15-month-old boy, she said: “Life is hard. And we can’t provide our children with a good education.” Living hand-to-mouth and fending for the family, her husband works as a driver outside of the camp.

Marip Nu Ja, a 27-year-old mother of three

The 27-year-old mother of three Marip Nu Ja has been displaced since 2011. She got married when she was 18 in 2008, and her first child is now nine. Holding her nine-month-old daughter, Marip Nu Ja said long-term displacement fills their lives with uncertainties and insecurities.
“I’m afraid that life will get more and more difficult when the children grow up,” she said.

Htu Ling, aged 33 and a mother of four, in Mai Na camp.

Htu Ling, a 33-year-old mother of four, gave birth to her youngest daughter just five months ago in Mai Na camp where she has been living for six years. She gave birth to three of her older children in her native Nam San Yang village—a 2-hour drive from Laiza—before fleeing the war. Since her second pregnancy with twins ten years ago, she has decided to use birth control, saying that she wanted to be a dedicated mother to her older children. Having heard that long-term birth control medication could increase her risk for ovarian cancer, Htu Ling and her husband decided to have another child.

Dai Tse, a 34-year-old mother of three in Madaing camp.

Thirty-four-year-old mother of three Dai Tse moved to Madaing camp in Waingmaw Township from Zai Awng camp in 2015. She gave birth to her last child last year in Madaing camp. She wants to have a contraceptive implant in her arm as a preferred method of long-term birth control but the cost is preventing her from doing it.
“One of the women here told me that it cost her 55,000 kyats (US$40). It is equal to the cost of one month’s food for my family,” Dai Tse said.

Je Muk, mother of two, aged 32.

Je Muk is a 32-year-old mother of two girls; she is currently taking hormonal birth control since both she and her husband could not go work outside of the Madaing camp and have to rely on donors to take care of their children. She is worried that hormonal birth control pills will have unpleasant side effects and hopes for a safer, alternative family planning option.
Je Muk said that her two-year-old daughter has a partial hearing impairment. She wants to go outside of the camp to be able to find a job so that she can save some money to treat her younger daughter’s hearing loss.

Families Unplanned in Kachin IDP Camps

Alternative School Near Inle Reimagines Primary Education

Alternative School Near Inle Reimagines Primary Education

Heritage Private School is situated in Chaung Sauk village in Nyaung Shwe Township, Shan State.

Ma Yin Myo Su, the founder of Inle Heritage Private School

The school’s founder Ma Yin Myo Su said she wanted to build a school that was funky, strange and had irregular shapes but was still in harmony with the surrounding area

the school’s buildings, but also its facilities are made out of bamboo.

Kyaw Swar, principal of Inle Heritage Private School

school’s design is a mix of contemporary and traditional architectural forms that fit in to local culture.

Heritage Private School is the first institution of its kind in Nyaung Shwe and Ma Yin Myo Su plans to expand the school to up to 12 buildings, eventually providing high school education.

NYAUNG SHWE, Shan State — On a four-acre plot of land in Chaung Sauk village, surrounded by the Shan hills and near one of Myanmar’s most popular tourism locales, three bamboo buildings resembling spaceships draw nearly every passerby’s attention.

At first glance, these bamboo and earthen structures northeast of Inle Lake could be mistaken for another new hotel or guesthouse. But seesaws and slides in front of the compound reveal that it has been built with children in mind.

It is the very first private school in Nyaung Shwe—an area known in Shan as Yawnghwe—and is open to any child in the local community, with an affordable price tag and run by the non-profit Inle Heritage Foundation.

The founder of Inle Heritage, Ma Yin Myo Su, is also managing director of two resorts: Inle Princess Resort near Inle Lake and Mrauk-U Princess Resort in Rakhine State, and has been recognized for efforts to preserve her ancestral ethnic Intha traditions and conservation of the natural beauty of Inle Lake. The 45-year-old’s most recent contribution concerns an investment in education.

“When I see that there are many babies in the families of my team and in my community, I wanted these children to have a childhood that I wanted myself as a child in this area,” said Ma Yin Myo Su, who guided The Irrawaddy’s reporters around the Inle Heritage Private School.

She stressed the need to have an alternative school in the area—recognized by the Ministry of Education, but with more activities than typical government-run schools—such as art, sports, storytelling, and innovative and creative talks about the environment, heritage, culture, nature and community.

“I live here. I was born here and I make my living here. So I want to give back in any way that I can, especially when the country is changing,” she explained.

In 2012 when Myanmar started allowing private schools, more than 60 schools registered. In the 2016-17 academic year, there were 585 private schools registered with the Ministry of Education, U Kyaw Thu, of the ministry’s department of basic education, told The Irrawaddy.

In a time when the private and international school sector is growing rapidly, fees for Myanmar’s most expensive international schools can run up to US$2,000 per month, per child. Private schools with a government-drafted curriculum start at around 50,000 kyats ($37) per month.

It took Ma Yin Myo Su and her team one year to complete the construction of the Inle Heritage Private School’s first three buildings. The school then launched its first class on June 1. It currently has a total of five classrooms hosting 118 students, from nursery to second grade, and boasts two playgrounds in the compound.

She plans to expand the school to host up to 12 buildings, eventually providing middle and high school education as well. The school’s monthly fees are 35,000 kyats ($25) for nursery and kindergarten and 40,000 kyats (US$30) for first and second grades.

 

Bamboo As A Building Material

The unique architecture of the school is another reason why it stands out from other standard school facilities in Myanmar, which are typically multi-story concrete buildings with limited play space. Yin Myo Su described it as a mix of contemporary and traditional architectural forms that fits into the local culture and remains close to nature.

To have a school that is made up of funky, strange and irregular shapes yet still stands in harmony with the surrounding area and environment inspired Ma Yin Myo Su’s fundamental vision to use bamboo as a building material for the project.

While Asian cultures have been building with bamboo since the 10th century, the medium has become increasingly popular in modern architecture and interior design as a sustainable and cheaper alternative to timber. Its advantage is that it is fast growing and does not contribute to deforestation, Ma Yin Myo Su explained.

“I want children to start thinking about sustainability, from the building itself, up to anything that they can see and imagine,” she said. “Whoever is going to build either businesses or schools or clinics or houses, it is possible to build in the most sustainable way possible, and there is alternative material that we could use with what we have around us.”

With proper insecticide treatment, bamboo structures can last several decades. It is non-polluting and, according to architects, arguably more earthquake resistant than cement and timber.

Ma Yin Myo Su also highlighted the school’s construction as a chance for her employees to learn how to preserve bamboo and how to treat it so that it is more resistant and durable for longer periods. The project was completed in partnership with Thailand-based architectural and design company Bamboo Family.

 Building Children’s Character

The school of five classrooms currently runs with a total of 17 staff including eleven teachers, two academic consultants and the principal.

Being the first private school in the region, one of the challenges it faces are the expectations from parents who want their children to be outstanding students in terms of grades and distinctions, Ko Aung Kyaw Swar, the school’s principal told The Irrawaddy.

The principal explained that the school’s first ambition is to train children to be morally sound and disciplined persons, while cultivating an attitude of care for the community.

“Education to me is beyond the recognitions of degrees or certificates,” he said. “I personally do not [put] a lot of grand visions or objectives on our kids, but I want them to become responsible for themselves on their own and to at least care for their community.”

The school’s design is a mix of contemporary and traditional architectural forms that fit in to local culture. (Photo: Chanson / The Irrawaddy)

After only the first two weeks of the school’s operation, Ko Aung Kyaw Swar said he was initially afraid that parents would give up on the school and that no children would show up to attend anymore. However, he had received positive feedback from parents that their children had become more independent in their daily lives.

“It’s the very, very first step of a long journey and [parents] need to believe in what we are doing, so we also try to closely collaborate with them,” he added.

Ma Yin Myo Su also said that she dreams of having a small animal farm and vegetable garden in the school compound where students can learn respect for animals, responsible consumption, and environmentally friendly habits.

“We have to give our children the best education, since they are going to lead our country’s next generation one day and decide its future,” she said.

By Tin Htet Paing 23 June 2017 – Photo: Chanson / The Irrawaddy

 

Families Unplanned in Kachin IDP Camps

A Brighter Future for Burma’s Juvenile Offenders?

Youth Rehabilitation Center in Kawhmu

RANGOON — As he waits impatiently for his time in custody to end, the first thing 16-year-old Zaw Thein Htike does every morning is count the days.
There are almost four hundred of them left.
“Aug. 1, 2018—that’s my release date,” he says, his words tumbling out all in a rush; there is no danger that he will forget the date fourteen months from now when he is due to leave the Hnget Aw San Youth Rehabilitation Center in Rangoon’s Kawhmu Township, commonly known as the “children’s prison.”
One impulsive mistake less than a year ago changed the boy’s life forever.
It was around 2 a.m. when his cousin came calling and asked him to come out. As the pair rambled the streets, the older boy revealed a plan to steal a motorbike. The pair would split the cash. “I was swayed by the idea of the pocket money he promised to share,” said Zaw Thein Htike.
The boys soon found a bike to take, but the police were quick too. As they approached, the older boy got away while Zaw Thein Htike was caught.
A court sentenced him to two years in a center that’s officially meant to equip him with the tools he needs to start a new life when he leaves.
But that’s going to be a challenge.

Aw san Youth Rehabilitation Center in Kawhmu Township outside Rangoon

Juveniles at the center stay inside their dormitory which houses about 80 boys

Youth come back to their dormitory after taking a bath and wash their clothes

Children wait to begin a meal at the rehabilitation center

A vocational training course teaches residents of the center hair dressing skills

Residents of the center attend woodwork classes

Children take a meal at the rehabilitation center

Children at the rehabilitation center play in their dormitory

Children at Risk.

Burma’s 1993 Child Law states that children under the age of 16 at the time of a conviction and those under 18 years old who need protection (including drug addicts, orphans, and those living on the streets) should be sent to one of 10 youth rehabilitation centers run by the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.
Three centers are for girls, four are for youths who need protection, and only the remaining three accept young males convicted of crimes.
Hnget Aw San is the largest with around 460 juveniles, while a center in Mandalay has fewer than 300 young people and the smallest in Moulmein (Mawlamyine) has around 100, according to the Kawhmu center’s governor U Kyaw Oo, who is also assistant director at the department of social welfare under the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement
Around 360 youths at Hnget Aw San have been convicted of a crime, while the others are former street children.
All the youths are subject to the same stated broad goals.
“We educate the boys in morals, and we aim to train them to be ready for when they go back into the community,” said U Kyaw Oo.
Most of the young offenders were charged with theft, he said.  Others were convicted of violent behavior, while just a few were sentenced under murder or drug charges.
Snatching or pick-pocketing mobile phones on city streets accounted for the sentences of more than 100 boys, he said.
“At age 14 or 15, they want to own a phone. Their parents are poor and can’t afford one. So the boys steal.’’
Phone theft convictions typically result in sentences of between two months and two years.
“They just don’t have knowledge,” said U Kyaw Oo. “It’s clear when you look at the case load. Children who arrive here come from poor families, they’ve dropped out of school, and they’ve fallen into bad company.”

… / …

Life in an Institution

Juvenile centers were first opened in 1973 under the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.
Prior to this, youth offenders were sent to prison-like correctional facilities under the Ministry of Home Affairs, where conditions were reportedly very harsh.
Conditions were once very tough at the Kawhmu center, too, according to Ko Chit Ko Lwin, the supervisor of a mental health support program run by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP). Hnget Aw San was “notorious” for pushing children into hard labor and for beatings, he said.

… / …

These days, the gates are open at the 36-acre complex. There are no high fences surrounding the dormitories that each house some 80-100 boys.
The boys are not permitted to leave, by law, but they are not under lock and key.
Until recently, the youths usually had fried rice for breakfast, dhal and fish paste for lunch, and some sort of meat for dinner.
In April, the official daily food allowance for each youth increased from 432 kyats to 1000 kyats as a result of a government increase, and the boys now eat meat twice a day.

… / …

It’s an improvement, but the more ambitious goal of achieving effective rehabilitation and a smooth reintegration into society for the young people is still some distance off.
Most of the boys suffer from anxiety about what the future will hold, said Ko Chit Ko Lwin.
“They worry about how the outside world will view them after they are released. How will they be treated? Will their families love them as before?”
The AAPP started a counseling program for 12 boys aged around 18 years in March, aimed at helping the boys achieve emotional stability and a positive outlook.
Burma’s youth rehabilitation centers are also meant to provide youth who were previously attending school with the option of continuing their educations.
Providing vocational training is the stated main priority for the centers. At the Kawhmu center, vocational training classes in carpentry, masonry, tailoring, electrics, and hair dressing are meant to be on the menu.

… / …

But lately only about two vocational training programs out of a hoped-for 10 have been running, as some have stalled due to a lack of resources for equipment, training tools and trainers, U Kyaw Oo admitted.
“We are still weak in vocational training. We can’t offer it all the time,” he said.
The current offerings are just not sufficient to meet the boys’ needs, Ko Chit Ko Lwin said.
“I really want them to learn more solid skills, so they’re not forced to reoffend when they leave.”
Similar concerns were expressed by Ko Zaw Zaw, a socially-conscious librarian who has opened free community libraries in Rangoon, Mandalay and Irrawaddy divisions and who visited the center last year to give the boys a motivational talk.
Reoffending is still an issue, he said. The boys are taught moral principles but what they really need are strong training programs that gave them solid skills to pursue a decent occupation.
That’s been difficult as a result of the decades-long chronic funding shortages.
Hnget Aw San has just 31 social workers while 47 are needed to take care of the almost 500 juveniles, U Kyaw Oo said. The social workers have also had to pitch in and try and do some of the vocational training, he added.
Despite the challenges, the center gave about 200 children some training last year, according to U Kyaw Oo.
Plans are in motion now for better provision through collaborations with the ministries of education and health and sports as well as other government and non-governmental institutions, the governor said.
Mobile teams supported by the education and industry ministries and others will teach the boys skills in carpentry, masonry, machine working and other trades this year, he said.
The promise was echoed by U Win Myat Aye, minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement on a visit to the center last Saturday.

… / …

Uncertain Futures

The new options can’t come too soon for Zaw Thein Htike.
He told The Irrawaddy that he had learnt a little bricklaying and motor cycle maintenance over his eight months at the center.
But the trainings so far didn’t seem to have made much of an impression.
“I think I will just become a motorcycle taxi driver after I’m released,” he said.
“I don’t dream of becoming a shop owner or a doctor—all that became impossible after I dropped out of school.”
But boys at the center can turn their lives around, U Kyaw Oo is keen to say. He tells the story of former center resident Thein Soe, who went on to become a traditional Burmese boxing champion and a member of the “White New Blood” Burmese boxing club.
Thein Soe visits the center every now and again to encourage the boys.
“We only know about the children who had close relationships with us, unfortunately. It is difficult to contact them after they are released as we don’t have follow-up monitoring programs. It would be great if we did,” he said.
Boys who return to troubled families and tough surroundings are more likely to return to a life of crime, he said. One possibly good thing, he added—only a very few boys have returned to the center after their release.

… / …

The issue of juveniles who lose their way is one that concerns everyone, says well-known writer and philanthropist Daw Than Myint Aung who also serves as a member of Yangon City Development Committee.
If children grow up in a good environment—in stable families, with good education and health care services and in a society with the rule of law—they won’t find themselves in contact with the juvenile justice system, she said.
“We need a society which will embrace these kids. If we neglect them, they will fall back into crime.”

By San Yamin Aung 4 May 2017