The Nation: Tearfund's Helen Manson
On Newshub Nation: Michael Morrah interviews
Tearfund's Helen Manson
The United
Nations said this week it wants to prosecute Myanmar's
military leaders for committing genocide and war crimes
against Rohynga Muslims. Close to a million Rohynga have
fled to refugee camps in Bangladesh after a campaign of
brutality in Myanmar, where they are not recognised as
citizens. Helen Manson is a Kiwi photographer and mother of
three from Auckland who now works for aid agency Tearfund.
Michael Morrah asked her how this crisis compares to other
humanitarian emergencies she's witnessed around the
world.
Helen Manson: Yeah,
so, I would say in all the places I've been, this is
definitely one of the worst — in the top two. Just because
of the scale of this crisis — so we're talking about just
under a million refugees in 10km2, so... And when you see
how cramped the conditions are. You know, other refugee
camps are so spread out. This one is just, like, really
tight.
Michael Morrah: What's the most challenging issue
for people who are living here, on a day-to-day
basis?
Yeah, at the moment, one year on, we're looking at
two things — it's around protection, so not only
protection from monsoon, but protection from trafficking and
exploitation. So, in regards to protection from the monsoon,
we're right in the middle of monsoon season. And it might
look glorious now, but you and I know today it's been
intermittently raining. We've got sandbags everywhere. This
area is on steep hillsides, so it's very precarious, in
terms of the risk of flooding and huge
mudslides.
Michael Morrah: When you talk about
exploitation and trafficking, what do you mean there? What's
the risk for those who are in here, in relative
safety?
Yeah, so although they are in
relative safety, there's a really real risk of trafficking
and exploitation. And that comes across in the fact that
people are living in extreme poverty. So they're at risk
of— they're extremely vulnerable. They're so
vulnerable. And so you've got people that are wanting to
take advantage of that vulnerability and use them for labour
trafficking. There's been reported cases of child
trafficking, potentially sex trafficking as well. Because
people are desperate for money, they're desperate to keep
their families alive. Some of that's voluntary. Some of
that's coerced.
How would you describe what
the Rohingya people have been through?
You
know what? When I think about what these people have gone
through, it brings tears to my eyes, because it is so
horrendous. These people have fled extreme persecution.
Persecuted for generations, but that really stepped up on
August 25th, 2017. And so these people have seen their
houses burnt down. They've seen loved ones killed in front
of them, people's, you know, very lives taken, children—
awful things done to children, things we can't even say on
camera. They've seen the loss of all of their properties.
And then they've had to get into the bush and run for their
lives with the clothes on their back as their only
possessions. When they come here, what an unknown future.
You know? They're arriving into a place where they've got to
build themselves a shelter with few materials. They're
living on very small amounts of food. Water is scarce.
Sickness is rampant. And these are the situations that these
people have come from — extremely traumatised, dehydrated,
terrified for their very lives.
Is a resolution
possible, then, whereby these people would feel comfortable
to return to Myanmar?
Yeah, you know, I think
most people here would say that they would like to return to
Myanmar, but only if they can go in a voluntary way, and
it's safe for them, and it's a dignified re-entry, so
they're actually given rights as citizens of Myanmar. And
that's what Tearfund is really calling on the government to
do, is to give these people the full rights they deserve as
Myanmar citizens.
What's the way forward,
then? Is this issue front of mind enough for change to
occur?
I mean, it's an issue that we're
constantly grappling with, right? Because we're NGOs, so our
main concern right now is on the people in the refugee
camps. But for the people that are here, one of the key
roles has got to be advocating for their safe, voluntary,
dignified return. And right now, there is some pressure
being put on the Myanmar government, but there hasn't been
much success. Even though there was a resolution to return
people, people, don't want to go back. The conditions there
are not very favourable. I mean, I've been speaking to so
many people in this camp, sitting with them in their homes,
and one of the things they've been telling me is that,
“How could I ever go back? I would look at the place where
my husband was murdered. I don't even have a house. My land
was taken from me. I have no crops. I have no livestock.
There is nothing left for me there.”
How
sustainable is this camp — in continuing this camp, in
terms of NGO work and funding?
Oh, look,
it's one of the biggest challenges we're facing right now.
You know, when a crisis starts, no matter what crisis that
is, all around the world, you've got a great amount of
public interest in those first few months, in those first
few weeks, and everyone wants to get involved, and everyone
donates. But the problem we're looking at now, a year in, is
that that support starts to dwindle. People don't— It
falls off the radar. And so one of the greatest challenges
we have is, in a protracted crisis, containing that—
sustaining that level of funding so that these people
continue to get the help that they need.
What
personal struggles do you think some of the staff that you
work with face here on a day-to-day basis? I mean, it must
be pretty hard work. It must be, at times, difficult and
seem a bit hopeless.
Yeah, for sure. I know
that some of the struggles our team face are physical
struggles. The heat is pretty intolerable. The secondary
struggle they would face is the constant trauma of hearing
these people's stories — the vicarious trauma of such
horrendous, horrendous stories. Some of the worst stuff that
humanity can throw up — they are listening to that and
trying to help these people along. And then, of course, the
work we're doing, we're doing the best we can with the
funding we've got, but it's never enough. There's a million
people in this camp. We're serving a small part of that, but
we're really trying the best we can.
Is there
any one particular story that, during your time here, has
really stood out for you and affected you, as a
mother?
Oh, absolutely. I was here in April,
actually, about six months ago, and I met a mother called
Begum. She's got four little girls about 8 to 2 years old.
And she told me that they were at home in Myanmar, and they
heard that the military was coming. And they knew that they
were after the men, so they went into their home and they
hid her husband, hid the dad. The military bashed in the
doors, found the dad — he was underneath the table — and
they killed him in front of her four girls. Well, the very
next thing that happened is that they took her outside and
raped her in front of her children. And as I sat in her tent
and I was looking at her girls and, yeah, just reflecting on
the fact that that could have been me. And one of the things
she said to me was, “I just wish I could give them
snacks.” She said, “They're so hungry, and in the
afternoon time they ask me for snacks, and I don't have
anything to give them.”
How do you
comprehend that level of violence and inhumanity towards
another person?
It's incomprehensible. It is
completely incomprehensible to me.
But you
must have encountered it a lot in your work and your
travels.
Yeah, and actually there's a really
scary phenomenon that I'm seeing taking place, where it's
happening more and on a greater level. So when I first
started this work about eight years ago, you would hear
stories about people being murdered and people being raped,
and now it's gone to a whole new level — a level of
extreme violence, extreme sexual violence towards people,
and just things you and I would never normally think of in
our human minds; we could never even dream up the things
that people could do to one another — are now happening,
and I'm seeing it not just here in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh,
but I'm seeing it in Syria and in Iraq and in Congo and in
South Sudan, and it's quite frightening,
actually.
The people here, they've suffered
the worst of humanity, haven't
they?
Absolutely. These people have suffered
incomprehensibly. They have suffered
extremely. Yeah, they really have.
Is
there a future for them?
I believe there is.
It's really our hope that these people would find their way
back to Myanmar, to a place where they are given full rights
as citizens, and if not that, then they're given full rights
as refugees here in Bangladesh. And we'd really call on the
government of Bangladesh to do that for these
people.
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