The Chinese Foreign Ministry
has denied human rights advocates’ reports that China is forcing ethnic Kachin
refugees to return to a war zone in Myanmar, saying that the people are going home of their own accord.
Responding to an article in The New York Times on Friday, the
Chinese Foreign Ministry released a statement to the newspaper that said the
people were returning because fighting between the government in Myanmar and the
Kachin Independence Army was subsiding, contradicting reports by residents who
say that the conflict is intensifying.
The ministry also said that many of the Kachin who had arrived
recently on the China
side of the border were not refugees. “Some of them return to Myanmar for work during the day and reside in China
temporarily during the night,” the ministry said. “China
has, in the spirit of humanitarianism, devoted a large amount of human
resources, money and other materials to supplying humanitarian assistance to
these Myanmar
border inhabitants.”
Thousands of Kachin have fled to Yunnan
Province in China ,
which borders Myanmar ’s Kachin State ,
after a 17-year cease-fire between their government and the Kachin Indepedence
Army ended in June 2011.
The Foreign Ministry’s statement came a day after The Times
requested comment from the ministry about accusations that Chinese officials
were forcing Kachin refugees back to Myanmar . The ministry had initially
declined to comment.
A researcher for Human Rights Watch said on Thursday that 1,000 refugees
had already been forced to return to Myanmar and that 4,000 others were
projected to return by the weekend. Human Rights Watch released a report in
June that estimated 7,000 to 10,000 refugees were living in China.The report
said some Kachin had been forced back earlier by Chinese officials, but what
was happening last week appeared to be a systematic and wide-scale forced
repatriation.
Patrick Zuo contributed research.
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