Social issues in the camp, you ask? Well, besides
the fact that each person who lives in the camp is a refugee and
has been displaced from their homeland, there are many secondary
problems that occur because of this displacement. Some of these
issues include an increase in the use of drugs and alcohol; and
in the larger refugee camps there are youth gangs that are forming.
Lack
of income is a pervasive issue for those living in the camps. Basic
food and some of their personal necessities (mosquito nets, cooking
charcoal, a charcoal stove, one pot per family, sleeping mats, medicine
- usually) are provided, but they also have other needs that include
candles, umbrellas, shoes, school fees, school uniforms, and more
nutritious food when a person in the family is sick. There is desperation
for a bit of extra money, and most people do not have any way to
earn it. There are only a few paying jobs available. The lack of
income causes stress and tension, which in turn can lead to an increase
in interpersonal conflicts.
There are a
number of reported cases of domestic violence in the camps. It has
been noted that in situations of war or social upheaval domestic
violence tends to increase because men feel that they are unable
to fulfill their role as protector and provider (World Health Organization
Report, 2002). Research has not been done on this with the Karen,
but it seems to be true. The community is increasingly concerned
about this issue, and in the last two years a few of the camps have
established safehouses where women can go to be safe.

There are many
orphans in the camps; they continue to arrive from the areas in
Burma where there is conflict (above picture). They carry with them
very recent scars from the terror that they have endured. For everyone
in the camp there always looms the knowledge that relatives and
others living inside of Burma, only kilometers away, continue to
live and die with extremely limited food and no access to medicine.
To help deal
with these and other social problems, the leadership in some of
the camps has begun a social welfare program. Beginning two years
ago, men and women have been chosen to be “Home Visitors”or Social
Welfare Workers. They do whatever they can to assist individuals
or families with social problems which they are unable to solve
on their own. However, the Social Welfare Workers have not received
any formal job training. While some of the workers are naturals
at de-escalating conflict, most find it awkward to step into the
middle of somebody else’s personal issue.
UNHCR recently
gave a two-day training on sexual and gender-based violence (including
women’s rights, domestic violence, rape), which has given the workers
more confidence. But they are in need of more training. The “Social
Welfare Worker Training” that I (Angela) was able to facilitate
came at a perfect time. Read on the next page about the training.
next
page
|