[More than a month after
Malaysia and Indonesia agreed to provide temporary
shelter for up to 7,000 of the migrants stranded at sea, there has
been no sign of progress in finding them a permanent home, nor any hint that Myanmar
would address the conditions driving the Rohingya exodus. And Asia ’s most powerful nations are
essentially sitting out the crisis.]
The wealthiest nations in the Asia-Pacific region stood back as
well. Australia
declared it would not
resettle the migrants, mostly Rohingya Muslims fleeing religious persecution in
Myanmar or poor Bangladeshis seeking jobs. Japan pledged $3.5 million in emergency assistance
but also refrained from offering to take in any displaced people.
More
than a month after Malaysia and Indonesia agreed to provide temporary
shelter for up to 7,000 of the migrants stranded at sea, there has
been no sign of progress in finding them a permanent home, nor any hint that Myanmar
would address the conditions driving the Rohingya exodus. And Asia ’s most powerful nations are
essentially sitting out the crisis.
Their passivity is all the
more striking because, halfway around the world, European leaders have been actively debating a response to their own migrant crisis, in which
more than 1,700 people from Africa and the Middle East have died trying to cross the
Mediterranean this
year.
President Xi Jinping of China and Prime Minister Narendra Modi of Indiaoften
present their nations as emerging global powers, promoting regional
cooperation. Both countries also share a border with Myanmar and enjoy economic leverage as
major trading partners, and in China’s
case, as a top source of foreign investment.
But neither has pressured the government on its treatment of the
Rohingya or played a significant role in efforts to resettle them. During a meeting of the United Nations Security Council
last month, China insisted that the matter was
an internal one for Myanmar to resolve.
“The Rohingya issue is a complex multilateral issue,” said
Zachary Abuza, an analyst with the consultancy firm Southeast Asia Analytics.
The governments in Southeast Asia “want it to go away, but they are unwilling to solve it. China and India could play leadership roles
but see it as a losing issue that would diminish their clout and bilateral
interests.
“No country has more leverage
over Myanmar than China , even if it’s diminished in
the past four years,” he added. But China sees the Rohingya problem “as
such a toxic one in Southeast Asia that it is unwilling to make a deal of the issue. There is no
political upside.”
India has helped absorb past waves of
refugees fleeing border wars and political repression in Myanmar , providing sanctuary to
Burmese pro-democracy activists through decades of military rule, for example.
It also hosts more than 10,000 Rohingya who fled earlier spates of violence
against them.
But India has refrained from criticizing
Myanmar and adopted a policy of
grudging tolerance toward Rohingya arrivals rather than engagement, analysts
and refugee advocates said. Some government officials have expressed fear that Rohingya Muslims in India might be infiltrated by
jihadists.
“India sort of stayed away from this whole thing,
and that is disappointing,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director of Human
Rights Watch, referring to the most recent crisis. “India wants to be more careful in maintaining its
strategic and economic influence” over neighbors rather than criticize them
over human rights issues, she said.
Michel Gabaudan, president of
the advocacy group Refugees International, based in Washington , said India was distrustful of the
international refugee process in part because it had received little
recognition for taking in refugees, including more than 100,000 Tibetans from China and another 100,000 Tamils
from Sri Lanka . “India has taken refugees when it
made political sense, but not out of a sense of international obligation,” he
said.
Many in India and elsewhere in the region
consider the problem of refugees to be a legacy of Western imperialism and
colonial-era borders. The origins of the current crisis, for example, can be
traced to 1974, when the Burmese military government asserted that the Rohingya
were economic migrants who had traveled to Myanmar during British rule and
stripped them of citizenship.
As a result, Mr. Gabaudan said, there is a sense that
responsibility for refugees rests with the West and institutions such as the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Only a handful of nations in Asia are among the 148 countries
that are parties to the main international conventions that protect refugees.
“Generally speaking, there is a lack of state responsibility for
refugee protection in Asia ,” said Brian Barbour, director of external relations at the
Japan Association for Refugees. “Most countries in the region believe that they
should be praised for hosting such large numbers of refugees, not criticized
for refusing to grant asylum or allow refugees to locally integrate.”
During the last major refugee crisis in Asia, which began in the
mid-1970s, more than three million people fled war in Indochina — Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos — and arrived in destinations across Southeast Asia that grew
increasingly unwilling to accept them, including Hong Kong, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. At an international conference
in 1979, governments in the region agreed to admit the refugees temporarily
only after the rest of the world promised to assume most of the costs and to
resettle them elsewhere.
More than one million people
were resettled in the United States , with large populations going
to Australia and Canada as well. Much smaller
populations were resettled in Japan , Malaysia and the Philippines .
China resettled 260,000 ethnic
Chinese who fled Vietnam at the time. In the preceding
decades, it also took in hundreds of thousands of ethnic Chinese fleeing
discrimination and violence in Indonesia and Malaysia , and earlier this year, it
offered temporary refuge for ethnic Chinese known as the Kokang who fled
fighting in their home state in northeastern Myanmar .
But the Rohingya and other refugee populations that are not of
Chinese ethnicity are less of a concern to Beijing , said Yun Sun, a scholar at
the Brookings Institution in Washington who has studied China and refugee issues. She said Beijing helped ethnic Chinese refugees
out of a sense of “amity,” but only if such assistance was not politically
costly. “Beijing doesn’t want to be seen as interfering with other
countries’ internal affairs,” she said.
Unlike India , China ratified the 1951 Refugee
Convention. But it limits registration of refugees and restricts access by the
United Nations’ refugee agency to populations in China . The government has also
refused to protect North Koreans who cross the border as refugees, treating
them instead as economic migrants subject to forced repatriation.
“The domestic priority is internal stability,” said Alistair D.
B. Cook, a research fellow with the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore .
Mr. Cook said an emphasis on noninterference in Asia has meant that the only
countries in the region that have responded to the migration crisis are those
that had migrants leave or come ashore. “Essentially what we see now, we see
going as far back as the Indochinese exodus,” he said. “How states responded
then and how they respond now, there hasn’t been too much change.”
What has changed, however, is the economic strength of the
region, which has enjoyed several decades of rapid growth since the Vietnam
War. Many countries in Asia are much richer than they were 40 years ago, suggesting at
least greater financial capacity to assist refugees.
While countries such as Thailand and the Philippines provide temporary sanctuary
for migrants fleeing persecution, Japan is the only nation in Asia that has accepted refugees for
resettlement through the United Nations’ refugee agency. Since beginning the
program in 2010, though, Japan has resettled only 18 refugee
families, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Even Australia , long a destination for
migrants seeking safety and a better life, has taken a tougher stance against
asylum seekers. After as many as 880 people drowned trying to reach the
continent in 2012, the government adopted a policy of intercepting migrants at
sea and turning them back, or holding them indefinitely at offshore detention
centers and, most recently, flying them to countries willing to take them for a
fee.
Earlier this month, an Indonesian smuggler said the Australian
authorities had given him and his crew more than $30,000 in cash to take their
cargo of 65 migrants to Indonesia , possibly in violation of
international and local laws. The allegation, which the government has neither
denied nor admitted, was the latest sign of a further hardening under Prime Minister Tony Abbott.
“It’s just a political choice,” said Paul Power, chief executive
of the Refugee Council of Australia, an umbrella group of nonprofits that work
with asylum seekers. “It’s all about presenting to a small element of the
Australian population that they are tough. What’s discussed is actually just
being tough on persecuted people. ”
Jane
Perlez contributed reporting from Beijing , Colin Moreshead from Tokyo and Nida Najar from New Delhi .