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Community Organizations Human Rights Documentation Unit (National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma)
Human Rights Documentation Unit (National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma)
Human Rights Documentation Unit (National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma)
Acronym
HRDU
Governmental institution

Location

Mae Sot
Tak
Thailand
Postal address
P.O. Box 70
Working languages
inglês

The Human Rights Documentation Unit is a division of the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma that is responsible for producing an annual human rights yearbook.

Members:

Resources

Displaying 6 - 10 of 23

Landmine chapter of the Burma Human Rights Yearbook 2004

Reports & Research
Junho, 2005
Myanmar

...The immense violence that has been inflicted upon civilians throughout the world from anti-personnel landmines has led to the growing international acceptance of the necessity of their eradication. On 5 December 1997, in response to this realization, 122 countries came together and signed the Mine Ban Treaty (also known as the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction).

Burma Human Rights Yearbook 2003-2004: The Situation of Migrant Workers from Burma

Reports & Research
Novembro, 2004
Myanmar

...Throughout 2003, large numbers of people continued to leave Burma to seek work abroad. Approximately ten percent of Burma’s population migrates to other countries, according to a report, Migration, Needs, Issues and Responses in the Greater Mekong Subregion 2002, by the Asian Migrant Center. People leave Burma for a number of reasons. Rampant inflation, a deteriorating economy and general lack of employment and educational opportunities are factors that cause many people to emigrate.

Burma Human Rights Yearbook 2003-2004: The Situation of Refugees

Reports & Research
Outubro, 2004
Myanmar

...According to the U.S. Committee for Refugees, more than 600,000 Burmese refugees and asylum seekers remained in countries neighboring Burma at the end of 2003. Driven out by the ruling military regime’s policies and practices that suppress their freedom and violate their human rights, refugees and asylum seekers have fled to countries including Bangladesh, India, Malaysia and Thailand. Refugees flee forced labor, forced relocation, torture, rape, and other human rights violations perpetrated by members of the Tatmadaw (armed forces) or other State sponsored individuals or organizations.

Landmine chapter of the Burma Human Rights Yearbook 2003-2004

Reports & Research
Outubro, 2004
Myanmar

...The atrocities related to landmines in Burma are not limited to the injury and death of non-military personnel but also include their use to violate Article 13 of the UN Declaration of Human rights, that of an individual’s freedom of movement both internally and internationally. In order to restrict the movement of supplies and information to insurgent groups, well-established routes to and from villages have been mined. Villages themselves have also been mined in attempts to prevent the return of both forcibly relocated communities as well as, in some areas, refugees.

Burma Human Rights Yearbook 2002-03: Internally Displaced People and Forced Relocation

Reports & Research
Setembro, 2003
Myanmar

The situation of internally displaced people (IDPs), in Burma remained critical throughout 2002. The U.S. State Department’s country report for 2002 on Burma estimated that forced relocations had produced hundreds of thousands of refugees, with as many as one million internally displaced persons.

"Throughout 2002 the military continued to forcibly relocate minority villages, especially in areas where ethnic activists and rebels were active, and in areas targeted for the development of international tourism." (Human Rights Watch World Report 2003)