BURMA DIGEST

                      A Campaign Journal for Human Rights of All Ethnic Nationalities in Burma 

         03.09.2006

 

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A PORTER’S TALE (1)

by Feraya

 

I was riding a friend’s bike on my way home

When a police officer arrested me

“This bike is stolen, so come with me” 

At the station he demanded 10,000 kyat

But I had no money to pay him

So that was why I was sentenced

To three year’s imprisonment. (*)

 

Many prisoners died while I was there

Some through abuse and some from being sick

My friend had diarrhoea and was very ill

The doctor took one look at him and said

“If you want medication you’ll have to pay,

but if you can’t then there’s nothing we can do”

And because my friend had nobody to pay for him

He had to die in prison.

 

One morning we were all called out to the yard

The chief jailers said:

“Pay us 50,000 kyat if you do not wish to porter”(**)

And because we had no money to pay them

We had to follow the army troops

And carry loads as convict porters.

 

My legs were chained all the time.

After a journey of several days we arrived at the site

The next morning our chains were released.

When the army came to take us

They asked me my name, my father's name

And my prison serial number

Then they gave me a dark blue shirt and trousers,

A cap and a pair of sandals that were too small,

Then I knew that I must go to porter.

 

There were 100 convicts taken out at the same time

I asked the soldiers “How many porters are there?”

They told me that there were 500 convict porters.

I saw many trucks, maybe around 50

Which the army brought to collect the convict porters.

We rode in the morning and arrived

At the camp in the forest in the afternoon;

We then started carrying the loads.

 

I saw some convict porters who could not carry their loads

The soldiers beat and kicked them

Some porters fell down and could not stand up to walk

They were unconscious and lying down beside the road

I heard the last soldiers in the group make records

Such as the name of the convict, their prison serial number, which prison they came from

Then they shot them dead.

 

I have to go to the frontline with the soldiers

And carry half a sack of rice

With barely enough to eat and drink

Nor any time to rest

I walk both day and night.

The basket digs into my flesh

Where the straps rub against my back and shoulders,

Cutting through my skin.

My footwear is nothing more than rubber flip-flops

That left my feet wounded by bamboo and rocks on the path

Leaving me to continue walking barefoot.

We must keep pace with the soldiers who wear jungle boots,

We are not allowed to rest, drink or talk while marching

Many of us collapse through exhaustion and beatings

The soldiers torture us when we cannot walk and carry the load

We get wet from the rain and sleep at night with wet clothes

The SPDC soldiers order us to build huts and make fires

After we made them the soldiers cast us out

They warm themselves beside the fire and we porters have to stay in the rain.

 

The SPDC soldiers do not give us enough food

We cook in the evening, and they tell us we can only eat twice a day.

When the convict porters get sick

The soldiers do not give us medicine

They say they have no medicine for convict porters,

Only for soldiers and that we should die.

(To be continued next week.)

--------------OOOOOOOOOO--------------- 

Excerpts from the KHRG report KHRG0603: ( http://www.khrg.org ) 

(*)A common charge in Burma when more plausible crimes are untenable is something which translates as 'hiding in the dark'. Under this law, the police can arrest and detain anyone who happens to be out late at night, or simply loitering during broad daylight. As would be expected, this offence provides an easy means of extorting funds or rounding up potential porters. In the case below, the individual was taken by the police while walking alone at night and immediately sent to porter with the military. "The SPDC soldiers arrested me on June 3rd 2006. I had gone to watch a football match and had come back late around half-past eleven or midnight. The SPDC soldiers arrested me on my way home."  

(**)Those interviewed by KHRG remained between six months and six and a half years in prison prior to being taken out to Karen State in convoys for forced labour as military porters. At no time prior to being removed were convicts told that portering for the military was a part of their sentence. The practice of recruiting convicts to serve as porters begins with prison officials informing convicts that large groups will be taken for this work, but also offering them yet another opportunity to bribe their way out. Porters described being taken out of prisons to be transferred to military operations in groups of between 40 and 160 prisoners at a time. However, this number is in some cases only two thirds of the total number initially called out, the rest having paid the requisite bribe to escape service as porters. It is probable that prison officials factor this into their calculations; for example, choosing 200 prisoners when the Army has demanded 150, and deliberately including at least 50 convicts who they know are likely to be able to pay.  

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