| Motherhood a Risk
for Burmese Migrants
Marwaan Macan-Markar
September 26, 2003: Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com)
MAE SOT, Thailand, (IPS) - When
she heads to the only health clinic in this
border town where Burmese migrant workers feel welcome, Khin
SoeYee runs the risk of being arrested.
She had a close call one recent Saturday, when the Thai police
stopped her and her husband on their way to the Mae Tao clinic.
What saved them were the cries of their 10-month old son that
needed medical attention, says the 32-year-old Soe Yee.
But this was just momentary relief for this mother of two
children, who has
been arrested on four previous occasions while heading for
the clinic. During all four times, the couple were taken into
police custody and kept in a cell for a day before being released.
“There is so much fear we have when coming to the clinic,”
says Soe Yee, a woman with a gaunt face with sunken cheeks.
“There is no choice for us but to take this risk, especially
for women like me, mothers.”
What lies behind this price she has to pay for motherhood
is her status in
Thailand. She is an undocumented migrant, who slipped across
the border from
Burma three years ago and has been a farm worker ever since,
picking potatoes, mushrooms and tomatoes. Her daily wage is
60 baht (1.50 U.S. dollars).
This town has an estimated 100,000 Burmese like Soe Yee,
who have fled their
military-ruled country in search of a job - any job - in Mae
Sot, an area ringed by forest-covered hills on the Thai-Burma
border.
Currently, there are an estimated one million migrant workers
from Burma, more than half of whom are undocumented migrants,
spread across Thailand. They are employed in labour intensive
and unskilled work that labour rights activists call “dirty
and dangerous” because locals do not want them.
For Dr Cynthia Maung, who runs the Mae Tao clinic, the travails
women like
Soe Yee face are part of a more complex reality that she and
her 150-member
staff have to encounter in caring for the many female migrant
workers who come calling.
Last year, this clinic, which is made up of a few single-story
buildings that line a gravel path on the outskirts of this
small town, saw an estimated 35,000 cases, a marked increase
from the 2,000 cases it attended to when it opened, in 1989.
During the first half of this year, for instance, the clinic
assisted 1,441pregnant women, of which 338 -- or 23 percent
-- were teenage pregnancies, states a study on reproductive
health at the Mae Tao clinic.
In addition, there were 1,231 patients who came for antenatal
care who tested for sexually transmitted diseases, including
HIV, the study adds.
Further, the study notes that over 10 percent of the women
who gave birth
delivered babies with low weight of less than 2.5 kilogrammes.
Likewise, “the abortion rate is increasing, particularly
unsafe abortions,” Maung, a migrant herself from Burma,
told IPS. “When you look at the reproductive health
admissions to the clinic, you see that there are 30 post-abortion
care cases per 100 deliveries.”
What some women may take for granted in the modern cities
of the world - emergency obstetrical care - is very much a
rarity for the migrant workers, with only four percent of
pregnant women having access to it.
“The reproductive health situation for migrant workers
is not a happy one,”
says Than Than Aye of Social Action for Women (SAW), a Mae
Sot-based non-
governmental organisation (NGO). “There is little awareness
about family
planning, about sexual health issues and diseases like HIV.”
That is compounded by cultural attitudes, economic realities,
the working
conditions in the garment factories that have attracted thousands
of women,
and the political climate they live in.
Regards condom use, for instance, health workers like Than
Aye have found
that migrant women feel inhibited in using condoms because
“they are shy”--
they fear being ridiculed by their peers.
Besides that, she adds, they are still influenced by what
happens in Burma, where if “a woman is caught with a
condom, she can be arrested on the grounds she is a prostitute”.
Furthermore, both women's rights and health workers admit
during interviews
that the migrant workers have limited access to free condoms.
Purchasing
condoms would mean losing over half a day's average wage,
which ranges
between 60 baht (1.50 U.S. dollars) to 80 (2 dollars).
But Burmese labour rights activists like Moe Swe argue that
there are other
factors besides low condom use that have contributed to both
an increase in
abortion rates and related reproductive health concerns.
“The factories in Mae Sot do not like the migrant workers
they have hired to
get pregnant,” Swe, secretary of Yaung Chi Oo Workers
Association, said in
an interview. “In July, 20 pregnant women were fired
from a knitting factory
because they were pregnant.”
“The female workers are not entitled to maternal leave,
to breastfeed their
babies,” he adds. “Most women also want to get
back to work soon due to the
money they desperately need. They often return after a month
from delivering
their babies.”
To that can be added the confined lives that the thousands
of women working
in the many garment factories have to live. The employers
force the workers
to live in the factories, where services for health care are
insufficient, reveals Swe. According to Than Aye, the atmosphere
migrant workers live in has also contributed to unwanted pregnancies,
abandoned children and hundreds of “stateless children”.
“At the safehouse run by SAW, we have 12 children who
were abandoned by their parents, illegal migrants,”
she says. “They range from a 10-day-old
baby to a two-and-a-half-year-old child.”
Since July, she adds, over 700 children born to Burmese migrant
workers in
this region have been accounted for as being stateless, since
Thai law does
not recognise them as citizens.
“There are many restrictions that the workers face,
including long hours,” says Maung. “Attempts to
change this are difficult, because it is not easy to send
medical teams into the factories to deal with reproductive
health concerns.”
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