KIRF has been getting needed school supplies and some food aid to IDP (“internally displaced people”) children in conflict areas in the Eastern Karen State of Burma and to child refugees in northern Thailand since 2008. We have been able to do this through an aid network coordinated by the Community School Program. This non-profit organization based in northern Thailand has provided access to education, medical care and basic necessities to refugee and migrant families from Burma as well as IDP families in Burma since 2001.
The local community-run schools we are supporting are the only source of formal education to these young students. Resisting regime pressure to shut down, they rely on international support through the Community Schools Program to prevail in the conflict areas of eastern Burma. Every year since 2008 we have been helping these kids have a better future through education with the help of the Community Schools Program. The first two photos (top left and bottom right) of this article were taken a few months ago at an IDP school inside of Burma. As you can see, it is easy to fall in love with these kids!. We try to support them and their teachers as much as we can.
In 2006 the Community Schools program was recognized by the World’s Children Prize Foundation of Sweden and received funding for 25 of their community supported schools. As part of this recognition, a formal needs assessment was done that identified the action areas of child abuse in the Eastern Karen State of Burma. According to the “Activity Report of the WCPRC in Burma – May 2011” report published by the Community Schools’ Program, here are those areas of concern:
- Parents cannot afford for their children to go to school due to poverty.
- In Burma there is still a civilian war with killing and displacement; many children are threatened and the Burmese regime has burned down houses, community schools, and have killed innocent families
- Children have been forced to become child soldiers
- Child trafficking that includes forcing the children to work as housemaids, market workers, and in brothels is occurring there
- Due to poverty there is the lack of opportunity for studying when children can attend school
- There is often no local school in the home village of these children and parents cannot afford the transportation to go to schools in other villages
- In some schools, children are beaten for infractions such as not doing their homework