While the problems in the Blue Nile area of Sudan rumble on, refugees continue to arrive at the various refugee camps which cater to those fleeing from the trouble. In mid December a rather strange story emerged revolving around a Thai national stranded in the Tongo refugee camp in Ethiopia.
65 year old Buntha Mkewyu went to work for an oil company in the Sudanese Blue Nile town of Maganza in 2007. When fighting broke out between Sudanese faction in late 2011, Mkewyu was forced to flee but was picked up by Sudan People’s Liberation Army – North (SPLA-N) soldiers and dropped off at another foreign company for safekeeping. Here he encountered John Borl Akol, a young Sudanese man also escaping from the violence who helped communicate with the non-English speaking Mkewyu.
Picking up a group of Indian nationals, the made their way to the towns of Dinduro, then Kurmuk, before nearby bombing raids forced them across the border to Ethiopia. The Indians headed to their embassy for a speedy repatriation but Mkewyu, without any Thai embassy or representation nearby, had no choice but to join his Sudanese friends in approaching the Ethiopian Administration for Refugee and Returnee Affairs (ARRA). Normally, a citizen of a foreign country would not be eligible for this type of help; a UNHCR spokesperson explained that as “Mkewyu is not an asylum-seeker, refugee or stateless person…[or]….internally displaced” he would not receive aid. But sometimes circumstances dictate otherwise and Mkewyu was signed in to Tongo refugee camp.
Mkewyu and Akol shared a tent and Akol made sure that his Thai companion had everything he needed to make his time in camp as comfortable as possible. His neighbours also shared their meals and Mkewyu passed his time doing his share of the laundry and cooking while ARRA treid to work out what to do with him.
It appears that the main sticking point was obtaining a permit to travel within Ethiopia and leave the refugee camp. The usual nature of this type of camp means the host government does not want the inhabitants leaving the site. Eventually, following the involvement of UNHCR, ARRA, the International Organisation for Migration, Mkewyu’s employer and Thai officials, permission was finally granted by ARRA for him to leave the camp and make his way to a location in Ethiopia from where he could return to Thailand.
It’s a story with a happy ending of course, but the questions to be asked must be why Thailand has been so ineffective in helping its citizen out of a precarious situation. Just because there is no official representation in the country, it shouldn’t have stopped the Thai authorities extricating one of their citizens immediately. Thailand does seem to have some form in this area, leaving their citizens to their own devices in awkward situations.
Would the French government, or the German government, have allowed one of their nationals to languish in a refugee camp for even one day before pulling out all the stops to get them to a more appropriate place? Thailand needs to do more to protect its citizens abroad.







