The United Nations (UN) Card, Identity, and Negotiations of Health among Rohingya Refugees
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection and Analysis
2.2. Data Collection Method and the CCA
2.3. Process of Obtaining UN Card in Malaysia
“Then in 1992, the UN opened the registration process for the Rohingyas. At that time, they did not offer us a UN card but just a paper containing your name, father’s name, and date of birth. After one month you need to go again for renewal. At that time, it was easy to register. In 1992 there were only about 400 Rohingyas living in Malaysia. At that time, you just go to the UN Office, and you can register yourself. But nowadays it is very difficult to get a UN card.”(Rohingya male who stayed Malaysia for 27 years)
“In 1995 I entered Malaysia through Bangladesh, then India, and then Thailand, and lastly Malaysia. But I got the UN card in 2003 because after my arrival in Malaysia in 1995, the UNHCR did not offer us the UN cards. So, from 1995–2003, I spent my life in Malaysia as an unregistered refugee.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 22 years)
“Before 2010, it was easy to get the UN card but after that it was very tough to get the UN card in Malaysia. Before 2010, you may directly go to the UN office and apply for the UN card. But now it is very hard to get the UN card. But the police custody system helps a Rohingya to get the UN card very easily. So, like me, some Rohingyas wish to be arrested by the Malay Police so that they will be able to get UN cards.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 5 years)
“One month after my arrival in Malaysia, me and my brother were caught by the police and the police sent us to jail. We spent 7 months in jail. Not only me and my brother, but there were also 12 other Rohingyas caught by the police at that time. After 7 months in jail, we were sent to the immigration camp. At that time UN people came to help us. The UN people then interviewed us. When they confirmed that we are Rohingya then they processed our UN cards.”(Rohingya male who stayed Malaysia for 7 years)
“In 2014–15, I got the UN card. To get the UN card, my husband and I had to go 6 to 7 times to the UN Office. After the birth of the first child in Malaysia, we went to the UN to get the UN card. They took my baby’s picture to give him the card and at that time my husband mentioned that the baby’s mother still does not get the card and then I got the UN card. Generally, the Rohingya women get the UN card in Malaysia after the birth of a Rohingya child.”(Rohingya female living in Malaysia for 9 years)
“Though I have two children in Myanmar, but after the birth of a child in Malaysia, I got the UN card. I along with my child went to the UN office to get the UN card. The UN people took my baby’s picture to give him the card and at that time, I also got the UN card.”(Rohingya female living in Malaysia for 7 years)
3. Results
3.1. Securing a Livelihood with the UN Card
“In Malaysia not only Rohingyas but also many other refugees are living… They have their passports, but we do not have any documents. The only document we can show the employer is the UN card. Many refugees come to Malaysia as they could easily find a job. The employer even does not ask anything except the UN card and sometimes not even the UN card. Rather they are happy as they can recruit the refugees at a lower cost. If our salary is 1000 ringgit, then the employer needs to pay Malay people 3 times, i.e., 3000 Ringgit. As a result, the refugee people do easily get jobs in Malaysia.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 10 years)
- The participants articulated that after obtaining a UN card, they found it easier to secure work in Malaysia. One of the participants noted, “UN card does not give us the permission to do the job but still, we find more jobs in Malaysia and get the salary at the end of each day.” Participants shared the role of access to a UN card in securing work.
“I did various jobs in Malaysia. There is no scarcity of jobs in Malaysia. Construction work, labour work or even buying and selling fishes etc. were done by me. I did not even stay idle for a day without a job. Various kinds of jobs are available in Malaysia till today. No person is jobless in Malaysia, and we get the job payment every day in the evening. But without a UN card, you will not get the job.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 17 years)
- Although the UN card is seen as the necessary paperwork that supports the participants in securing work, a number of participants pointed to the limited role of the card in offering protections and access to a secure livelihood.
“We were treated as foreigners in Malaysia. Though we had UN cards, we did not get official permission to work there. We had to work in Malaysia but that was not officially permitted and so we were always scared. Malaysian police always disturbed us. The Police mentioned that the UN card does not permit you to do a job. They told us that we could not do our jobs. Then we had to manage by giving a bribe to the police.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 14 years)
- Note here the ambiguity around the role of the UN card. Although the participants pointed to the UN card as an enabler in securing access to work, they simultaneously noted that the UN card does not provide official permission to work. This ambiguity around the UN card shaped participants’ harassment in the hands of the police. The sense of being scared and feeling anxious was communicated across the interviews, and this was intertwined with everyday meanings of health. Moreover, everyday acts such as offering bribes to the police emerged as strategies for survival amidst the ambiguity and the harassment.
3.2. Lower Treatment Costs with the UN Card
“No complaint from a refugee (registered or unregistered) is generally allowed in Malaysia. Another thing when we visit any hospital, our fee is 100 times more than the fee of a Malay resident. Again, after taking 100 times the fee, sometimes they give only 10–20 Paracetamol. This is for the Rohingya refugees who have UN cards, and for those who do not have UN cards, they have to pay 200 times.”(Rohingya female who stayed in Malaysia for 06 years)
- One of the participants who had lived in Malaysia for 14 years mentioned, “When we were sick, we had to pay more money in the hospitals. Even the medical personnel asked us- ‘why do you come to our country?’” While describing his experience in Malaysia with racial discrimination in healthcare, one of the participants mentioned,
“When my wife was pregnant, she went to the clinic for a checkup. But at that time doctors did not behave well with her. They asked my wife, “why do you give birth to children as you do not have any legal documents?” Though we are paying more than double still they show their hatred towards us. When they do any diagnostic test like blood check-up, urine checkups they show their hatred towards us by their attitudes, and they take more than double fees from us.”
“Due to the problems faced by me during the boat journey, I became sick after reaching Malaysia. During about three months boat journey, I could not eat properly, could not use the toilet properly, and had to sleep in a crowded space in the boat. We could not drink fresh water. Instead, we had to drink the salty water of the sea. As a result, I became sick and for the first nine months stay in Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), I could not do any job and at that time, I was unregistered as well.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 05 years)
- Unregistered Rohingya can only visit NGO clinics and some private clinics in Malaysia. When they are unregistered or even registered, the cost of healthcare is unaffordable for many of them [26]. Unregistered or even registered Rohingya refugees are afraid of being arrested by the Malaysian police and so do not travel to seek medical services. One of the participants mentioned that when he went to do some shopping for groceries shortly before arriving in New Zealand, the Malay police harassed him and retained the travel bag that he had purchased for travelling.
“Generally, without the UN card we cannot visit the doctors in Malaysia. So, during my pregnancy period in Malaysia I faced a lot of problems visiting a doctor. You may be able to visit the doctor without the UN card then you need to pay more than the double amount. With the UN card still we had to pay more than the Malay people. But the privilege was with the UN card if the payment of the hospital is 200 Malaysian Ringgit, then you have to pay 50%, i.e., 100 and the rest 50% is paid by the UN/Govt.”(Rohingya female who stayed in Malaysia for 6 years)
“If a Malay resident gives 1 Malay Ringgit, then we have to give 100 Malay Ringgit. It is just the doctors’ fee without any medicine cost. But in the private clinics in Malaysia, all (foreigners and Malay people) have to give the same fee but more treatment cost. In government hospital in Malaysia for Malay people if the treatment cost is 1 dollar Malaysian money then for a Rohingya refugee it is 100 dollar Malaysian money. But there is one thing, if you have a UN card in Malaysia then 50% of your treatment cost is given by the UN and 50% needs to be borne by you.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 11 years)
“My child was born in Malaysia. But the childbirth fee was too much in Malaysia. We had to pay 7000 (seven thousand) Malaysian Ringgit during the birth of my child as at that time I did not have the UN card. As I did not have the UN card, we also faced problems finding hospitals. The Malay police also harassed my husband several times.”(Rohingya female who stayed in Malaysia for 10 years)
3.3. Some Level of Protection with UN Card
“When I entered Malaysia in 1989 at that time, no UN party was there. Sometimes, we were caught by the immigration police, and they pushed us back to Thailand. Then after giving money to the Dalal (broker), we entered Malaysia. But the problem was that all the pushed back persons could not come back to Malaysia. Some may have died on the way. I was also caught by the Malay police 4–5 times and pushed me back to Thailand. It was life at that time.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 29 years)
“Sometimes, they (Malaysian authorities) sent us near the Myanmar border. Again, we struggled to come back to Malaysia as we did not have any documents where we could go. In Thailand there was less opportunity for work and so we all tried to come back to Malaysia to get a job.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 29 years)
“After getting the UN card, I was also arrested by the Malay Police. Then they again put me in the immigration camp. But this time, I could be released within a short period of time as I have had the UN card. When the police got confirmation of my UN card, they released me.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 11 years)
“So many times, the Malay police tried to harass me. As I was driving my motorcycle, the police always tried to disturb me. As a refugee, we were not allowed to take driving licenses in Malaysia and for this when any police saw me, then he wanted some bribe. As a refugee, we were not also allowed to open any Bank account in Malaysia or even not allowed to rent a house. As I was driving the motorbike so many times, I had to give bribes to the police. But if you do not have the UN card then you could not manage the police and would have to go to jail.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 10 years)
3.4. UN Card for Rohingya Child Education
“As refugees we always faced problems in Malaysia. We cannot move freely, we cannot rent any house, our children are not allowed to get education. We always think that without education the kids do not have any future. We understand the importance of education as in our life we did have any opportunity of education. Child education was one of the reasons to apply for third country settlement.”(Rohingya female who stayed in Malaysia for 6 years)
“The UN card does not give us any rights to Malaysia. We can only do our jobs as laborers or any low category jobs, but the UN card does not give us or our children citizenship rights in Malaysia. Even our children do not get Govt. education facilities by the UN card. But with the UN card the children can study only in the UN run school but that is not the formal education.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 10 years)
“When the children are going to school in Malaysia, we face problems. When the children are in class I, no problem but when the kids are in class III, the Malaysian Govt said, the children of refugees could not study further. With the UN card the children can study up to class III or IV. Then we were in tension. Yes, we had many jobs in Malaysia, but the children do not have any future as they could not study more.”(Rohingya male who stayed in Malaysia for 25 years)
3.5. UN Card for Third Country Resettlement
“From 2011, I started to apply to the UN for my third country settlement process. I requested them to help us to send me to any third country. I was called in 2012 for an interview. Then my family member has been called with me by the UN as all of my family members had the UN cards. Then they interviewed me several times. Then the medical test of my family members has been done. Then at last in 2018, I got the opportunity to come to New Zealand. So, about 6 years have been required to finalize my third country settlement process.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 29 years)
“After some months of my application, the UN called me and took my interview. They asked me what problems I faced in Malaysia. I answered all the questions they asked me. I mentioned I could not lead a good life here in Malaysia, faced the problem of giving the house rent, faced the problem of giving the doctors fee etc. I again in person request them to send me abroad. But without the UN card we cannot apply for the third country settlement.”(Rohingya male who lived in Malaysia for 15 years)
“No such problem to apply for the third country settlement as we had UN cards. The main problem was that we did not have any car and sometimes we faced difficulty getting the bus to go to the UN Office. After giving the interviews we had to complete the medical test. But then we had to wait for 3 years after applying to the UN to get the final resettlement in New Zealand.”(Rohingya female who lived in Malaysia for 6 years)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Rahman, M.M.; Dutta, M.J. The United Nations (UN) Card, Identity, and Negotiations of Health among Rohingya Refugees. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3385. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043385
Rahman MM, Dutta MJ. The United Nations (UN) Card, Identity, and Negotiations of Health among Rohingya Refugees. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3385. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043385
Chicago/Turabian StyleRahman, Md Mahbubur, and Mohan J. Dutta. 2023. "The United Nations (UN) Card, Identity, and Negotiations of Health among Rohingya Refugees" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3385. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043385
APA StyleRahman, M. M., & Dutta, M. J. (2023). The United Nations (UN) Card, Identity, and Negotiations of Health among Rohingya Refugees. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3385. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043385