The latest in FMO’s growing selection of podcasts focuses on a new Chinese government policy, recruiting young Uyghur women from majority Uyghur areas of East Turkestan, and transferring them to work in factories in urban areas of eastern China. Under this policy, thousands of Uyghur women have been removed from their families and placed into substandard working conditions thousands of miles from their homes. Though official propaganda slogans promote the program as an overwhelmingly positive experience for these women, less than two years after the initiation of the policy, it has already left a history of broken promises and shattered families. In interviews recorded by film-maker Simon James, between September 2008 and July 2009, four experts talk about the impact this programme is having: * Dr. Michael Dillon, visiting professor at Tsinghua University, Beijing * Omer Kanat, Uyghur Service at Radio Free Asia * Amy Reger, Uyghur Human Rights Project (UHRP) * Enver Tohti, chairman of the UK Uighur Association The podcast ‘Relocation of Young Uyghur Women in China’ is now available on Forced Migration Online: http://www.forcedmigration.org/podcasts/uyghur-women/ FMO Podcasts: Forced Migration Online offers a collection of audio podcasts that can be downloaded for free and listened to either on your computer or on the move (http://www.forcedmigration.org/podcasts/). The podcast series includes lectures from forced migration events and discussions between experts on forced migration issues from academia, practitioner organizations and international agencies. Also increasingly the series features interviews with refugees and other displaced people. The podcasts are in MP3 audio format. On your computer you can either use just a web browser (such as Firefox or Internet Explorer), your default multimedia software such as (QuickTime, Windows Media Player or RealPlayer) or dedicated podcast aggregator software. The version for iTunes is synchronised with the slides of the lecture. The software can be downloaded at http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/
Category Archives: Blogs
ToR for a Senior Research Consultancy for the Migrants’ Needs and Vulnerability Assessment in the Gauteng Province
Funding opportunity: Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration
(Un)Trafficked in NYC
An absolutely extraordinary thread where you can read the real time efforts of a community of bloggers to save 2 women from being trafficked in New York City. Internet activism at its best.
http://ask.metafilter.com/154334/Help-me-help-my-friend-in-DC
Uganda/Rwanda
Uganda has been forcibly repatriating Rwandans over the past year (see www.refugeelawproject.org), Uganda,Rwanda,and UNHCR have annunced they are to sign the Cessation clause by the end of the year. But Uganda has been receiving refugees who are fleeing persecution in Rwanda over the past months. Worse still, Rwandan operatives are active in Uganda bringing great insecurity to refugees and those claiming asylum from Rwanda. Persons who have well-documented examples of experiences of insecurity of refugees in Rwanda are encouraged to send these to me at Barbara@fahamu.org, marked CONFIDENTIAL. These will be used to assist a group of judges to build a cdase against the signing of the cessation clause, Anyother use of the information received will be redacted so as to protect the anonimity of the individual named. Thank you. Barbara Harrell-Bond
Tertiary Education Research Cluster: Mission Statement and Core Principles
SOUTHERN AFRICA YOUTH VISION DEVELOPMENT ( SAYOVI)
stop forced migration?
governance for a better tomorrow’s africa
The african continent has been characterized by political chaos, the absence of democracy.As a result, many countries find themselves in endless wars leading in tragedies such as genocide and mass killings. The leaders are to be hold accountable for all the chaos on the continent. In this blog shall be focussed on just some points among many others.
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The kind of leadership, the reason behind the bad leadership,…
The treatment of the refugees in South Africa
the refugees are protected by the United Natons. They are written in the international conventions and laws.]
The laws are known as the international rufugees laws. Most of the countries in the world agree to refugee rights. All refugees have these rigths:
– regfugees cannot be forced to return to a country if they are afraid of persecution or discriminattion there. they cannot be forced to go if they will be in danger.
– refugees