Sunday, December 28, 2008
Historical Background
Burma is home to people of more than one hundred ethnicities; each has a distinct language and culture. Before the British occupied Upper Burma in 1886, Burma was a feudal country and many ethnic people had sovereign power within their own territories. The mountainous border areas inhabited by various ethnic nationalities were largely left under the rule of their traditional chiefs. Burma has not had real peace since gaining its independence from Britain in 1948. The military coup of 1962 in Burma has led to civil war and economic crisis, which has forced thousands of civilian people to be internally displaced and made people leave for neighboring countries. Civil war began a few months after Burma gained independence and from 1962 to the present day the country has been ruled by a military dictatorship.
The rural villages’ economies are very poor, with the majority of villagers surviving on subsistence farming. The discrimination, decades of civil war and development policies based on extraction of natural resources in ethnic areas have created a major gap between urban and rural areas. Burma spends the lowest percent of GDP on education and health, with most of their budget spent on funding the military. While the military is well funded, the youth of Burma lack basic educational opportunities such as school and qualified teachers due to rising school fees in urban areas.
The Lahu are an Indigenous of Burma. The Lahu people are descended from the Yi (Lo Lo) branch of the Tibetan-Burmese and originated in South Western Yunnan, China. The majority of the Lahu people currently live in the mountains of Eastern Shan State. The Lahu live by hillside cultivation, gardening and farming.
The Lahu live under the control and suppression of the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), the military government of Burma. The SPDC frequently enter Lahu villages and persecute the people by killing innocent villagers, taking their property, kidnapping villagers to perform forced labour for army camps, committing sexual violence on the women and forcing migration. Widespread human rights abuses by the military, including extortion, forced labour, kidnappings, extra-judicial killing, torture, the use of child soldiers, rape, arbitrary detention, intimidation, forced relocation, land confiscations, burning villages, arbitrary taxation, exploitation and destruction of property have been documented in all ethnic areas.
For these reasons, many young Lahu people have left Burma for Thailand and the Lahu Youth Development Organization (LYDO) was set up at the Thai-Burma border on 10th October 1997. The Lahu Youth Organization (LYO) was also established by the youths in Mae Sot and at the Thai-Burma border, Mae Sot on 31st July 2004 in order to obtain safety and lost rights and with the purpose of helping others in Burma. At a meeting held on 1st May 2007, the leaders of the two organizations (LYDO and LYO) consulted and assented to transform into one organization, creating the United Lahu Youth Organization (ULYO) for more effective implementation of our programs.
Today, ULYO is a member of Adolescent Reproductive Health Networking (ARHN), Nationalities Youth Forum (NYF) and Drug and Alcohol Recovery and Education Team (DARE) as well as collaborate with other ethnic Organizations.
Labels: Historical Background
Aims
Labels: Aims
Objectives
To make our society more economically and politically accessible, and socially just.
To improve and promote living standards, health, education, social and human rights for Lahu people.
To preserve and improve the Lahu culture, literature and customs.
To build solidarity among all Lahu people.
To implement social and relief programs to meet the needs of the Lahu people.
To achieve equality of rights and self-determination for the Lahu, and, likewise, for other ethnic nationalities.
To systematically collect and document human rights violations in Lahu areas.
Labels: Objectives
ULYO's Activitives
The health situation of the Lahu people is poor. There are no clinics, not enough health workers and/or health services in Lahu areas. The villagers have little awareness of health prevention. Some of the villagers use opium as medicine, to help them recover in times of severe illness and pain. As a result of using opium, a number of addicts can be found in the villages.
For this reason, ULYO works with Back Pack Health Worker Team to provide health care and education training to resolve those problems. In addition to visiting the village schools and providing vitamin A, de-worming, they also teach the students about personal hygiene and the importance of cutting their fingernails etc.

The Drug and Alcohol Recovery and Education (DARE) team provide training workshops and education for drug prevention to decrease the number of addicts mentioned above.
Given additional resources, we would be able to set up an addiction recovery center to help those Lahu suffering from addictions inside Burma.
Labels: Health
Education


Labels: Education
Documentation
ULYO systematically collects and records information to reveal the suffering of Lahu people to the world, as well as to obtain evidence to win back lost rights when transition from the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) dictatorship to a genuine Federal Democratic System finally occurs.
Labels: Documentation
Social and Relief Program
ULYO formed the Lahu Relief Team to help Lahu people with their physical and mental needs. We provide basic food and clothes during natural disasters, and war and fire victims with help from people who can afford to offer it by cooperating with locally based organizations. We visit victims for counseling, pray with them and encourage them. We also help people who have fled to Thailand because of political persecution. In addition, we offer support to migrant workers. We help the Lahu people who have fled to Thailand for the above-mentioned reasons to get jobs and work permit cards.
Labels: Social and Relief rogram
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