Aplikasi enam dimensi kelompok minoriti berdasarkan pendekatan Kinloch: Perubahan sosio-politik minoriti Rohingya (Application of six dimensions of minority group based on Kinloch approach: The socio-political change of Rohingya minority)

Noor Farhana Ahmad Pazil

Abstract


Kehidupan golongan pelarian di negara penerima telah menyebabkan mereka berhadapan dengan pelbagai reaksi daripada masyarakat majoriti. Kajian ini memfokuskan pada minoriti Rohingya yang menetap di Malaysia. Operasi penghapusan etnik di Myanmar telah menyebabkan pengusiran berlaku dalam kalangan Rohingya dan mengakibatkan mereka digelar dengan pelbagai identiti seperti pelarian, pemohon suaka, golongan tanpa negara, orang hanyut serta etnik minoriti. Penindasan tehadap Rohingya di Myanmar telah menyebabkan kemunculan etnik ini di Malaysia menerusi migrasi secara besar-besaran bermula pada tahun 1978. Minoriti Rohingya secara umumnya dikategorikan sebagai golongan pelarian di Malaysia. Oleh itu, mereka berhadapan dengan undang-undang yang telah digariskan oleh kerajaan terhadap golongan pelarian. Sehingga hari ini, UNHCR (2020) mencatatkan anggaran 101,010 pelarian Rohingya yang telah mendaftar di Malaysia. Kajian ini akan merungkaikan hubungan antara masyarakat tempatan dan minoriti Rohingya di Selayang, Selangor dengan mengaplikasikan enam dimensi kelompok minoriti berdasarkan pendekatan Kinloch (1979). Kaedah kualitatif telah digunakan iaitu dengan menemu bual empat orang lelaki dan dua orang wanita etnik Rohingya di Selayang serta rujukan data sekunder daripada kajian perpustakaan seperti buku, jurnal, tesis, keratan akhbar dan data atas talian. Hasil kajian menunjukkan bahawa berlakunya sekatan dalam mendapatkan faedah dalam institusi terpenting seperti pekerjaan, pendidikan, serta kesihatan. Namun, kewujudan gerakan-gerakan sosial yang membantu golongan pelarian khususnya Rohingya dalam pelbagai aspek telah memberi ruang untuk minoriti ini meneruskan kelangsungan kehidupan di negara penerima. Interaksi yang baik antara kelompok majoriti dan minoriti Rohingya juga membantu mereka dalam beradaptasi dengan kehidupan di Malaysia.

Kata kunci: gerakan sosial, kelompok minoriti, migrasi, pelarian, perubahan sosio-politik, Rohingya

The survival of the refugees in the host society caused them to face the reactions and acceptance of the majority ethnics. This study focuses on the Rohingya minority group residing in Malaysia. The ethnic cleansing operation in Myanmar has resulted in the expulsion of the Rohingya and resulting in various identities such as refugees, asylum seekers, stateless people, boat people and ethnic minorities. The suppression of the Rohingya in Myanmar has led to a massive migration starting from 1978 in Malaysia. The Rohingya minority group is generally categorised as refugees in Malaysia. Therefore, they need to adhere to the laws that has been outlined by the governments for the refugees. UNHCR (2020) recorded an estimate of 101,010 of Rohingya refugees who had registered in Malaysia. This study will discover the relationship between the local community and Rohingya minority group in Selayang, Selangor by applying six dimensions of minority group based on Kinloch (1979) approach. The qualitative method was used through in-depth interview session with four Rohingya men and two Rohingya women in Selayang. The secondary sources from previous studies was referred such as books, journals, theses, newspaper articles and online data. The results showed that there was a restriction in the most important institutions such as employment, education, and health. However, the existence of social movements that help the refugees in various aspects have provided an opportunity for the Rohingya minority group to continue their survival in the host society. Good interaction between the majority group and Rohingya minority group can also support them in an adaptation of life in Malaysia.

Keywords: social movement, minority group, migration, refugee, socio-political changes, Rohingya


Full Text:

PDF

References


Australian Government Department of Immigration and Citizenship. (2006). East Timor Born. Australia: Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population and Housing.

Askland, H. H. (2007). Habitus, Practice and Agency of Young East Timorese Asylum Seekers in Australia. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 8(3), 235-249.

Bernama. (2015). Sindiket Pemerdagangan Rohingya. Retrieved from http://www.astroawani. com/berita-malaysia/infografik-sindiket-pemerdagangan-rohingya-61620

Beswick, D. G. & Hills, M. D. (1972). A survey of ethnocentrism in Australia. Australian Journal of Psychology, 24, 211-225.

Crockford, F. (2007). Contested Belonging: East Timorese Youth in the Diaspora. Tesis PhD, Australian National University.

Dali, A. M. & Abdullah, A. (2012). Air Mata Kesengsaraan Rohingya: Identiti, Penindasan dan Pelarian. Malaysia: Inteam Publishing.

Hamzah, I. S., Daud, S. & Idris, N. A.. (2016). Pelarian Rohingya dan isu-isu kontemporari di Malaysia. Geografia-Malaysian Journal of Society and Space, 12(9), 11-23.

Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (1999). New Country, New Stories: Discrimination and Disadvantage Experienced by People in Small and Emerging Communities. Sydney: Race Discrimination Commissioner.

Hyman, I., Vu, N. & Beiser, M. (2000). Post-migration stresses among Southeast Asian refugee youth in Canada. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 3, 281.

International Rescue Committee. (2018). Resettlement and The Rohingya. Retrieved from https://www.lfsrm.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/ResettlementandRohingyaIRC.pdf

International Rescue Committee. (2020). No time to lose: An urgent call for access to quality education for rohingya children in Cox’s Bazar. Retrieved from https://reliefweb.int/ sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/ircaccesstoeducationrohingyav4.pdf

Kassim, A. (2009). Filipino refugees in Sabah: State responses, public stereotypes and the dilemma over their future. Southeast Asian Studies, 47(1), 52-88.

Kinloch, G. C. (1979). The Sociology of Minority Group Relations. United States of America: Prentice Hall.

Lewa, C. (2009). Asia’s new boat people. Forced Migration Review, 30.

Little, W. & McGivern, R. (2012). Introduction to sociology - 1st Canadian edition. OpenStax College. https://opentextbc.ca/introductiontosociology

Medecins Sans Frontieres. (2002). 10 Years for The Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh: Past, Present and Future. Holland: Medecins Sans Frontieres.

Pikkarainen, H. & Brodin, B. (2008). Discrimination of national minorities in the education system. Laporan Ombudsmannen Mot Etnisk Diskriminering (DO) 2008, 2.

Rees, S. (2004). Refuge or retrauma? The impact of asylum seeker status on the wellbeing of East Timorese women asylum seekers residing in the Australian community. Australian Psychiatry, 11(1), 96-101.

Schweitzer, R., Perkoulidis, S., Krome, S., Ludlow, C. & Ryan, M. (2005). Attitudes towards refugees: The dark side of prejudice in Australia. Australian Journal of Psychology, 57(3), 170-179.

Skeels, A. (2012). Refugee children’s participation in protection: a case study from Uganda. Research Paper Centre for Migration Policy Research, Swansea University United Kingdom, 241.

Suan, T. P. (2006). Kehidupan Rohingya di Malaysia: Perjuangan dalam ketidakpastian hidup. Akademika, 68(1), 111-122.

The Equal Rights Trust (ERT). (2010). Trapped In A Cycle of Flight: Stateless Rohingya in Malaysia. UK: ERT.

UNDP. (2018). Impacts of the Rohingya refugee influx on host communities. Retrieved from https://issuu.com/bdundp/docs/impacts_of_the_rohingya_refigee_inf

UNHCR. (2020). Figures at a glance in Malaysia. Retrieved from https://www.unhcr.org/ en-my/figures-at-a-glance-in-malaysia.html

Walker, I. (1994). Attitudes to minorities: Survey evidence of Western Australians’ attitudes to Aborigines, Asians and women. Australian Journal of Psychology, 46(3), 1-7. Retrieved from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313136705_Attitudes_to_minorities_ Survey_evidence_of_Western_Australians'_attitudes_to_Aborigines_Asians_and_women

Yoshikawa, L. & Teff, M. (2011). Malaysia: Invest in Solutions for Refugees. Washington: Refugees International.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.