Friends of Refugees

A U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program Watchdog Group

Archive for the ‘Lansing’ Category

Refugees being attacked at residential complex in Lansing, MI since November

Posted by Christopher Coen on April 26, 2012

Car break-ins, ’30-plus’ broken windows, an old man getting punched in the face, a young woman…kicked’, and theft.” Those are some of the incidents at Summer Place Townhomes in Lansing, MI that refugees say have happened to them since November. The refugees, from Burma, Bhutan and Iraq, say they have been the target of a group of 10 and 20 local teenagers. Some of the refugees find it hard to sleep at night, while others are taking turns staying up at night to watch for trouble. The Lansing Police Department doesn’t seem to know much about what’s happening though refugees have reported the ongoing crimes. An article at Lansing City Pulse has the story:

…Bo is a refugee from Burma and has lived in Summer Place Townhomes for about seven years…

…since November, Bo and his family haven’t been sleeping due to a combination of fear and duty — they take turns staying up all night to keep intruders away. Several other neighbors in Summer Place report similar situations.

It’s been quiet, safe, secure,” Bo said, referring to the years leading up to November. Then he rattles off nearly daily instances when he and his neighborhood have been the target of a group of local teenagers, between 10 and 20 of them: car break-ins, “30-plus” broken windows, an old man getting punched in the face, a young woman “about my age kicked by those people,” theft.

So this is why you stand guard overnight. “Yeah, it’s very dangerous. We all worry. You gotta watch out and stay awake.”

Bo fears the worst: that the harassment will turn deadly. At one point, he armed himself with a pellet gun, which he said was subsequently taken by the Lansing Police Department. “We are not shooting for anything. I believe I’m doing the right thing. It’s like I’m security, protecting all people, not just the Burmese.”

As I walk through the neighborhood Saturday before meeting Bo, refugees from Iraq and Bhutan tell similar stories. 

Dozens of young children — from toddlers to teenagers — were playing in the street and courtyards. Adults gathered around, keeping an eye on them. The day before, the group came and broke a car window, said Ammar Mahdi, a 41-year-old refugee from Iraq. Mahdi’s English was broken and, at times, his 10-year-old son, Yousif, acted as a translator.

We need help. It’s every day,” Mahdi said. “I am not sleeping.”..

…Devi Ghimisey is from Bhutan and about the same age as Mahdi. He lived in a refugee camp in Nepal for 18 years before coming to the U.S. three years ago.

They come while we’re sleeping. Kids playing football — they come and beat them up. They come and throw rocks,” Ghimisey said.

Recently, the group stole Mohammed Mohahamed’s children’s three bikes. Two weeks ago, they broke his neighbor’s house windows. Mohahamed is 33 and also came from Iraq. “I want to change this trouble,” he said. “I want the street here safe.”…

While this has been going on, arrests have been scarce…neighbors say the response from the Lansing Police Department has been inadequate…

…neighbors say they feel discouraged from calling the police because the trouble keeps happening — even after reports…

…Alfonso Salas, who owns Lansing Athletics sporting goods store…says that while it’s a rough neighborhood to begin with, he thinks it’s racially charged. And he warns that something needs to change, or “it’s gonna get bad.”

Because of the color of their skin and who they are, they get beat up on,” he said. “I feel for them… Read more here

Posted in abuse, Burma/Myanmar, children, hate crimes, housing, Iraqi, Lansing, Nepali Bhutanese, police, safety | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Burundi Refugees In Michigan Passenger Van Rollover Accident, 1 dead

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 28, 2012

A 14-passenger 2002 Chevrolet Express van overloaded with 17 people, many of them not wearing seat belts, rolled over on I-96 in Michigan near Grand Rapids. An 18-year-old Burundian refugee named Ombeni Erasto died, and his sister reportedly lost part of her leg. Several other people in the van were injured. State police said the van’s rear tire blew, causing the 22-year-old driver to lose control. An article at the Lansing State Journal gives some details:

LOWELL TWP. — The Lansing teenager who died Sunday in an accident near Grand Rapids was on his way home from a church choir performance that he had been looking forward to for a while, said his younger brother.

Omberi Erasto, 18…was one of 17 people ranging in age from infant to adult in a 14-passenger 2002 Chevrolet Express van, which was traveling east on Interstate 96 in Lowell Township. State police said the van’s rear tire blew, causing the 22-year-old Lansing driver to lose control. The van struck another vehicle and slid sideways off the roadway.

The accident killed Erasto, a senior at Lansing Eastern High School. Several relatives, including three of his sisters, also were injured in the accident, said Erasto’s younger brother, Shukurani Nyabenda, 16. Nyabenda said other family members were also in the van…

…His family came to Michigan from Tanzania as refugees about five years ago, Nyabenda said. Erasto was born in Burundi… Read more here

…and this from WOOD-TV 8:

LANSING, Mich. (WOOD) – The 15-passenger van that overturned along I-96 Sunday carried 17 members of Lansing’s Burundi Choir who were returning home after a concert in Grand Rapids.

Ombeni Erasto died in the crash , and his sister reportedly lost part of her leg. Several other people were injured, and many were not wearing seat belts.

The group includes many Burundi refugees who fled their country during the civil war and ended up in Tanzanian refugee camps… Read more here

A report from the WILX media outlet says that out of the 17 on board, over half were under the age of 18, including three infants.

These vans are not safe when used for their intended purpose of carrying the maximum allowable number of passengers. The vans should never be overloaded, and must be underloaded. In addition, fuel tanks should be kept full to help lower the center of gravity, all passengers must wear seat belts, tires must be regularly inspected, and only people experienced with driving passenger vans should be at the wheel.

In December three refugees died in a passenger van rollover in Amarillo, Texas. Another van rolled in November near Rushmore, Minnesota. In early 2011 there were van rollover accidents involving refugees in central Georgia (and here) and northern Georgia. A passenger van rollover in Arizona in 2009 killed six refugees.

Posted in Burundian, churches, Lansing, Michigan, passenger van roll-over, teenagers | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Smoke Detectors and Apartment House Fires

Posted by Christopher Coen on December 16, 2011

Last month I visited a recent refugee family arriving from Africa. I noticed that the smoke detector in their apartment had a red light – a dead battery. Although the US State Department supposedly requires resettlement agencies to make sure that each refugee case has a working smoke detector, that doesn’t always happen. The problem with this is that the low-income housing units that we resettle refugees into are also prone to apartment house fires, and the dead battery in the smoke alarm presents a danger. The most recent fire I’m aware of was a fire on Tuesday night that displaced a Bhutanese refugee family resettled to Lansing, Mich. A Lansing State Journal article details the case:

LANSING - Damber Magar and his family were at home Tuesday night, watching television, when they heard a knock on the door.

They were told their neighbor’s apartment was on fire, said Damber, 16, who went outside with his parents and older sister and saw smoke coming from the roof.

Fire broke out at about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Woodside Meadows town houses…said Eric Weber, Lansing fire spokesman.

Firefighters have been unable to determine a cause, Weber said. They ruled out intentional and mechanical causes, but were not able to rule out electrical items that plug into outlets.

It appears the fire started in a common room, Weber said. Of six units in the building, four are unable to be occupied due to fire, smoke or water damage…

…Damber said he and his family are Bhutanese refugees from Nepal and have lived in Lansing for one year… Read more here

Posted in apartment house fires, housing, Lansing, Nepali Bhutanese | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Few resources for college-age refugees

Posted by Christopher Coen on September 30, 2011


Although there are between 400-700 refugees resettled to Lansing, Michigan each year, there are few resources for college-age refugees. Most of the services and agencies that cater to refugees’ needs instead focus on children and families. This leaves these young people resettled halfway around the world in a strange place and a vulnerable position — with no family or friends to support them. Luckily, in Lansing other young people have stepped forward to help these refugees. An article in The State News explains:

…[Kaba, a 24-year-old refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo] never met his real family. As a child in Uganda, he was taken in by a Guinean man and raised in the Congo. Kaba’s adopted father raised him as his own, and Kaba came to know the man’s four children as brothers and sisters. In 2004, conflict arose in the Congo, causing Kaba and his family to flee back to Uganda. But before they could escape, Kaba’s father was killed.

Kaba said his father was the most important person in his life, and he was devastated by the loss. But there was little time to mourn his loss.

“We arrived in Uganda in 2005 in August, and in October I went (away) to work for six months,” Kaba said. “When I came back around (March 2006), I didn’t find (my family) at home. They were swift, they moved and they didn’t tell me where they went.”

For the next two years, Kaba remained in a refugee camp until he was selected for resettlement by U.N. officials in 2008 and was flown to Lansing….

…many refugees, such as Kaba, are resettled halfway around the world in a strange place with no family or friends to support them.

Suddenly, these young people have to learn how to live on their own, provide for themselves and to interact with people who speak another language, [Community relations and marketing director for St. Vincent Catholic Charities Julie Picot] said. Tasks that might seem simple, such as riding the bus or shopping at Meijer,
can be incredibly difficult to learn, she said.

But harder still is healing the mental and emotional wounds that have been inflicted upon these refugees before their arrival, she said…

But for refugees such as Kaba, beyond those essentials lies a desire for something more, something many refugees in his situation struggle to find —companionship.

Finding a friend

With between 400-700 refugees coming to Lansing each year, there are many services and agencies that cater to their needs, but the focus for most of those groups is centered on children and families, MSU alumnus Ken Chester said.

But there are few resources for college-age refugees,
Chester said.

Because of this shortcoming, Chester founded Refugee/Immigrant Young-Adult Neighbor, or RYAN, in 2008 based on the work he did as a student at MSU and a member of IVAC.

After working with a young refugee during an IVAC project in 2007, Chester realized this segment of the refugee population was being isolated from the rest of the community.

“The thing that really touched me was when he said, ‘You’re my only friend in the community,’” Chester said… Read more here

Posted in Congolese, Lansing, Michigan, St. Vincent Catholic Charities (Lansing), young adults | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 85 other followers