Friends of Refugees

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Archive for the ‘Spokane’ Category

Bodies in river may be missing Nepali-Bhutanese

Posted by Christopher Coen on July 7, 2011

Submerged car found in Spokane River at Boone Avenue and Hogan Street, 1600 block of East Mission.

It appears that police have found the three missing Nepali-Bhutanese young men in Washington state. Police discovered the car they were last seen in, and with three bodies in it, submerged in the Spokane River, near the friend’s apartment where they were last seen. The bodies, however, have not yet been officially identified. The Spokesman Review is covering the tragic case.

Krishna Dhakal…likely died in the cold Spokane River, along with two life-long friends.

Spokane police removed a car from the Spokane River near Mission Park this evening, along with bodies believed to be those of three Bhutanese refugees missing since June 11. However, the bodies have not yet been officially identified.

Dhakal, of Spokane, 28-year-old Dilli Ram Bhattarai and 21-year-old Krishna Dhital, both of Tukwila, were last seen in the black Acura that was pulled out of the river near the 1600 block of East Mission, where Dhakal lived with his family.

Detectives working the case discovered a bumper and license plate this morning in the river near South Riverton and Sinto avenues. The Spokane County sheriff’s helicopter was called in and spotted a car in the river near Boone Avenue and Hogan Street, just downstream from the bumper, which had the license plate from the car the three were last seen in, police said.

Police spokeswoman Officer Jennifer DeRuwe said police initially searched the area after a missing persons report was filed, but the river was about four feet higher at the time. Detectives returned today and were able to see the bumper in the water… Read more here

KREM.com has a video news report.

**UPDATE** July 8, 2011 – Autopsies show that the three drowned

Posted in Nepali Bhutanese, safety, Spokane, Washington, World Relief | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Search continues for 3 missing Nepali-Bhutanese in Washington state

Posted by Christopher Coen on July 4, 2011

Police are still investigating Washington state case involving three young Nepali-Bhutanese men who have been missing since June 11. They were last seen with a friend at an apartment complex in Spokane. Police are looking for a black 2003 Acura with Washington license plate 933ZGH that the young men were seen in. Anyone with information about the men can call the Tukwila Police at 206-433-1808 or an anonymous tip line at
206-431-3689. If anyone sees the men, they should call 911. The
Tukwila Reporter has more:

The search continues this month by Tukwila Police and Spokane Police for three missing Bhutanese men, including two men from Tukwila and one from Spokane.

Dilli Ram Bhattarai, 28 and Krishna L. Dhital, 21, both of Tukwila, and Krishna Dhakal, 17, of Spokane, have been missing since June 11, according to a media release from the Bhutanese Community Resource Center in SeaTac. The men were reported missing June 13 by family members.

Bhattarai and Dhital traveled to Spokane to visit family. The three were last seen with a friend at an apartment complex in Spokane. Bhattarai and Dhakal are cousins and Dhital was a neighbor while the three were in refugee camps in Nepal.

Tukwila Police are working with Spokane Police to find the men, according to a July 1 email from Mike Murphy, Tukwila Police spokesman. Spokane is the lead investigator because the men were last seen in that area.

“We have a detective assigned as well and we are working with Spokane to coordinate our effort,” Murphy said. “I am not aware of anything that appears to be foul play but, as you know from the family, this is highly unusual and that angle is not yet ruled out.”

Family members told police that culturally, it’s very uncommon that the men have run away from their relatives. Relatives suspect the men might be in life-threatening situations…

Bhattarai is the father of a baby girl. He was scheduled to report to work on June 13. Dhital just graduated from Foster High School in Tukwila. Dhakal, a sophomore, was to report back to school in Spokane after the weekend they went missing… Read more here

Posted in Nepali Bhutanese, police, Spokane, Washington, World Relief | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Nepali-Bhutanese young men disappear in Spokane

Posted by Christopher Coen on June 21, 2011

**UPDATE** — July 7, 2011

Media outlets are reporting that three young Nepali-Bhutanese men went missing ten days ago in North Spokane, Washington. The three were last seen playing soccer at a local park, going home to eat, and then heading out again. NWCN has the story:

SPOKANE, Wash. – Police need help finding three young men who went missing ten days ago.

They are Bhutanese refugees who came to Washington two years ago.

Family and friends say the men were at Mission Park in North Spokane playing soccer just before they went missing. They came home, had dinner, and then went out again. That’s the last time anyone saw them.

Family members filed a missing person’s report. Now loved ones and staff at World Relief are trying to get the word out about the mysterious disappearance… Read more here

Another article at KXLY-4 reports that two young men, Bhattarai and Dhital, are from Tukwila (in western Washington) and that Dhakal, a 17-year-old, is from Spokane.

…17-year-old Krishna Dhakal, a Lewis and Clark High School student, 28-year-old Dilli Ram Bhattarai and 21-year-old Krishna Dhital disappeared two weeks ago. They were last seen shortly after playing soccer at a park near Whittier Pool on June 11.

…When Dhakal didn’t show up for finals at Lewis and Clark two weeks ago, police and his mom knew something wasn’t right. Dhakal was last seen with his cousin Dilli Ram Bhattarai and his friend Krishna Dhital. Bhattarai and Dhital are both from Tukwila in western Washington. No one has seen them or been able to reach them by cellphone.

[family friend Anna] Demmert says the Bhutanese are a very trusting culture and she’s afraid that may have landed Dhakal, Bhattarai and Dhital in trouble… Read more here

On a video clip Dhakal’s mother says via an interperter that they tried calling the three but that their cellphones are “not working”.

If you have any information please call Crime Check 509-456-2233.

Posted in Nepali Bhutanese, safety, Spokane, World Relief | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Church overwhelmed; World Relief Spokane office defiant

Posted by Christopher Coen on September 12, 2010

A church working with World Relief in Spokane says that they cannot keep up with the flow of refugees to the city, according to an article in The Spokane Spokesman. The church’s pastor says that World Relief must draw the line somewhere, or have it drawn for them.

In the fall of 2006, a young Spokane pastor and his wife welcomed an extended family of 12 ethnic Burmese refugees into their East Central neighborhood church called Jacob’s Well and prayed that more would come.

Nearly four years later, that family has been joined by more than 600 Burmese, and the Rev. Eric Blauer wonders how many more refugees from around the world his church, the city and the nation can handle in these tough economic times.

From our standpoint it’s hard to figure out how we can keep receiving refugees who are unprepared for the realities they find when they get here,” Blauer said…

ardent refugee advocates such as Blauer believe there are limits to the education, health care and social service resources available to support large, low-income populations of people whose attempts to find employment are impeded by culture and language.

World Relief and other voluntary refugee resettlement agencies must draw the line somewhere or have it drawn for them, they say. here

But the recalcitrant director of World Relief in Spokane, Mark Kadel, indicates that he has no intention of listening to feedback from churches, such as Jacob’s Well, that are working with his organization. He intends to try to bring MORE refugees to Spokane, and not less. Despite his defiance, he may have trouble getting through Washington state’s Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance, whose chief, Tom Medina, says that given the economic situation, this is not the time to increase the flow of refugees to the area.

…World Relief, the resettlement agency responsible for bringing thousands of refugees to Spokane over the past 24 years, says it would like to bring more – not fewer…

Last year, Washington state received 2,588 refugees. Of the 80,000 refugees authorized to be admitted into the United States this year, Washington is expected to get as many as 2,900, including 500 in Spokane. World Relief expected to bring even more to Spokane next year.

The Baltimore-based agency has no intention of slowing the flow of refugees, says Mark Kadel, World Relief’s director in Spokane.

Absolutely not. If anything, we need to move forward,” Kadel said in a recent interview.

Kadel said the United States provides a safe haven for less than 1 percent of the 13 million people suffering in refugee camps, and “we are not doing our share”…

…Tom Medina, chief of Washington’s Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance, looked at the state budget and advised the six resettlement agencies operating in the state to slow the flow of refugees this year.

Two other agencies – the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants and Catholic Charities of Spokane – attempted this year to begin new resettlement programs in Spokane. Medina convinced them that given the economic situation, this was not the time to initiate new refugee streams.

And then this statement:

Although resettlement agencies like World Relief are not required to notify municipalities about the number of refugees they may be bringing in, they are required under the federal Refugee Act to show that they have at least consulted with someone in state government.

That’s not correct. According to the State Department contract that World Relief signed, the Cooperative Agreement, World Relief must, “…colaborate with state and local officials, other agencies and services in the area in implementing a plan to rationalize the numbers of refugees to be resettled and to ensure quality services and a welcoming atmosphere are provided to refugees.”

By the way, I had an experience myself with Mark Kadel. In 2003 I discovered Lost Boys of Sudan refugees at World Relief’s Tampa affiliate in New Port Richey who complained of severe neglect and mistreatment by the agency. The refugees said that World Relief placed them in unfurnished apartments where they had to sleep on the floor for months, and that the agency made them work in their warehouse moving furniture and then setting up apartments for new refugees, but never paid them for the work. They also said that they had to spend days cleaning nursing homes but were never paid for the work. The World Relief refugees said that before they did the cleaning that a World Relief employee made them sign pieces of paper that he had folded over so that they couldn’t see what they were signing. When World Relief finally helped them get jobs, the jobs were in a different county, and the refugees had to wake early at 4am to commute by bike three hours to their jobs.

I wrote to the State Department and the ORR to forward the refugees’ complaints, but the agencies did not bother to respond. I then wrote to the agencies again in 2004 and 2005 to report ongoing complaints from the refugees. In May 2005 the refugees told us that Mark Kadel came to their apartments and represented himself as a U.S. State Department employee. One of the refugees said that when he asked for Mr. Kadel’s business card, Mr. Kadel failed to produce one, and that he then asked Mr. Kadel to leave the apartment. Mr. Kadel also contacted me, and this time, misrepresented himself as a “mediator”, and tried to get information from me about the complaint. Of course, the organization that is the subject of the complaint could never act as a mediator.

State Department monitors then showed up in New Port Richey to talk to World Relief employees and the refugees. After speaking to dozens of refugees and inspecting World Relief’s records, which indicated extreme disrespect for their refugee clients, the State Department then canceled World Relief Tampa’s refugee resettlement contract.

Posted in Burma/Myanmar, churches, Cooperative Agreement, evangelical, faith-based, local officials, failure to notify, ORR, Spokane, State Department, Sudanese, Washington, World Relief | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments »

Faith-based control of refugee resettlement in some cities

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 9, 2010

Should faith-based groups be able to decide which members of the community may take part in the federal government’s local refugee resettlement efforts? Kelcie Moseley asks that question in an op-ed at the University of Idaho’s Argonaut.

It’s our group’s position that faith-based groups’ participation in the U.S. refugee resettlement program be limited to providing required services and material items to refugees. Although the government oversight agencies claim that they prohibit religious groups from requiring refugees to pray, attend religious services, preaching to refugees, and the like, it seems that there are a myriad number of other ways the groups are able to infuse their particular religious beliefs into the process. Exactly what business do they have intruding their personal religious beliefs into refugees’ and community volunteers’ lives?

The writer of the op-ed claims that to volunteer her time and efforts for refugee resettlement in Spokane that she first had to sign a World Relief application form’s “spiritual assessment”, which required her to explain her “spiritual relationship with the Lord”. I suppose people might say that if she isn’t able to profess a relationship or belief in the Christian god or with World Relief’s particular evangelical beliefs that she could instead choose to volunteer with a different refugee resettlement agency; except that World Relief is one of only two government contractors resettling refugees in Spokane, the other one being Catholic Charities.

A perusal of the State Department inspection (monitoring) reports for the refugee resettlement agencies shows that other resettlement agencies have, among other things, been caught requiring refugees to pray or attend religious services. One agency only allowed refugees from its religion to take part in the Matching Grant Program (see State Dept. monitoring report).

I had the experience of watching one faith-based resettlement agency take part in a successful effort to prevent a dying 29-year-old refugee from returning to his wife and children in Africa. They believed that his soul would only be able to get into heaven if they were able to keep him here and “minister” to his soul. That wasn’t his belief, but they had complete control. They went as far as calling a bank official and conspiring with the bank to close a private donation fund account, set up to help the refugee buy a plane ticket home, and return all the donations to the donors. The fact that these actions were illegal did not prevent it from happening.

Posted in Spokane, USCCB, Washington, World Relief | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 10 Comments »

 
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