Evicted from the Land of Hope

Approximately 50,000 workers are gambling with their lives in the small town of Nunukan, East Kalimantan. They're willing to stay in overcrowded and suffocating tents, even sleeping in parks and on stall porches. Hunger and disease are imminent: food and water are far from adequate. In the past month alone, 35 lives have been lost.

Although they've been expelled from Malaysia together with hundreds of thousands of other workers, they still hope to return there after processing the necessary papers in Nunukan. The new immigration law in the neighboring country requires that they hold passports and work agreements if they don't want to be imprisoned for five years and receive six strokes of the cane.

To the majority of the workers, only the neighboring country can fulfill their dreams. As such, they're willing to suffer—even to be forgotten.


September 17, 2002

CARRYING with it millions of hopes, the ship Samudera Express is making slow progress. It seems reluctant to leave the Tanon Taka Port in Nunukan, East Kalimantan. The 400 passengers on board two weeks ago were impatient to reach Tawau Port on the east coast of Malaysia; Indonesian workers who just a month before had been unceremoniously evicted from their places of work in Malaysia.

One of the passengers, Erna, clung to her husband's hand w

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