Yahoo – AFP,
Nurdin Hasan, 15 May 2015
About 900 Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants made it to shore in Indonesia and Thailand Friday, as Myanmar undermined calls for a coordinated response to Southeast Asia's human-trafficking crisis by threatening to boycott a planned summit.
![]() |
A group of
rescued migrant children at a shelter in the Indonesian fishing
town of Kuala
Langsa, Aceh province, on May 15, 2015 (AFP Photo/Chaideer
Mahyuddin)
|
About 900 Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants made it to shore in Indonesia and Thailand Friday, as Myanmar undermined calls for a coordinated response to Southeast Asia's human-trafficking crisis by threatening to boycott a planned summit.
The
Indonesian and Malaysian policy of turning away stricken boats filled with
Bangladeshis and ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar has been met with outrage,
including from Washington and the United Nations.
Activists
estimate up to 8,000 migrants may be at sea in Southeast Asia, with horrific
tales emerging of passengers abandoned by abusive smugglers, horribly cramped
conditions, starvation and death.
In his
first public comments on the issue, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said
he was "very concerned with the plight of migrants" but gave no
indication of a policy shift on an issue that has caused regional
finger-pointing.
"We are in contact with all relevant parties, with whom we share the desire to find a solution to this crisis," he said in a statement, without elaborating.
"We are in contact with all relevant parties, with whom we share the desire to find a solution to this crisis," he said in a statement, without elaborating.
It was not
clear whether those "relevant parties" included Myanmar, which faces
harsh criticism of its treatment of Rohingya and on Friday snubbed neighbouring
Thailand's call for a regional meeting on the problem on May 29.
'We cried
for help'
The
unfolding humanitarian crisis appears to have been precipitated by a Thai
police crackdown that has thrown busy people-smuggling routes into chaos just
as a surge of migrants has taken to the sea.
"We
are unlikely to attend... we do not accept it if they (Thailand) are inviting
us just to ease the pressure they are facing," Myanmar presidential office
director Zaw Htay told AFP.
Indonesian
police said at least 797 people were rescued Friday by fisherman in Aceh
province on the east coast of huge Sumatra island.
One
overloaded boat was sinking off the coast when local fishermen came to the
rescue, picking up migrants as they jumped from the stricken vessel, police
said.
Muhammad
Amin, a Rohingya, told AFP that the boat had first been turned back by the
Indonesian navy towards Malaysian waters, only for the Malaysian navy to direct
it back towards Indonesia.
In an
increasingly desperate situation -- after nearly two months at sea and the crew
having abandoned ship -- he said the Bangladeshis attacked the Rohingya and
threw some of them overboard, and he was forced to swim for hours before being
rescued.
"As we
were swimming, we saw a fishing boat, and we cried for help, then fishermen
pulled us one by one from the sea," said the 35-year-old.
'Human ping pong'
Search and
rescue officials said it was not immediately clear whether all those rescued
had come from the same boat.
At least 61
children were ferried to shore by Indonesian fishermen. Nearly 600 migrants
were already sheltering in Aceh after managing to get ashore in recent days.
A military
spokesman said earlier the navy had prevented a boat carrying migrants from
entering Indonesian waters but he later clarified that the boat had been empty,
and the navy found migrants in the water nearby and helped them to shore.
In
Thailand, the navy discovered 106 Rohingya on an island off the coast of Phang
Na province but it was unclear whether their boat had a problem or they had
been abandoned, the provincial governor said.
Earlier
Friday, a boat carrying about 300 Rohingya left Thailand's waters, a Thai
official said, after authorities repaired its engine and provided food.
A Thai
official said the passengers -- who wanted to reach Malaysia -- declined offers
to come ashore in Thailand, fearing they would be sent back to Myanmar.
They
planned instead to make for Indonesia, the official said.
![]() |
Rohingya
migrants on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh
Lipe
in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015 (AFP Photo/Christophe Archambault)
|
Regional
governments have been roundly chastised for what Human Rights Watch described
as a deadly game of "human ping pong" in rejecting migrants.
UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein voiced serious concern,
saying he was "appalled" at the migrant boat push-backs "which
will inevitably lead to many avoidable deaths."
The Muslim
Rohingya flee by the thousands each year to escape state-sanctioned
discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar and recent sectarian violence
against them.
There are
more than a million Rohingya living in Myanmar's western state of Rakhine, many
going back generations, but Myanmar insists they are illegal immigrants from
Bangladesh.
The
Bangladeshis are thought mainly to be economic migrants escaping their country's
grinding poverty.
Related Article:





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.