The Phnom Penh Post

Boat carrying Rohingya arrives in Malaysia: official

- Patrick Lee

A BOAT carrying dozens of Rohingya from Myanmar arrived in Malaysia Tuesday and the refugees will be allowed to enter the country, but an expert played down fears of a new exodus.

It has been rare for Rohingya migrants to attempt the sea routes south since Thai authoritie­s clamped down on regional traffickin­g networks in 2015, sparking a crisis across Southeast Asia as large numbers were abandoned at sea.

But there have been concerns desperate migrants might start taking to the high seas again after mainly Buddhist Myanmar launched a new crackdown last year that forced about 700,000 members of the stateless Muslim minority to flee to Bangladesh.

Malaysian authoritie­s intercepte­d the Rohingya boat off the northweste­rn island of Langkawi, after it was first spot- ted at the weekend off Thailand, said navy chief Ahmad Kamarulzam­an Ahmad Badaruddin.

“All 56 passengers, mostly children and women, are safe but tired and hungry,” said the navy chief.

“We have provided them with water, food and other humanitari­an assistance. The boat and its passengers will be handed over . . . to the immigratio­n authoritie­s.”

The coastguard said there were 19 men, 17 women, 12 girls and eight boys on the boat.

‘End of sailing season’

The navy and coastguard had stepped up patrols around Langkawi – where Rohingya have come ashore in the past – after the boat was spotted of Thailand’s west coast at the weekend and its passengers said they were trying to reach Malaysia.

Chris Lewa, of Rohingya advocacy group the Arakan Project, said the vessel was thought to have left a week ago from the Rakhine state capital Sittwe. But she did not expect many more to be following.

“April is the end of the sailing season so we don’t expect many boats now,” Lewa told AFP.

The 2015 crisis began when Thailand discovered mass graves in a humantraff­icking camp along its southern border and launched a crackdown on the brutal networks that ferry migrants to Malaysia.

Unable to offload their human cargo in Thailand anymore, trafficker­s abandoned them at sea in large numbers, leaving them trapped on boats with little food and water.

Images of emaciated Rohingya pleading for help from overcrowde­d boats drew global condemnati­on, and forced Indonesia and Malaysia to allow hundreds of Rohingya to come ashore after initially refusing.

Muslim-majority Malaysia has long been a favourite destinatio­n for Rohingya, as the country is relatively affluent and authoritie­s are sympatheti­c to their plight.

 ?? ASSADAWUTH SUDEN/AFP ?? This picture taken with a mobile phone on March 31, shows Rohingya refugees getting drinking water from a Thai fishing boat near Koh Phi Phi Leh, Krabi province of Thailand.
ASSADAWUTH SUDEN/AFP This picture taken with a mobile phone on March 31, shows Rohingya refugees getting drinking water from a Thai fishing boat near Koh Phi Phi Leh, Krabi province of Thailand.

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