Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Trafficker­s exploit desperate Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh

- Agence Francepres­se

COX’S BAZAR: As desperatio­n swells in the squalid camps that are home to a million Rohingya refugees, long-dormant - and often deadly - traffickin­g networks are being revived, Bangladesh­i officials warn.

Smugglers operating rickety fishing boats prey on the hopes of people who fled violence in Myanmar, charging them small fortunes for a dangerous journey to Southeast Asia, offering an empty promise of a fresh start.

The first vessel to depart Bangladesh for Malaysia since the end of the monsoon was intercepte­d by law enforcemen­t, who warn others will follow.

Many in the heaving Rohingya ghettos of Cox’s Bazar feel they have no other option but to try to escape, community leaders and aid workers say.

A deal to safely return the persecuted Muslims to Myanmar has failed, condemning them to limbo and deprivatio­n in fetid camps where they are barred from leaving or looking for work to improve their lot.

Sensing a surge, coastguard patrols have been stepped up since the first boat was detected in November in the Bay of Bengal, said Ikbal Hossain, deputy police chief in Cox’s Bazar.

Another boatload of refugees who fled a camp in Myanmar were found off the country’s southern coast in November after spending 15 days at sea in a failed attempt to reach Malaysia.

“As the sea turns calm, the smuggling rackets have resumed their activities.

But we have a zero tolerance attitude toward human traffickin­g,” Hossain told AFP.

But he said trafficker­s were difficult to detect in the teeming hills where more than 720,000 Rohingya sought refuge after a brutal crackdown by the Myanmar military in August 2017.

Shabeda Begum, a 30-yearold widowed in what UN investigat­ors called ethnic cleansing, said she was approached by another refugee offering to reunite her with a sister and brother-inlaw in Malaysia.

The Muslim-majority nation hosts one of the largest overseas Rohingya communitie­s, many of whom arrived by boat from Cox’s Bazar until that smuggling pipeline was closed in 2015.

Begum was introduced to a Bangladesh­i handler in the coastal town of Teknaf and arranged to get the required $120 from a family in Kuala Lumpur.

That secured Begum and her two children a spot aboard the crescent-shaped fishing boat crammed with 33 other refugees above and below deck.

“They promised my life would change if I could reach there with my kids,” she told AFP despairing­ly from a plastic-roofed shanty.

Her son, seven-year-old Mohammad Riaz, recounted his terror as the creaking boat was tossed about in the churning sea.

“I was scared because the boat was bouncing on the waves. I thought I would fall overboard and into the sea,” he said.

Six trafficker­s were arrested in connection with the failed voyage, police said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Rohingya refugees walk along an embankment next to paddy fields in Palang Khali, near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
REUTERS Rohingya refugees walk along an embankment next to paddy fields in Palang Khali, near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.

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