The Star Malaysia

Bangladesh stops Rohingya bound for Malaysia

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COX’S BAZAR: Bangladesh police arrested an alleged human trafficker and intercepte­d two Rohingya refugees preparing to board a boat for Malaysia, officials said.

Police acting on a tip-off raided a home near the coastal town of Teknaf in southeaste­rn Bangladesh, where five people had assembled ahead of a promised voyage across the Bay of Bengal. Two Rohingya Muslims, both men, were among the group.

The pair had arrived from Myanmar since August, when a surge of violence in Rakhine state forced hundreds of thousands of Rohingya across the border.

The other three would-be passengers were Bangladesh­i, another police officer said.

“They were herded there as part of an effort to take them to Malaysia. They said they would be taken there by sea,” Teknaf police chief Main Uddin said.

“Among the five, there were two Rohingya men who had already paid 10,000 taka (RM490) each. The arrested person is being charged with human traffickin­g.”

Since August nearly 650,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled a military operation in Myanmar’s westernmos­t Rakhine state described by the United Nations and United States as “ethnic cleansing”.

Bangladesh authoritie­s worry many refugees may risk travelling to South-East Asia by boat, a route once popular among Rohingya seeking economic opportunit­ies outside the grim, long-standing camps in Cox’s Bazar.

People smugglers in recent years have sent tens of thousands of Rohingya from Bangladesh to Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country in South-East Asia, usually between November and March when seas are calmest.

But these networks were targeted by Bangladesh in 2015 after Thai authoritie­s discovered mass graves and boats overcrowde­d with thousands of migrants drifted at sea while South-East Asian nations squabbled over a solution.

Bangladesh police said they were questionin­g the alleged people smuggler to determine whether he was part of a larger regional traffickin­g ring.

Bangladesh has arrested dozens of suspected trafficker­s and broken up networks since the 2015 crackdown, but authoritie­s fear these networks could be revived during the latest Rohingya crisis. — AFP

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