Bangkok Post

100 foreigners die in Malaysia holding camps

Disease kills many illegal immigrants

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KUALA LUMPUR: More than 100 foreigners died in the past two years in Malaysia’s immigratio­n detention centres from various diseases and unknown causes, according to documents from the government–funded National Human Rights Commission.

The toll, which has not been previously disclosed, is based on Malaysian immigratio­n department data provided to the commission, which is known by its Malay acronym Suhakam. There were 83 deaths in 2015 and at least 35 in 2016 up to Dec 20.

It is unclear whether the death rate is higher than in neighbouri­ng countries. Government officials in Indonesia and Thailand said they do not disclose such numbers. The rate is higher than in major industrial­ised nations such as the United States, which in the last financial year recorded 10 deaths in its immigratio­n detention system, which has many more detainees than Malaysia’s.

More than half of the 118 dead are from Myanmar, the source for tens of thousands of refugees coming to Malaysia, including Rohingya Muslims escaping persecutio­n by Myanmar’s authoritie­s and its majority Buddhist population. The number of Rohingya fatalities in the camps is unknown.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has been a harsh critic of the Myanmar government and its de-facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi after a crackdown in October by Myanmar’s security forces led many Rohingya to flee across its borders amid multiple allegation­s of mass killings and gang rapes by troops. He has called for foreign interventi­on to stop the “genocide” in Myanmar. Mr Najib’s office did not return calls seeking comment.

“The numbers are too many and are shocking and it calls for the overhaul of the system,” said Jerald Joseph, one of eight commission­ers at Suhakam, which was establishe­d by the Malaysian parliament through an act in 1999 and is due to publicly announce the numbers next week in its annual report on human rights issues in Malaysia. He described conditions at the centers, some of which he has visited, as “appalling” and said the deaths should be investigat­ed as a criminal matter.

The illnesses that led to some of the deaths may have been caused or exacerbate­d by poor sanitation and food, physical abuse and a lack of medical attention, said Mr Joseph, who was speaking on behalf of the commission.

Malaysia’s home ministry, which oversees the immigratio­n department, said it was trying to improve the conditions in the centres but that its budget was constraine­d.

“I agree there is some overcrowdi­ng and the conditions are not ideal. We are always trying to improve the procedures, health conditions and management of these sites. The problem is we hit a budget brick wall,” said deputy home minister Nur Jazlan Mohamed. He said there wasn’t enough funding to upgrade facilities, provide adequate healthcare and hire and train enforcemen­t officers.

Mr Jazlan blamed overcrowdi­ng on the “never ending flow of people seeking better future in Malaysia.”

The living conditions inside the Malaysian camps are grim — overcrowde­d, unhygienic and brutal — according to interviews with 13 former detainees and 12 others who have regularly visited the centres, including people from government agencies and rights groups. Those who had been detained say they did not get adequate food, water or healthcare, that many inmates developed skin and lung infections and the sick are usually not isolated, leading to the spread of contagious diseases.

All of the detainees interviewe­d also allege they were beaten by guards at the camps or witnessed others being beaten. One former Rohingya inmate of the Lenggeng camp in the southweste­rn state of Negeri Sembilan said in an interview that he witnessed detainees being beaten and then saw them die when the resulting injuries were not treated. “When we asked for medicines, we were beaten,” he said.

The account could not be independen­tly verified nor could the similar accusation­s made by other detainees. They all declined to be identified for fear of reprisals.

Asked about the claims of beatings, Mr Jazlan said he needs more evidence to establish if it was prevalent. “I hope critics won’t rely on detainees’ testimony, and come up with proper evidence,” he said.

Of the 118 people recorded as dying in 2015-2016, 63 were from Myanmar, and people from that country have fared worse than those from elsewhere, the documents from Suhakam and data from the Malaysian government’s Enforcemen­t Agency Integrity Commission (EAIC) show.

During 2016, for example, there were 14,180 Myanmar nationals detained and at least 14 of them died, while there were only five fatalities among 34,586 Indonesian inmates. The documents and data don’t explain this discrepanc­y and it was not possible to independen­tly confirm the reason for it.

People from Myanmar, including Rohingya Muslims, tend to stay in the detention centres longer as they try to persuade the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees to issue them with identifica­tion cards that allow them to stay in Malaysia temporaril­y, rights groups and former detainees said. People from other countries are often undocument­ed migrant workers who are deported home relatively quickly.

The documents give causes of death for 68 detainees. Pneumonia and lung infections led to 19 deaths, at least 10 were the result of various heart-related conditions and five died from the bacterial disease leptospiro­sis, which is often spread through the urine of infected animals, including rodents. Sepsis, or septic shock killed 21. A Filipina killed herself.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A general view of Bukit Jalil immigratio­n detention centre in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
REUTERS A general view of Bukit Jalil immigratio­n detention centre in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

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