Edmonton Journal

Unless vessel is sinking, Malaysia will turn away would-be migrants

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LANGKAWI, Mala ysia — A crisis involving boatloads of Rohingya and Bangladesh­i migrants stranded at sea deepened Tuesday as Malaysia said it would turn away any more of the crowded, wooden vessels unless they were sinking.

Over the past three days, more than 1,000 migrants have landed on the Malaysian resort island of Langkawi — known for its swank hotels and white-sand beaches — with another 600 arriving in Indonesia’s westernmos­t province of Aceh. Many more migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh are believed trapped in packed boats at sea, some after being abandoned by captains and smugglers, activists and officials said.

The waters around Langkawi will be patrolled 24 hours a day by eight ships, said Tan Kok Kwee, regional chief for Malaysia’s maritime enforcemen­t agency.

“We won’t let any foreign boats come in. If the boats are seaworthy, we will give them provisions and send them away,” Tan said. If the boat is sinking, they would rescue them, he said.

Southeast Asia is the grips of a humanitari­an crisis as boats packed with Rohingya and Bangladesh­is wash ashore, some after being stranded at sea for more than two months.

A crackdown on human trafficker­s has essentiall­y spooked agents and brokers, who have refused to take people to shore.

One boat sent out a distress signal Tuesday, with migrants saying they had been without food and water for three days, according to Chris Lewa, director of the non-profit Arakan Project, after speaking by phone to some on board.

“They asked to be urgently rescued,” she said, adding there were an estimated 350 people on the ship, 50 of them women, and that they had no fuel.

The UN High Commission­er for Refugees, the United States, Australia and other government­s and organizati­ons, meanwhile, have held emergency meetings to discuss next steps.

They are worried about deaths, but also the looming refugee problem. In the past, most nations have been unwilling to accept Rohingya, a Muslim minority from Myanmar who are effectivel­y stateless. They worry that by opening their doors to a few, they will be unable to stem the flood of poor, uneducated migrants.

“It sets up the possibilit­y people will finally realize this is a regional issue,” said Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia division, “that countries are receiving Rohingya because of Burma’s bad policies of discrimina­tion and abuse against members of the religious minority and that they need to band together to demand the government change those policies.”

 ?? Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images ?? A Rohingya boy waits along with other illegal migrants at a detention centre in Langkawi on Tuesday. Nearly 2,000 boat people from Myanmar and Bangladesh, many thought to be Rohingya, have been rescued off Indonesia and Malaysia.
Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images A Rohingya boy waits along with other illegal migrants at a detention centre in Langkawi on Tuesday. Nearly 2,000 boat people from Myanmar and Bangladesh, many thought to be Rohingya, have been rescued off Indonesia and Malaysia.

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