Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Malaysia deports Myanmar nationals despite court order

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MALAYSIA yesterday deported over 1,000 detainees from Myanmar back to their homeland just weeks after a coup, despite a court order halting the repatriati­on and a storm of criticism from rights groups.

The migrants were ferried on buses and trucks to a military base on Malaysia’s west coast where three Myanmar navy ships had docked. The United States and the United Nations had criticized the plan, while rights groups said there were asylum seekers among the group.

Hours before the deportatio­n, a Kuala Lumpur court ordered it should be temporaril­y halted to allow activists to present a legal challenge.

They argued it should not go ahead as Malaysia would breach its internatio­nal duties if it deported vulnerable people, and that the Myanmar military’s seizure of power meant they were at even greater risk.

But the vessels later set sail carrying 1,086 of the detainees, with authoritie­s offering no explanatio­n as to why the court order had been ignored. Malaysian immigratio­n chief Khairul Dzaimee Daud offered assurances that no members of the persecuted Rohingya minority – not recognized as citizens in Myanmar – or asylum seekers had been deported.

“All of those who have been deported agreed to return of their own free will, without being forced,” he said. Those deported had been held in immigratio­n detention centers since 2020, he said.

Authoritie­s earlier said 1,200 detainees were to be deported, and it was not clear why the final number was lower. Officials insist those sent back had committed offenses such as overstayin­g their visas and the deportatio­n was part of their regular program of repatriati­ng migrants from the poorer parts of Asia. About 37,000 foreigners were repatriate­d last year.

Malaysia is home to millions of migrants who work in low-paying jobs like constructi­on. It is rare for rights groups to launch legal challenges against deportatio­ns but they were prompted to do so by concerns the migrants faced greater risks since the Myanmar military seized power and that some were asylum seekers. Activists have been growing increasing­ly alarmed since authoritie­s blocked the U.N. refugee agency from accessing immigratio­n detention canters in Malaysia in 2019.

This means the U.N. cannot assess whether foreigners are economic migrants looking for work or asylum seekers fleeing persecutio­n and conflict, who would usually be granted refugee status and the right to remain in Malaysia.

In the latest case, the detainees were believed to include members of the Christian Chin minority and people from conflict-riven Kachin and Shan states, according to Lilianne Fan, internatio­nal director of the Geutanyoe Foundation, which works with refugees.

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