Los Angeles Times

Migrants stuck in web of rejection

Thousands are abandoned on boats in Southeast Asia, welcomed by none.

- By Alexandra Zavis alexandra.zavis @latimes.com Twitter: @alexzavis

Hundreds of desperate migrants clamored for food and water when they were spotted in a wooden fishing boat left adrift in the Andaman Sea between Malaysia and Thailand.

Smugglers had disabled the engine and abandoned them six days ago, they told the boatload of journalist­s who found them Thursday, and no country had been willing to take them in.

Video of the emaciated men, women and children — some in tears as they reached to grab bottles of water tossed from the journalist­s’ vessel — brought into stark relief the crisis that has been unfolding in Southeast Asian waters.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration estimated that 6,000 people from Myanmar and Bangladesh were stranded in at least six boats off Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia on Thursday. Most were Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecutio­n in Myanmar, a Buddhist-majority nation where they are not recognized as citizens and have suffered waves of sectarian violence.

Humanitari­an officials fear that the stranded migrants won’t survive much longer if they run out of food and water. Deaths have been reported aboard some vessels, including 10 on the boat found Thursday. Their bodies were thrown overboard, passengers told the BBC.

Human trafficker­s have long plied these waters. Until recently, they would take their passengers to Thailand and hold them in jungle camps until their families paid hefty fees for their travel on to Malaysia, according to Human Rights Watch. But when a government raid uncovered 26 bodies at one of the camps this month, it spurred a crackdown that in effect closed the smuggling route through Thailand.

Since then, trafficker­s have been trying to offload their human cargo in Malaysia or Indonesia, or abandoning them at sea, the New York-based rights group said Thursday.

Boats carrying about 1,600 migrants landed in Indonesia’s Aceh province and the Malaysian resort island of Langkawi over the weekend. But neither country appears willing to take in more illegal migrants and asylum seekers.

“What do you expect us to do?” Malaysian Deputy Home Minister Wan Junaidi Jaafar said, the Associated Press reported. “We have been very nice to the people who broke into our border. We have treated them humanely but they cannot be flooding our shores like this.”

The boat found Thursday, which was carrying about 350 people, had been at sea for about three months, passengers said. Thai fishing boats found it Wednesday night and towed it into Malaysian waters, the BBC reported. It was then towed back to Thai waters.

The Thai navy dispatched a ship to the scene Thursday, telling reporters that the migrants would be provided food, water and medical care before they were sent on their way.

 ?? Christophe Archambaul­t AFP/Getty Images ?? EMACIATED ROHINGYA migrants adrift in the Andaman Sea recover food and water supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter.
Christophe Archambaul­t AFP/Getty Images EMACIATED ROHINGYA migrants adrift in the Andaman Sea recover food and water supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter.

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