The Guardian (USA)

Hundreds of Rohingya refugees stuck at sea, say rights groups

- Rebecca Ratcliffe South-east Asia correspond­ent

Hundreds more Rohingya refugees remain stuck at sea, rights groups have warned, just one day after it emerged that dozens of people died onboard a boat that was refused entry to Malaysia and left adrift for two months.

On Friday, Malaysia’s air force confirmed it had denied entry to a second boat carrying about 200 Rohingya people, claiming it had done so to prevent further spread of the coronaviru­s within the country, which remains under lockdown.

Researcher­s believe other boats are likely to also be stuck at sea, packed with refugees who are attempting to escape desperate and squalid conditions in the city of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh.

Refugee camps on the border of Bangladesh grew to be some of the biggest in the world following a brutal military crackdown in 2017 that forced more than 700,000 Rohingya to flee Myanmar.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said it had received informatio­n about as many as five boats spotted off the coasts of Malaysia and southern Thailand in recent days, believed to be carrying hundreds of people.

It is feared that the refugees could remain trapped at sea and unable to disembark as countries cite the spread of Covid-19 as a justificat­ion for turning boats back.

The developmen­ts are reminiscen­t of a 2015 crisis when many Rohingya died at sea after south-east Asian nations refused entry, prompting the UN to warn that people were being left stranded on “floating coffins”.

On Thursday, Bangladesh rescued almost 400 people in the Bay of Bengal, after they spent two months adrift. They had attempted to sail to safety in Malaysia, survivors reported, but were refused entry. Dozens of those onboard had died.

On the same day, it has since emerged, another Rohingya boat was intercepte­d by two Malaysian navy vessels after it was spotted by an air force jet off the north-western island of Langkawi. Malaysian sailors gave the refugees food before escorting them out of the country’s waters, the air force said.

“With their poor settlement­s and living conditions ... it is strongly feared that undocument­ed migrants who try to enter Malaysia either by land or sea will bring [Covid-19] into the country,” the air force said in a statement late on Thursday.

It added that “maritime surveillan­ce operations will be intensifie­d”.

Chris Lewa, of the Arakan Project, which works on Rohingya rights issues, said that Covid-19 was not an acceptable reason for any country to refuse entry to refugees.

“The duty of the navy is to rescue people at sea, not to push them out and put their life at risk even more,” she said. “What is going to happen? Where are these people going to go?”

The refusal of entry to Malaysia is a worrying sign that the country is becoming increasing­ly hostile to Rohingya refugees.

While relatively few boats carrying Rohingya have arrived in Malaysia since the 2015 crisis, some have been allowed in. Earlier this month, 202 Rohingya people landed in Langkawi and were detained.

In a statement, Amnesty Internatio­nal called on Malaysia and Thailand to “immediatel­y dispatch search and rescue boats with food, water and medicine to meet the urgent needs of possibly hundreds still at sea”.

Both countries should urgently allow the people to disembark safely, the group said, adding: “Both Thailand and Malaysia are aware that people’s lives are in danger. Refusing to help the people on these boats would not be wilfully blind – it would be consciousl­y making their plight even worse.”

 ?? Photograph: Suzauddin Rubel/AP ?? Rohingya refugees gather after being rescued on Thursday. They had been drifting for weeks after being denied entry to Malaysia.
Photograph: Suzauddin Rubel/AP Rohingya refugees gather after being rescued on Thursday. They had been drifting for weeks after being denied entry to Malaysia.

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