124 Rohingya
Rescued sailing adrift in Indonesian waters
PressTV:
March 01, 2013
Sixty-three Rohingya Muslims,
including 23 children, fleeing the violence in Myanmar have been found adrift
in a wooden boat in western Indonesia, in the second such event this week.
Indonesia police said on Friday that the vessel was found by fishermen
with no engine while drifting off the eastern coast of Sumatra island near Aceh
Province.
"Fishermen found the boat with 63 Rohingya late Thursday afternoon
around 160 kilometers (100 miles) from the coastal town of Idi Rayeuk. They
then towed the boat to shore," provincial police chief Muhajir said.
"All we know is they are from Myanmar. We don't know where exactly
the boat sailed from as they're too tired and hungry to be interviewed and
we're having problems communicating," he added.
The Rohingya asylum seekers were sent to an immigration office in the
nearby Langsa town, Muhajir said, adding that they would be transferred to a
detention centre.
On Tuesday, Indonesian fishermen also rescued 121 Rohingya Muslims,
including six women and two children under the age of five, about 25 kilometers
north off the coast Aceh Province.
One of the survivors reportedly said that Thailand authorities had shot
at them and taken their food and petrol supplies as they passed Thailand’s
waters.
Recently, another boat was found off Sri Lanka’s coast, with 33
dehydrated Rohingya refugees and 97 dead. The surviving passengers said Thai
military had taken the boat’s engine and left them to float at sea for 25 days
without water and food before being rescued.
"Considering the situation in Myanmar and Thailand, we're expecting
to find more Rohingya in boats around here," Muhajir also said.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugee has voiced concern over the
increasing number of Rohingya deaths at sea. The international body also urged
Myanmar government to “promote reconciliation and economic development in
Rakhine state, pursue practical measures to ensure basic rights so that the
Rohingya can lead normal lives where they are, and grant them access to
citizenship.”
Myanmar’s government refuses to recognize Rohingya Muslims as citizens
and labels the minority of about 800,000 as “illegal” immigrants from
neighboring Bangladesh, which has shown no willingness to help the
Rohingyas.
More than 100,000 Rohingyas have been displaced since the sectarian
violence broke out in June, according to the UN. Rohingya Muslims have faced
torture, neglect, and repression in Myanmar for many years.
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