A boat crammed with migrants was towed out to sea by the Thai navy and then held up by Malaysian vessels yesterday, the latest round of "maritime ping-pong" by Asian states determined not to let asylum seekers come ashore.
The United Nations has called on countries around the Andaman Sea not to push back the thousands of desperate Bangladeshis and Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar now stranded in rickety boats, and to rescue them instead.
"We're not seeing any such moves from any governments in the region even though we're calling on the international community to take action because people are dying," said Jeffrey Savage, who works with the UNHCR refugee agency in Indonesia, where some 1,400 migrants have landed over the past week.
Nearly 800 came ashore near Langsa in Indonesia's Aceh province on Friday, many with stories of a gruelling voyage that included push-backs from the Malaysian and Indonesian coasts. Mahmud Rafiq, a 21-year-old Rohingya man who left Myanmar a month ago, recounted how an Indonesian navy ship given them food and medicine before towing their boat to Malaysian waters, where they were again stopped, given supplies and taken right back.
While adrift at sea, he said, the Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants had fought fiercely over dwindling supplies of food.
"We had very little food, and we agreed that we would leave it for the women and children," said Rafiq. "Then they started hitting us. They took the food. They pushed many of us overboard. They beat us and attacked us with knives. I was hit with a wooden plank on the head and on my legs."
An estimated 25,000 Bangladeshis and Rohingya boarded smugglers' boats in the first three months of this year, twice as many as in the same period of 2014, the UNHCR has said.
A clampdown by Thailand's military junta has made a well-trodden trafficking route into Malaysia – one of Southeast Asia's wealthiest economies – too risky for criminals who prey on Rohingya fleeing persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar and on impoverished Bangladeshis looking for work.
In response, many people-smugglers appear to have abandoned their boats in the Andaman Sea, leaving thousands thirsty, hungry and sick, and without fuel for their vessels' engines. One of those boats was towed away from the Thai coast by Thailand's navy yesterday, only to be intercepted off the Malaysian coast.
A Reuters journalist on a speedboat taken from southern Thailand's coast said the people aboard had little shelter from the blazing sun. Some of the women were crying and some passengers waved their arms and shouted.
The International Organisation for Migration has criticised southeast Asian governments for playing "maritime ping-pong" with the migrants and endangering their lives.
US Secretary of State John Kerry on Friday urged Thailand to consider sheltering the homeless Rohingya and called on its neighbours not to send the migrants back out to sea.
Responding to the pressure, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said his country already had 120,000 illegal migrants from Myanmar and the "humanitarian catastrophe" was a global issue to be resolved by the international community.
Thailand is hosting talks on May 29 for 15 countries to discuss the crisis.
http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/migrants-in-maritime-ping-pong-turned-back/
No comments:
Post a Comment