Thousands of people are adrift in the Andaman Sea after smugglers
abandoned their vessels following a Thai crackdown on human
trafficking. Many of the migrants are thirsty and sick.
Migrants aboard the vessel were visibly distressed on the packed
deck under a blazing sun, a Reuters witness said. Women were crying
and some waved their arms and shouted, he said.
The boat has been towed back out to sea by the Thai navy twice after
drifting for days. On both occasions, the navy fixed its engine and
supplied it with food, water and fuel before towing it out of Thai
waters.
The migrants told the Thai navy on Saturday they wanted to go to
Malaysia, the officer aboard a patrol boat told Reuters.
"We fixed their engine and showed them where Malaysia is," the
officer said.
After the Thais released it, the boat entered neighboring Malaysian
waters where it was intercepted, he said. He declined to give his
name.
It was unclear what the Malaysian authorities would do with the
migrants. But Malaysia's government said this week it would push
boats back to sea as it did not want to receive large numbers of
illegal migrants.
The International Organization for Migration has criticized the
region's governments for playing "maritime ping-pong" with the
migrants and endangering their lives.
The United Nations this week urged governments to fulfill an
obligation to rescue those at sea and "keep their borders and ports
open ... to help the vulnerable people who are in need".
But there was no sign of a coordinated rescue operation, the U.N.
refugee agency UNHCR said on Saturday.
"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," Jeffrey Savage, who works with the
UNHCR in Indonesia, told Reuters on Saturday
While many remain at sea, thousands have made it to land.
Nearly 800 migrants came ashore in Aceh in Indonesia on Friday,
taking the number that have made land in Indonesia and the northwest
of Malaysia to more than 2,500 over the past week.
Thailand found 106 more migrants on Friday on an island in the
southern province of Phang Nga, provincial governor Prayoon
Rattanasenee told Reuters. It was unclear how they got there, he
said.
"Most of them are men but there are also women and children,"
Prayoon said. "We are trying to determine whether they were victims
of human trafficking."
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The Thai clamp-down has made the preferred trafficking route through
Thailand too risky for criminals preying on Rohingya Muslims fleeing
persecution in Myanmar and Bangladeshis seeking to escape poverty.
An estimated 25,000 Bangladeshis and Rohingya boarded smugglers'
boats in the first three months of this year, twice as many in the
same period of 2014, the UNHCR has said.
The United Nations said the deadly pattern of migration by sea
across the Bay of Bengal would continue unless Myanmar ended
discrimination.
Most of Myanmar's 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims are stateless and
live in apartheid-like conditions in Rakhine state in the west of
the predominantly Buddhist country. Almost 140,000 were displaced in
clashes with ethnic Rakhine Buddhists in 2012.
Myanmar uses the term "Bengalis" for the Rohingya, a name most
Rohingya reject because it implies they are immigrants from
Bangladesh despite having lived in Myanmar for generations.
Thailand is hosting talks on May 29 for 15 countries to discuss
migration in the region.
Myanmar had not received an invitation to the talks and would not
attend if the word Rohingya was used, Zaw Htay, a senior official
from the president's office, said on Saturday.
"We haven't received any formal invitation from Thailand officially
yet," he said in an emailed response to questions from Reuters.
"And another thing, if they use the term 'Rohingya' we won't take
part in it since we don't recognize this term. The Myanmar
government has been protesting against the use of it all along."
(Additional reporting by Amy Sawitta Lefevre in BANGKOK, Aung Hla
Tun in YANGON and Kanupriya Kapoor in JAKARTA; Writing by Simon
Webb; Editing by)
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