Malaysia
orders rescue of migrant boats, Thailand says no to shelters
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[May 21, 2015]
By Praveen Menon and Amy Sawitta Lefevre
KUALA LUMPUR/BANGKOK (Reuters) - Malaysian
Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Thursday he had ordered the navy to
conduct search and rescue missions for thousands of migrants adrift at
sea as Thailand's prime minister said his country would not provide
shelter.
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Southeast Asia is battling a migrant crisis that has seen hundreds
of "boat people", mostly Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar and
Bangladeshi migrants who fled persecution and poverty at home or
were abducted by traffickers, pushed back out to sea by Thailand,
Malaysia and Indonesia.
Many now face sickness, and possible starvation.
"I have further ordered @tldm_rasmi (navy) and APMM (Malaysian
Maritime Enforcement Agency) to conduct search and rescue efforts on
Rohingya boats," Najib said on his Twitter account.
"We have to prevent loss of life," he said, adding that humanitarian
aid would be delivered by land and sea.
Malaysia and Indonesia on Wednesday said they would let as many as
7,000 migrants on the seas now to come ashore temporarily, but no
more.
For decades, ethnic minority Rohingya have suffered from
state-sanctioned discrimination in majority-Buddhist Myanmar and are
denied citizenship. The Malaysian and Indonesian foreign ministers
were in Myanmar on Thursday for talks on the crisis.
Armanatha Nasir, a spokesman for Indonesia's foreign ministry, said
Indonesia would not put pressure on Myanmar.
"We will continue to encourage Myanmar in their process of reform
and democratization. Because in the end we believe it will create an
environment conducive for the Rohingya."
The United Nations has been calling on governments in the region to
rescue the migrants. More than 3,000 have been rescued by locals or
come ashore in Indonesia and Malaysia this month.
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Indonesia and Malaysia have said that temporary shelters would be
set up to house the migrants but Thailand, a traditional transit
point for migrants trying to reach Malaysia illegally to find work,
said it would not follow suit.
"There will definitely be no migrant shelters," Thai Prime Minister
and coup leader Prayuth Chan-ocha told parliament in Bangkok on
Wednesday, adding that existing detention centers would be used to
hold those found to have entered Thailand illegally.
Thailand has said it would stop towing boats back to sea, something
Malaysia and Indonesia had been doing in recent days, and will allow
the sick to come to shore for attention, but has stopped short of
saying whether it would allow other migrants to disembark.
Thailand has called a regional conference on the issue in Bangkok
for May 29.
(Additional reporting by Kaweewit Kaewjinda in BANGKOK and Kanupriya
Kapoor in JAKARTA; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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