More than 3,000 migrants have landed in Indonesia and Malaysia
since Thailand launched a crackdown on human trafficking gangs this
month. About 2,600 are believed to be still adrift in boats, relief
agencies have said.
While some of the migrants are Bangladeshis escaping poverty at
home, many are members of Myanmar's 1.1 million Rohingya Muslim
minority who live in apartheid-like conditions in the country's
Rakhine state.
"You cannot single out my country," Htein Lin, director general at
Myanmar's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and head of the country's
delegation to Friday's meeting in Bangkok, said in his opening
remarks. "In the influx of migration, Myanmar is not the only
country."
The region was suffering from a human trafficking problem, he said,
and Myanmar would cooperate with regional and international efforts
to find "practical mechanisms" to deal with it.
Myanmar does not consider the Rohingya citizens, rendering them
effectively stateless, while denying it discriminates against them
or that they are fleeing persecution. It does not call them Rohingya
but refers to them as Bengalis, indicating they are from Bangladesh.
The Bangkok gathering brings together 17 countries from the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and elsewhere in
Asia, along with the United States, Switzerland and international
bodies such as the UNHCR, the UN's refugee agency.
Host Thailand said the meeting's three objectives were: to provide
humanitarian assistance; to combat the long-term problems of people
smuggling; and to address the root causes of the problem.
"More than ever, we need a concerted effort by all countries
concerned," Thai Foreign Minister General Tanasak Patimapragorn said
in an opening address. "It needs both Thai and international
cooperation to solve the problem comprehensively."
DELICATE ISSUE
One delegate said Myanmar was pushing for other participants not to
use the term "Rohingya" and that most were respecting Myanmar's
request, although he added that the country's mere presence in the
Thai capital represented progress.
"It's a very delicate issue for Myanmar and it requires cooperation
and dialogue for all of us to be able to find a solution," said the
delegate, who declined to be identified.
But Volker Turk, Assistant High Commissioner for Protection at the
UNHCR, said the deadly pattern of migration across the Bay of Bengal
could only be ended if Myanmar addressed the root causes.
"This will require full assumption of responsibility from Myanmar to
all its people," he said. "Granting of citizenship is the ultimate
goal."
Some participants have cautioned that the meeting was unlikely to
produce a binding agreement or plan of action, given many attendees,
including those from Myanmar, Indonesia and Malaysia, were not
ministerial-level.
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Officially called the Special Meeting on Irregular Migration in the
Indian Ocean, the gathering takes place against the grim backdrop of
Malaysia's discovery of nearly 140 graves at 28 suspected people
smuggling camps strung along its northern border. Thai authorities
earlier found 36 bodies in abandoned camps on their side of the
border, which led to the crackdown.
Malaysia said it was exploring the possibility of a holding a summit
meeting within the next few weeks for the leaders of Thailand,
Malaysia, Indonesia and Myanmar.
"This is with a view to finding a workable solution to the crisis at
hand," Ibrahim Abdullah, deputy secretary general at Malaysia's
foreign affairs ministry, told the meeting.
PEOPLE-SMUGGLING CAMPS
The crisis erupted at the beginning of the month, when the Thai
crackdown made it too risky for traffickers to land migrants,
prompting them to abandon thousands at sea.
Regional governments have struggled to respond, although images of
desperate people crammed aboard overloaded boats with little food or
water prompted Indonesia and Malaysia to soften their initial
reluctance to allow the migrants to come ashore.
Malaysia, which says it has already taken 120,000 illegal immigrants
from Myanmar, and Indonesia said last week they would give temporary
shelter to those migrants already at sea, but that the international
community must shoulder the burden of resettling them.
Thailand has refused to allow the boats to land, saying it is
already sheltering 100,000 migrants from Myanmar, but has deployed a
naval task force to offer medical aid at sea.
Thailand said on Friday it had given the United States permission to
fly surveillance flights over Thai airspace to identify boats
carrying migrants.
"We have to save lives urgently," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Anne Richard told reporters on her way into the meeting. U.S. air
missions were already operating from bases in Malaysia, she said.
(Additional reporting by Simon Webb, Juarawee Kittisilpa and Alisa
Tang; Writing by Alex Richardson; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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