The kind of vessel that the Rohingya use to make their voyages (Photo - Phuket Wan) |
Phuket Wan
December 10, 2012
PHUKET: Three boats laden with Rohingya men and boys have been
apprehended off the Andaman coast of Thailand today, according to
reports.
Two of the boats came ashore at Ko Chang, an island near Thailand's
border with Burma that bears the same name as a tourist destination in
the Gulf of Thailand.
The third boat landed at Ko Sinhi, an island 18 kilometres from Ranong, a large Thai border port.
The first boat at Ko Chang landed at 7am with 170 people - an unusually high number - on board.
A second boat landed at 9.40am and the third vessel reached Ko Sinhi at 11am.
It's not known how many people were on board the second and third vessels.
All three groups were apprehended by the Royal Thai Navy, usually reliable sources have told Phuketwan.
The current whereabouts of the people on the boats in not known.
Boats have been leaving ports in Bangladesh or Rakhine state in Burma
(Myanmar), scene of deadly clashes since June, at the rate of at least
one a day since late October.
Why the boats have landed in Thailand so far north of Malaysia, the
usual destination for the Muslim-minority boatpeople, is not known.
Thailand has been employing a ''help on'' policy, intercepting Rohingya
vessels if they come too close to the Thai coast and supplying food and
water on condition that the passengers sail on, past Thailand.
Deadly battles between Rohingya and Rakhine locals have killed at least
170 people and razed thousands of homes since a rape and murder lit
simmering animosity in May.
With thousands of Rohingya forced to live in displaced persons camps
where conditions are primitive and where children are said to be
malnourished, many are trying to flee by water.
A boatload of 112 men and boys was apprehended when they came ashore at
Thai Muang, a short drive north of Phuket, on November 10.
The passengers included included 56 teenagers - the youngest aged just 14. Another 46 people on board were under 26.
Officials in Thailand described them as ''Burmese'' to stifle any
suggestion that as Rohingya, they could be categoriesed as refugees.
Phuketwan obtained a list of the names of the men and was able to confirm that they were Rohingya.
All of them were trucked north from Thai Muang the same day, probably to
be delivered in Ranong to people smugglers. Because they are stateless
non-citizens, Burma does not take them back.
The increased flow of boats leaving Burma is likely to continue until
the ''sailing season'' ends with the arrival of the monsoon in April.
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