Bangkok Post
December 18, 2012
Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia's maritime agency on Tuesday said it "rescued"
40 Myanmar shipwreck survivors, who are thought to be Muslim Rohingya
fleeing ethnic violence who had been denied entry to Singapore.
The agency told AFP the survivors of a wreck off the Myanmar coast on
Dec 4, in which 160 others were reportedly drowned, were in good health
and being transported to Johor state on one of its vessels.
"I confirm 40 Burma (Myanmar) nationals were rescued from the
Vietnam-flagged cargo ship Nosco Victory," Hamid Mohamad Amin, the
agency's director for command and control, told AFP, declining to
elaborate.
Singapore had turned away the ship carrying the 40 survivors amid media reports they could be stateless Muslim Rohingya.
Singapore's Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) said it denied entry to
the Vietnamese-registered bulk carrier Nosco Victory because of a lack
of information about its passengers.
Australia's Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reported the 40 were
believed to be Rohingya, a stateless Muslim minority from Myanmar's
western state of Rakhine, who had been fleeing ethnic violence there.
Clashes between Buddhists and the Rohingya have left scores of people dead and displaced more than 115,000 people since June.
It said they were survivors from a Bangladesh-flagged ship that sank on
its way to Malaysia, a largely Muslim country that has a big Rohingya
population.
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