Sri Lanka rescued 138 Bangladeshi and Myanmar Nationals on February 3, 2013. (Photo - AFP) |
AFP
February 16, 2013
Sri Lanka's navy on Saturday rescued 38 Myanmar nationals who were
drifting off the island's east coast, the second batch of boatpeople to
be saved in as many weeks, officials said.
Sri Lankan naval craft responding to a distress call plucked the 38
people from a rickety boat drifting about 250 miles (400 kilometres) off
the east coast, a navy official said.
Four of the rescued passengers required treatment for dehydration and
they were being brought to the southern port of Galle, he said.
"Four people required medical attention and are out of danger," the navy
official, who asked not to be named, said. "They will reach shore by
tomorrow (Sunday)."
It is the second time in less than two weeks the navy has gone to help a crippled foreign boat.
On February 3, the navy rescued 138 Bangladeshi and Myanmar nationals
from a sinking boat. One of the passengers in that boat had died before
help reached.
Officials said it was unclear if those identified as Myanmar nationals
were Rohingya -- members of a stateless Muslim minority described by the
UN as one of the world's most persecuted groups -- who had fled
Myanmar.
An explosion of tensions between Buddhist and Muslim communities in
Myanmar's western state of Rakhine since June 2012 has triggered a
seaborne exodus of Rohingya.
Thailand's navy blocked more than 200 Rohingya boatpeople from entering
the kingdom late last month as part of a new policy under which they
will be given food and water but barred from landing if their boat is
seaworthy
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