March 1, 2013
AFP
Fishermen in western Indonesia rescued more than 60 ethnic Rohingya
asylum-seekers from Myanmar found adrift in a wooden boat, police said
Friday, in the second such arrival this week.
The vessel with no engine had 23 children on board and was found
drifting off the eastern coast of Sumatra island near the province of
Aceh.
"Fishermen found the boat with 63 Rohingya late Thursday afternoon
around 160 kilometers [100 miles] from the coastal town of Idi Rayeuk.
They then towed the boat to shore," East Aceh district police chief
Muhajir told AFP.
"All we know is they are from Myanmar. We don't know where exactly the
boat sailed from as they're too tired and hungry to be interviewed and
we're having problems communicating," said Muhajir.
The asylum-seekers were being held in an immigration office in the
nearby town of Langsa, and were likely to be transferred to a detention
center, Muhajir said.
Fishermen in Sumatra rescued 121 Rohingya on Tuesday, with one claiming
Thai authorities had shot at them and taken their food and petrol
supplies to sabotage their boat as they crossed Thai waters.
Thai authorities are cracking down on Rohingya refugees entering the
country, turning around a boat in January with 200 Rohingya in its
waters, pushing them towards a third country.
"Considering the situation in Myanmar and Thailand, we're expecting to find more Rohingya in boats around here," Muhajir said.
The UN considers the Rohingya, a stateless Muslim ethnic group, one of
the most persecuted minorities in the world, and Myanmar views its
roughly 800,000 Rohingya as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, denying them
citizenship.
Buddhist-Muslim unrest in the western Myanmar state of Rakhine has left
at least 180 people dead and more than 110,000 displaced since June
2012.
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