About 180 Rohingya refugees feared dead after boat goes missing

  • 12/26/2022
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About 180 Rohingya refugees are feared to have died after their boat went missing in the Andaman Sea, making 2022 one of the deadliest years for the refugees trying to flee the camps in Bangladesh. In a statement on Sunday, the United Nations said it was concerned that a boat carrying 180 refugees, which had left the camps in the Bangladeshi city of Cox’s Bazar on 2 December bound for Malaysia, had sunk with no survivors, which would make it one of the worst disasters for Rohingya sea crossings this year. Relatives of those onboard said they had lost contact with the boat on 8 December and had little hope left that any were still alive. Mohammad Noman, who lives in the Rohingya refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, described how his sister Ayesha Khatoon had boarded the boat with her two daughters, aged five and three, with a dream to reunite with her husband in Malaysia. “Since the boat left Bangladesh on December 2, every day we called up the boat two or three times on the boatman’s satellite phone to find out if my sister and her two daughters were all right,” he said. “Since December 8, I have failed to get access to that phone.” He added: “I know some other people in Cox’s Bazar who made phone calls to the boat every day and stayed in contact with their relatives there. None of them has succeeded to reach the phone after 8 December.” Kefayatullah, the captain of another boat carrying Rohingya refugees that was rescued by the Sri Lankan coastguard earlier this month after it ran into trouble, said he saw the boat carrying the 180 refugees get caught up in high waves during a stormy night some time in the second week of December. Kefayatullah said: “It was around 2am when a strong wind began blowing and big waves surfaced on the sea. Jamal’s [the captain] boat began swaying wildly, we could gauge from a flashlight they were pointing at us. After some time, we could not see the flashlight any more. We believe the boat drowned then.” Noman described the devastation in his family at the realisation that the boat carrying his sister and nieces had probably sunk. “My mother has not eaten food for two days now. She is crying continually and fainting time and again,” he said. If the sinking of the boat is confirmed, it would bring the number of Rohingya refugees who have died on sea crossings to Malaysia in 2022 close to 350, one of the worst tolls in recent years, demonstrating the desperation of many of the Rohingya refugees to flee to a new life outside the camps in Bangladesh. More than a million Rohingya Muslims are now living in the Cox’s Bazar camps, where they fled after violence and persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar. But they are living in increasingly prison-like conditions with little opportunity for education or livelihoods. Malaysia is a popular destination for Rohingya, especially for women who often travel there for arranged marriages, and human traffickers have a lucrative business organising regular boat crossings on rickety vessels, despite the high risks and hazards involved and the fact that many Rohingya face detention on their arrival in Malaysia. On Monday, a boat carrying about 160 Rohingya refugees, which had been adrift for weeks, was rescued off the coast of Aceh, Indonesia, according to two Rohingya rights groups and relatives of those onboard. The boat had been floating in the Andaman Sea without food and water for weeks but pleas for rescue had gone ignored by surrounding countries. More than a dozen onboard, mostly women and children, are thought to have died on the crossing. Mohammed Rezuwan Khan, the brother of one of the women onboard, who was travelling with her five-year-old daughter, said he had spoken to the captain of the boat several times over the past few weeks. “On 24 December, I learned from a phone call with the captain that the death toll had reached 12 and they had been going without food and water for over two weeks,” he said. Khan said he was still trying to reach his sister to find out if she and his niece were among those rescued on Monday. Chris Lewa, the director of the Arakan Project, which works in support of Myanmar’s Rohingya, confirmed that the boat had been rescued on Monday, after weeks of her organisation pleading with south and south-east Asian countries to step in. “The boat in distress finally landed in North Aceh, Indonesia, late this afternoon,” said Lewa. The previous day, another 58 Rohingya refugees washed up on the coast of Banda Aceh in Indonesia in a rickety boat. The boat had set sail for Malaysia but had run into trouble, and the rescued refugees were “very sick” and “very weak from hunger and dehydration”, according to the local police chief Rolly Yuiza Away. The UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, last week urged governments in south and south-east Asia to act on the calls of distress from the Rohingya refugee boats. “While many in the world are preparing to enjoy a holiday season and ring in a new year, boats bearing desperate Rohingya men, women and young children are setting off on perilous journeys in unseaworthy vessels,” Andrews said.

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