Sailors
help a rescued boy to disembark from a Sri Lanka Navy vessel at Oluvil
harbour today. Sri Lanka's navy on Sunday rescued 138 Bangladeshis and
Myanmar nationals from a sinking fishing vessel off the island's east
coast, officials said.
France 24 English
03 February 2013
AFP
- Sri Lanka's navy on Sunday rescued 138 Bangladeshis and Myanmar
nationals from a sinking fishing vessel off the island's east coast,
officials said.
One
passenger was found dead while many of the 138 plucked from the boat
were dehydrated, said navy spokesman Kosala Warnakulasuriya, adding that
the vessel had been adrift for 10 days before it sank on Sunday.
"We
sent three ships for the rescue at a location 50 miles (80 kilometres)
off the eastern coast of Akkaraipattu," Warnakulasuriya told AFP. "Some
have been admitted to a local hospital."
Police said 14 were Myanmar nationals while the others were Bangladeshis.
Fifteen
of the survivors, including two women and two children, were
hospitalised with acute dehydration, police said in a statement.
"We
have difficulty in communicating with the survivors so we have asked
the two embassies to send us translators," police spokesman Prishantha
Jayakody told AFP.
He
said statements of survivors would be recorded and they would be moved
to a temporary shelter in Colombo under judicial supervision. In the
meantime, the authorities at Oluvil fishing harbour were giving them
shelter.
"We
are certain that they were not trying to enter Sri Lanka, but their
boat developed trouble in mid-sea and they drifted close to our shores,"
Jayakody said.
The
early-morning rescue came amid stepped up naval patrols to deter Sri
Lankan fishing boats from taking would-be illegal immigrants to
Australia.
Authorities
arrested more than 1,200 people trying to leave the island illegally
last year. Many of those who make the perilous journey pay up to $3,000
for a place on trawlers run by people-smugglers.
Warnakulasuriya
said the passengers rescued on Sunday identified themselves as
Bangladeshi and Myanmar nationals but it was not yet known where they
came from or were headed.
Reports
from local fishermen alerted fishing authorities who in turn asked for
help from the navy which mounted a 20-hour search and rescue operation,
officials said.
They
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 an
seaborne exodus of Rohingya.
Thailand's
navy blocked more than 200 Rohingya boat people 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.
Sailors
assist rescued survivors on a Sri Lanka Navy vessel at Oluvil harbour
today. One passenger was found dead while many of the 138 plucked from
the boat were dehydrated, said navy spokesman Kosala Warnakulasuriya,
adding that the vessel had been adrift for 10 days before it sank on
Sunday.
Sailors help rescued survivors at Oluvil fisheries harbour in eastern
Sri Lanka today. Fifteen of the survivors, including two women and two
children, were hospitalised with acute dehydration, police said in a
statement.
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