30 January 2013
A group of Rohingya women and children at Khao Lak shelter in southern Thailand (Photo: IRIN)
Wednesday, 30 January 2013 THE BANGKOK POST
Nearly 350 illegal
Rohingya migrants were found crammed inside two vessels entering Thai
waters in southern Ranong and Phuket provinces on Tuesday.
In Ranong, a boat
carrying about 140 Rohingya migrants was spotted floating about 5.5
kilometres off Phayam island in Muang district about 8.30am by a naval
patrol boat.
Naval officers provided the illegal migrants with food and water, a source said. Humanitarian assistance was also provided to help them on the way to their destination.
The Rohingya had to be
sent back out to sea as authorities were already struggling with an
influx of illegal Muslim Rohingya migrants, the source said.
Several boats carrying
Rohingya have illegally entered Thailand via this southern province on a
daily basis. In some cases, the Rohingya sunk their own boats to
prevent authorities from sending them back out to sea, the source said.
In Phuket, about 200
illegal Rohingya migrants were found crammed inside a vessel searched by
marine police and naval officers off Racha Noi island in Muang district
Tuesday.
The boat was initially
spotted floating between Racha Yai and Racha Noi islands by fishermen on
Monday. They provided the migrants with food and water and told the
authorities.
They suggested the boat
people land on Racha Noi, Phuket’s southernmost island, because it was
uninhabited. Some of the migrants camped on the island overnight, but
most remained on the boat.
A combined marine
police and navy team descended on the boat late Tuesday. It was not
known where they were planning to take the refugees.
The 200 Rohingya are
the latest to reach southern Thailand, following a series of arrests in
Songkhla and at sea in Phangnga province this month.
This lifts the total number of illegal Rohingya migrants now in custody to about 1,700.
Meanwhile, Foreign
Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul will lead a delegation of Organisation
of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) members to meet Islamic leaders and
security agencies in the three southernmost border provinces tomorrow.
He said the delegation would get first-hand information about the
southern violence.
He will also use this
opportunity to seek a solution to the Rohingya migrant problem from the
OIC and ask the delegation which countries wanted to take in the
migrants who had fled from Myanmar’s Rakhine state to Thailand.
As those migrants had
entered Thailand, the kingdom had to provide them with temporary
assistance on a humanitarian basis, he said. Authorities had to work
with several international agencies such as Unicef and the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to find a solution.
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