
60 Rohingya found abandoned on Thai island (Credit: Google)
- The group, which included five children, was discovered on Koh Dong island
- Police said they had been charged with illegal
- The incident comes after the bodies of 14 Rohingya people, including children
Fifty-Nine Rohingya people were discovered on a Thai island after being abandoned by traffickers en route to Malaysia, A senior police officer said Sunday.
The group, which included five children, was discovered on Koh Dong island in southern Satun province on Saturday, according to lieutenant general Surachet Hakpan.
Every year, thousands of mostly Muslim minority Rohingya people fleeing persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar risk their lives in months-long, expensive journeys across Thailand’s seas to reach Malaysia.
Police said they had been charged with illegal entry and could face deportation to Myanmar following a court case.
“We are providing humanitarian assistance and will investigate whether they are victims of human trafficking or if they entered illegally,” Surachet said.
The group appeared “starving and was likely to have had no food for three to five days”, a police statement said.
Group members told officers their boat was among three vessels carrying 178 people that had left Myanmar and Bangladesh, having paid an agent around 5,000 ringgit ($1,300) for the journey.
Read more: Hundreds of Rohingya escape Malaysia detention, six dead
The first two boats carrying 119 people were stopped and arrested by Malaysian authorities, according to the Thai police statement.
The boat’s crew then decided to abandon those onboard on Koh Dong island — telling them that they had reached Malaysia, the group told officers.
The incident comes after the bodies of 14 Rohingya people, including children, were discovered washed up on a beach last month after they attempted to flee Myanmar.
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya people fled a military crackdown in the nation in 2017, bringing with them harrowing stories of murder, rape and arson.
Those still in Myanmar are widely seen as interlopers from Bangladesh and are largely denied citizenship, many rights and access to healthcare and education.
Muslim-majority Malaysia is a key destination for Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar or refugee camps in Bangladesh.
After their vessel was shipwrecked on an island off the coast of Satun province in 2019, a Thai boat captain was charged with smuggling 65 Rohingya people from Myanmar.
The same area was the hub of a multimillion-dollar trafficking route that was exposed in 2015 following the discovery of mass graves of Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants along the Malaysian border.
Read More: Rohingya children have few options FOR education as Bangladesh is closing illegal school
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