140 Rohingya stranded off Indonesia; locals deny landing permission
UNB
Publish: 23 Oct 2024, 11:41 AM
LABUHAN
HAJI, Oct 23 (AP/UNB) - About 140 weak and hungry Rohingya Muslims, mostly
women and children, were on a wooden boat anchored about 1 mile (0.60
kilometers) off the coast of Indonesia's northernmost province of Aceh on
Tuesday, officials said, and local residents refused to allow them onto land.
The blue-painted boat
has been floating off the coast since Friday. Three Rohingya died during the
nearly two-week-long trip from Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh to the waters off
Labuhan Haji in South Aceh district, local police said.
Authorities have
transferred 11 Rohingya to a government hospital since Sunday after their
health worsened.
"Our community, the
fishing community, refuses to let them land because of what happened in other
places. They have caused unrest to local residents," said Muhammad Jabal,
the chief of the fishing community in South Aceh.
A large banner hanging
at the seaport read: "The people of South Aceh Regency reject the arrival
of Rohingya refugees in the South Aceh Regency area."
The group left Cox's
Bazar on Oct. 9, according to an Aceh police report, and intended to reach
Malaysia. Some passengers on the boat had reportedly paid to be transported to
other countries.
Local residents have
given the group food, Jabal said, and the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees has also provided them food.
There were 216 people on
board when the boat departed Bangladesh and 50 of them reportedly disembarked
in Indonesia's Riau province, according to police.
Aceh police have
arrested three suspects for alleged people smuggling.
About 1 million of the
predominately Muslim Rohingya live in Bangladesh as refugees from Myanmar. They
include about 740,000 who fled a brutal counterinsurgency campaign in 2017 by
Myanmar's security forces, who were accused of committing mass rapes and
killings.
The Rohingya minority in
Myanmar faces widespread discrimination. Most are denied citizenship.
Indonesia, like Thailand
and Malaysia, is not a signatory to the United Nations' 1951 Refugee Convention
and is not obligated to accept them. However, the country generally provides
temporary shelter to refugees in distress.
In March, Indonesian
officials and local fishermen rescued 75 people from atop the overturned hull
of a boat off the coast of Aceh. Another 67 passengers, including at least 28
children, had been killed when the boat capsized, according to the UNHCR. AP
reported that the captain and crew had tortured women and girls before the the
boat capsized.
End/UNB/AP/MB