At least 250 people missing, including Rohingya, Bangladeshis, after boat sinks in Andaman Sea
The trawler departed from Teknaf in the southern Bangladeshi district of Cox's Bazar carrying a large number of passengers to Malaysia.
PTI
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Overcrowding, strong winds and rough seas caused the vessel to lose control and sink (Representative image/X)
Dhaka, 15 April
At least 250 people, including Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals, were missing after a boat capsized in the Andaman Sea recently on the way to Malaysia, according to the United Nations' refugee and migration agencies.
While
details remained sketchy, Bangladesh Coast Guard spokesperson Lt Com Sabbir
Alam Suzan told The Associated Press on Wednesday that nine people, including
three Rohingya and six Bangladeshis, were rescued on 9 April.
Suzan said
the Bangladesh flag carrier MT Meghna Pride rescued the nine people when the
crew found them floating at sea after the capsize.
When the
boat sank, the status of any search on Wednesday was unclear.
The UN
High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Organisation for Migration, in a joint statement, said Tuesday that the trawler departed from Teknaf in the
southern Bangladeshi district of Cox's Bazar carrying a large number of
passengers to Malaysia.
Overcrowding,
strong winds and rough seas caused the vessel to lose control and sink, the
agencies said.
Shari
Nijman, a UNCHR communication officer in Cox's Bazar, said Wednesday that the
agency had no other updates.
Another
coast guard media official told the AP by phone Wednesday that the rescued
people, eight men and one woman, were all safe after being handed over to the
coast guard, who brought them to the police in Teknaf.
The
official said the rescue was not part of any official search operation as it is
outside Bangladesh territory, and that the crew of the MT Meghna Pride saved
the people while it was on its way to Indonesia from Bangladesh's Chittagong.
The
official spoke by phone on condition of anonymity in line with official policy.
UNHCR and
IOM said the disappearance reflected the protracted displacement of Rohingya
people and the absence of durable solutions.
They said
ongoing violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state has made the Rohingya's safe return
to Myanmar uncertain, while limited humanitarian assistance, as well as
restricted access to education and employment in refugee camps, continue to
push vulnerable Rohingya refugees to choose risky sea journeys, often based on
false promises of higher wages and better opportunities abroad.
UNHCR and IOM urged the international community to strengthen funding and solidarity to ensure lifesaving assistance for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, which has sheltered more than 1 million Rohingya from Myanmar.
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