News Indonesia Struggles As Migrants Arrive By The Hundreds.

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AFP - ‎Monday‎, ‎11‎ ‎May‎ ‎2015
Indonesia struggles as migrants arrive by the hundreds.

They washed up on Indonesia's far west coast "sad, tired and distressed" after a treacherous high-seas journey: hundreds of Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh, with children in tow, in search of a better life.
They were never supposed to wind up in Indonesia's Aceh region, said one Muslim Rohingya aboard the wooden boat which arrived at the weekend.
The 573 people had boarded in Thailand with the promise of reaching Malaysia before traffickers abandoned them off the coast with little fuel.
Local authorities in Lhoksukon, the capital of North Aceh, also were unprepared for the sudden arrivals, in one of four boats of Rohingya migrants rescued off the coasts of Indonesia and Malaysia since Sunday.
Caught off guard, the authorities scrambled to find food and shelter for hundreds of exhausted people, some so dehydrated they needed intravenous drips and treatment at local health clinics.
"We actually don't have money in our budget for this," Mohd Yani, a local official of the North Aceh Social Welfare Office, told AFP.
But he added: "We will think about it later. This is an emergency."
Brought to shore, the migrants were piled into a local sports centre, many too weak to do anything but lie head to toe on the floor and try to sleep.
Tegas, a local government official who like many Indonesians goes by only one name, said the migrants arrived "psychologically distressed" and "sad, tired” and distressed".
They now face a bleak situation in Lhoksukon.
"The centre is cramped and poorly ventilated. Toilets are few and smelly," Tegas told AFP.
"The migrants sleep on a blue canvas tarp we lay on the ground, without pillows and blankets. We really need more supplies and to move them to a better accommodation."
But where the authorities are stretched, locals are lending a helping hand.
Many opened their doors when the migrants arrived, providing them with food, clothing and respite after the long journey.
Others around the sports hall are now helping out with whatever they have, bringing food and water and trying to strike up conversations despite the language barrier.
"It’s just the Acehnese way of trying to cheer them up," Tegas said.
Their situation may be grim but for another group of fellow Rohingya migrants further east, land still remains out of reach.
The captain of that boat fled after it was intercepted early Monday, the Indonesian navy claims, leaving behind roughly 400 migrants on a damaged boat with limited water.
The navy was supplying the boat with water and food but a spokesman said there were currently no plans to allow it to berth.
Rohingya are considered by the UN to be one of the world's most persecuted minorities.
Buddhist-majority Myanmar views its population of roughly 1.3 million Rohingya as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, and they have been targeted in outbreaks of sectarian violence there in recent years, prompting many to flee.
Thousands have braved the dangerous sea crossing from Myanmar to southern Thailand and beyond in the hope of reaching mainly Muslim Malaysia. But many often fall prey to people-traffickers in Thailand.
Boatloads of Rohingya have arrived off Aceh in the past, typically after becoming lost or running out of fuel.
But amid the misery, some of the newly arrived Rohingya are trying to follow a normal routine, visiting the local mosque to pray while their children play together nearby.
Tegas said the devout Acehnese welcomed their Muslim counterparts and pitied the
persecution they faced in the name of religion.
"We treat them like our brothers and sisters," he said.
But they remain in limbo, waiting for an expected visit from the International Organization for Migration to assess what needs to be done now.

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Rohingya muslims in Thailand.
 

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Indonesia to 'turn back every boat carrying Rohingyas'

Military says it would not allow boats as nearly 2,000 migrants arrive in Indonesia and Malaysia in past two days.


12 May 2015 11:03 GMT

Indonesian military has told Al Jazeera that they will send back any boat with Rohingya migrants entering its waters as a vessel carrying hundreds of migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh was turned away towards Malaysia.

Fuad Basya, Indonesian military spokesman, said that they pulled back a boat "full of people in dire conditions, smelling bad, some were screaming", adding that they provided the migrants with water, food, medicine and fuel.

AFP news agency reported that the boat carrying an estimated 400 migrants was intercepted on the coast of northwestern Aceh region on Monday.

Meanwhile, rights groups have urged regional governments to save thousands of migrants believed to be stranded at sea in Southeast Asia and at the risk of death.

An estimated 6,000 to 8,000 Bangladeshis and Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar remain trapped in crowded, wooden boats, officials and activists said on Tuesday.

Nearly 2,000 people have reached Malaysia and Indonesia in the past two days after Thailand announced a crackdown on smuggling routes. They were rescued from overcrowded boats after being stranded at sea.

Myanmar shirks responsibility


Even as a large number of migrants originated from Myanmar, its government said that they will not take responsibility for migrants who are not their own citizens.

"If it is true and proven that they are from Myanmar, we will take responsibility for them. But not the Bangladeshis," Zaw Htay, the director of Myanmar's president's office told Al Jazeera.

"Some of the Rohingya people may have come from Bangladesh. We can't be responsible for them. But we do not accept the name Rohingya. They are Bengali," Htay added referring to Myanmar's long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim community.

The Rohingya, who are Muslim, have for decades suffered from state-sanctioned discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, which considers them illegal settlers from Bangladesh even though their families have lived there for generations.
Those comments come a day after more than a 1,000 migrants, including children from both countries, were detained in Malaysia after they arrived in the popular Malaysian resort island of Langkawi.

The police chief in Langkawi told Al Jazeera's Karishma Vyas that 1,158 people were being held on the island. At least 672 are Bangladeshi, and around 486 of them are Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.

At least 100 women and 60 children were among them. The migrants were in a very poor state, suffering from dehydration as well as hunger.

The police say they believe the captain as well as the other traffickers on the three boats had escaped in another vessel and left the migrants to their own devices.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/05/150512045951738.html
 

queenislam

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Astaghfirullahalazim!
Very sad at this stage more sadder when at this time their needs are being turned down,
So where did the authority think our brothers and sisters the Rohingya will go? Turning back to Myanmar will spell >Massacre mass burned alive murder!
The UN ?
...and do these countries that they are trying to reach out for help REALLY running out of space for shelters?

Doesn't they have those uninhabited jungle,mountainous that they can spare?

Did they prefer to get it barren for the ghosts and jinns to stay rather than human???

When there's a will there's a way and with Ramadhan is approaching ,insyaAllah, Allah swt will assist ~Amin!
 
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