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Nearly 2,000 migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh rescued in Indonesia, Malaysia

Like Gen Zia had done, BD must allow them to set up camps in the bordering area. There is no shortage of funds, weapons or trainers. BD just have to tolerate them. They themselves can liberate Arakan from the Burmese occupation tyrants.
===============
International community is aroused. But the Burmese do not understand anything other than power. BD must be convinced/compelled by all to allow the Rohingya Mujahids to operate.


Join me in asking the U.S. to take action to save the lives of thousands of desperate people who are about to lose their lives in the Andaman Sea.
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If you have read Nick Kristof's piece, "Crisis at Sea" in the New York Times, you understand that the lives of thousands of ethnic minority Rohingya from Burma are in peril:http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/14/opinion/nicholas-kristof-crisis-at-sea.html.

Fleeing the threat of genocide, Rohingya refugees are adrift in flimsy boats as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia refuse to allow them to reach safety. The United States is in an important position to influence these governments and to help launch an immediate search and rescue operation.

Join me in asking the United States to take action to save the lives of thousands of desperate people who are afloat in the Andaman Sea.


Fleeing the threats of genocide, thousands of Rohingya are adrift at sea, with no country willing to take them in.

Demand their rescue and protection.

The next crucial step is to confront the source of this catastrophe — the march to genocide in Burma against the Rohingya.

As long as the government of Burma continues its policies of persecution, the number of victims will continue to rise.

With an enormous amount of influence in Burma, the U.S. administration should be confronting the source of this hell — Burma's systematic repression and endangerment of 1.3 million Rohingya because of their ethnicity and the God they pray to.

Take Action:
http://action.endgenocide.org/Lost-at-Sea-Fleeing-the-Threat-of-Genocide


Thank you for standing for the Rohingya in this time of crisis.
Sincerely,
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President, United to End Genocide


P.S.Will you help save the lives of the Rohingya with an emergency gift?Your donation will increase pressure on the U.S. and international community to take immediate action to help Rohingya families survive and strengthen our genocide prevention programs in Burma.


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ABOUT UNITED TO END GENOCIDE
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But you can not trust Islamic rebels as they always turn their guns against their master.

Sorry I can't allow that in our territory. I love my own country too much.
 
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Like Gen Zia had done, BD must allow them to set up camps in the bordering area. There is no shortage of funds, weapons or trainers. BD just have to tolerate them. They themselves can liberate Arakan from the Burmese occupation tyrants.
===============
International community is aroused. But the Burmese do not understand anything other than power. BD must be convinced/compelled by all to allow the Rohingya Mujahids to operate.

occupation : Professional
daily work : shouting to arm those illegal people unlike professional... :cuckoo::nono::nono:
 
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Didnt' you see they all opt for Malaysia ????



Can you tell me more about Bosra in Thai fishing trawlers? Reports are coming that the poor souls are tricked to Thai fishing trawlers as sold as slaves and they never see the shore in their life again. Tell me more about it.

Burmese administration facilitate the whole trade to reduce the number of Rohingya in their country and they found a evil aliance with the Bosra trader who had been in business for decades. People are tricked to find them job in Malaysia but a big number of them subject to ransom money, sold as slaves in thai fishing trawler, some find graves and the lucky one could see the smiles of Malaysian government.
Yeah. I also saw that how Malaysian navy ordered its Fishermans not to help the migrants and threatened to blow off the boat if they try to enter malaysian waters and they also said that whatever help given to migrant who came ashore is temporary.
You guys are number 1 when protesting, doing riot and vandalising about somebody done bad against Muslim in another country
or drawing mohammad cartoon but won't help them when they ask for it.
 
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Breakthrough in Asian migrant crisis as Indonesia and Malaysia agree to help
Two countries agree to offer temporary shelter for thousands of refugees and economic migrants who have been trapped on boats on south-east Asian seas


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A Rohingya child drinks water at the port of Julok village in Kuta Binje, Indonesia’s Aceh Province after arriving there by boat.
Photograph: Beawiharta/Reuters
Agence France-Presse

Wednesday 20 May 2015 06.00 BST
Indonesia and Malaysia have agreed to provide temporary shelter to thousands of migrants stranded at sea in the first breakthrough in the humanitarian crisis confronting south-east Asia.

The announcement was made on Wednesday by the Malaysian foreign minister, Anifah Aman, after a meeting with his counterpart from Indonesia and Thailand to address the plight of the migrants.

Most of them are the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar and others are Bangladeshis fleeing poverty.

Anifah said the two countries agreed to give the estimated 7,000 stranded migrants temporary shelter “provided that the resettlement and repatriation process will be done in one year by the international community”.

“I urge all NGOs, of all races and religions to step forward to volunteer to help these Rohingya migrants,” Malaysia’s home minister, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, said.

“Even though they are a migrant community that is trying to enter the country illegally, and breaking immigration laws, their wellbeing should not be ignored.”

The breakthrough came as hundreds more starving people were rescued off the Indonesian coast on Wednesday and Burma for the first time offered to help in the crisis which has been blamed in part on its treatment of the ethnic Rohingya minority.

Following appeals by the UN chief, Ban Ki-moon, and Washington last week for the Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants to be rescued, Pope Francis also issued his first comments on the issue on Tuesday, likening the plight of the “poor Rohingya” to that of Christian and ethnic Yazidi people brutalised by the Islamic State group.

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About 3,000 people have already swum to shore or been rescued off Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand over the past 10 days after a Thai crackdown disrupted long-established smuggling routes, prompting some of the gangs responsible to abandon their human cargo at sea.

A total of 426 migrants believed to be from Burma were rescued in the early hours of Wednesday off Aceh in Indonesia, local officials said.

“Their condition is very weak. Many are sick, they told me that some of their friends died from starvation,” said Teuku Nyak Idrus, a local fishermen involved in the rescue.

Those saved in the Malacca strait between Malaysia and Indonesia’s Sumatra island included 30 children and 26 women, he added.

With food and water supplies running low, some boats have drifted back and forth as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand refused to accept them, drawing international condemnation.

Burma also has come under growing pressure to help stem the outflow of Muslim Rohingya, who are fleeing their homes in the country’s western Rakhine state after years of violence and discrimination at the hands of the Buddhist majority. Most head for Muslim-majority Malaysia.

Burma state media quoted a foreign ministry statement on Wednesday saying the government “shares concerns” expressed by the international community and is “ready to provide humanitarian assistance to anyone who suffered in the sea”.

That marked the most conciliatory statement yet from the Burmese government, which considers Rohingya to be foreigners from neighbouring Bangladesh and disavows all responsibility for them.

Burma has previously said it may snub Thailand’s call for a regional summit on the issue, and was not present at Wednesday’s meeting of foreign ministers in Malaysia.

In a mass at the Vatican, Pope Francis compared the Rohingya to those victimised in the Islamic State group’s brutal jihad in Syria and Iraq.

“We think of the poor Rohingya of Myanmar. As they leave their land to escape persecution they do not know what will happen to them,” he said.

The UN’s refugee agency told AFP on Tuesday it had received reports that at least 2,000 migrants had been stranded at sea for weeks on boats near the Burma-Bangladesh coasts.

They are being held on board amid horrid conditions by human traffickers who are demanding payment from the passengers to release them, a spokeswoman said.

Breakthrough in Asian migrant crisis as Indonesia and Malaysia agree to help | World news | The Guardian
 
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Yeah. I also saw that how Malaysian navy ordered its Fishermans not to help the migrants and threatened to blow off the boat if they try to enter malaysian waters and they also said that whatever help given to migrant who came ashore is temporary.
You guys are number 1 when protesting, doing riot and vandalising about somebody done bad against Muslim in another country
or drawing mohammad cartoon but won't help them when they ask for it.

End of the day it will be them who will accommodate. They wanted to pressurize Burmese.

Breakthrough in Asian migrant crisis as Indonesia and Malaysia agree to help
Two countries agree to offer temporary shelter for thousands of refugees and economic migrants who have been trapped on boats on south-east Asian seas


1000.jpg

A Rohingya child drinks water at the port of Julok village in Kuta Binje, Indonesia’s Aceh Province after arriving there by boat.
Photograph: Beawiharta/Reuters
Agence France-Presse

Wednesday 20 May 2015 06.00 BST
Indonesia and Malaysia have agreed to provide temporary shelter to thousands of migrants stranded at sea in the first breakthrough in the humanitarian crisis confronting south-east Asia.

The announcement was made on Wednesday by the Malaysian foreign minister, Anifah Aman, after a meeting with his counterpart from Indonesia and Thailand to address the plight of the migrants.

Most of them are the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar and others are Bangladeshis fleeing poverty.

Anifah said the two countries agreed to give the estimated 7,000 stranded migrants temporary shelter “provided that the resettlement and repatriation process will be done in one year by the international community”.

“I urge all NGOs, of all races and religions to step forward to volunteer to help these Rohingya migrants,” Malaysia’s home minister, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, said.

“Even though they are a migrant community that is trying to enter the country illegally, and breaking immigration laws, their wellbeing should not be ignored.”

The breakthrough came as hundreds more starving people were rescued off the Indonesian coast on Wednesday and Burma for the first time offered to help in the crisis which has been blamed in part on its treatment of the ethnic Rohingya minority.

Following appeals by the UN chief, Ban Ki-moon, and Washington last week for the Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants to be rescued, Pope Francis also issued his first comments on the issue on Tuesday, likening the plight of the “poor Rohingya” to that of Christian and ethnic Yazidi people brutalised by the Islamic State group.

Advertisement
About 3,000 people have already swum to shore or been rescued off Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand over the past 10 days after a Thai crackdown disrupted long-established smuggling routes, prompting some of the gangs responsible to abandon their human cargo at sea.

A total of 426 migrants believed to be from Burma were rescued in the early hours of Wednesday off Aceh in Indonesia, local officials said.

“Their condition is very weak. Many are sick, they told me that some of their friends died from starvation,” said Teuku Nyak Idrus, a local fishermen involved in the rescue.

Those saved in the Malacca strait between Malaysia and Indonesia’s Sumatra island included 30 children and 26 women, he added.

With food and water supplies running low, some boats have drifted back and forth as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand refused to accept them, drawing international condemnation.

Burma also has come under growing pressure to help stem the outflow of Muslim Rohingya, who are fleeing their homes in the country’s western Rakhine state after years of violence and discrimination at the hands of the Buddhist majority. Most head for Muslim-majority Malaysia.

Burma state media quoted a foreign ministry statement on Wednesday saying the government “shares concerns” expressed by the international community and is “ready to provide humanitarian assistance to anyone who suffered in the sea”.

That marked the most conciliatory statement yet from the Burmese government, which considers Rohingya to be foreigners from neighbouring Bangladesh and disavows all responsibility for them.

Burma has previously said it may snub Thailand’s call for a regional summit on the issue, and was not present at Wednesday’s meeting of foreign ministers in Malaysia.

In a mass at the Vatican, Pope Francis compared the Rohingya to those victimised in the Islamic State group’s brutal jihad in Syria and Iraq.

“We think of the poor Rohingya of Myanmar. As they leave their land to escape persecution they do not know what will happen to them,” he said.

The UN’s refugee agency told AFP on Tuesday it had received reports that at least 2,000 migrants had been stranded at sea for weeks on boats near the Burma-Bangladesh coasts.

They are being held on board amid horrid conditions by human traffickers who are demanding payment from the passengers to release them, a spokeswoman said.

Breakthrough in Asian migrant crisis as Indonesia and Malaysia agree to help | World news | The Guardian


It was Bangladesh who asked UN to help bring Bangladeshis back. All Bangladeshis will be brought back.
 
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In Vatican mass, Pope Francis speaks of plight of stranded Rohingya migrants
'They do not know what will happen to them,' Pope Francis says

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(Photo by Philip Chidell / Shutterstock.com)

Pope Francis is pictured on Easter Sunday, 2013, in St Peter's Square (Photo by Philip Chidell / Shutterstock.com)

In his homily Tuesday Pope Francis focused on many different “goodbyes” that happen during life, and asked whether attendees were ready for the final, most important farewell before going to the Father.

“Am I prepared to entrust to God all that I have? To entrust myself to God? To say that word which is the word of the son entrusting himself to his Father?” the pope asked May 19.

“I'm thinking of the great farewell, my great farewell, not when I must say 'see you then,' 'see you later,' 'bye for now,' but 'farewell.'”

Pope Francis spoke to those present in the Vatican's Saint Martha guesthouse for his daily Mass. He took his inspiration from the day's readings where Jesus says farewell to the disciples before his Passion and death, and when St Paul bids farewell before going to Jerusalem, and weeps on the beach with those who came to say goodbye to him.

He noted how both readings use the word “addio,” meaning “farewell” in the final sense. Paul, he noted, entrusts everything he has to the Lord while Jesus entrusts his disciples to God.

“We only say 'addio' at a time of final farewells, be they of this life or be they our final farewell,” he said, and spoke of the various types of small goodbyes we say in our lives.

There is the goodbye of a mother who hugs her son before he leaves for war, and every day she wakes up with fear that someone will come and to thank her for the generosity of her child in giving his life for his nation, Francis said.

He spoke of the goodbye of the “poor Rohingya from Myanmar”, who fled persecution in their homeland and are now stranded at sea.

These people, he noted, have “been in boats for months over there. They arrive in a town where people give them water and food and tell them to go away. That's a farewell.”

Rohingya people are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group largely from Rakhine state in west Myanmar. Since clashes began in 2012 between the state's Buddhist community and the long-oppressed Rohingya Muslim minority, more than 100,000 Rohingya's have fled Myanmar by sea, according to the UN.

In order to escape forced segregation from the rest of the population inside rural ghettos, many of the Rohingya — who are not recognized by the government as a legitimate ethnic group or as citizens of Myanmar — have made the perilous journey at sea in hopes of evading persecution.

Currently a number of Rohingya people — estimated to be in the thousands — remain stranded at sea in boats with dwindling supplies while Southeastern nations such as Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia refuse to take them in.

Pope Francis compared the Rohingya to those victimized in the Islamic State group's brutal jihad in Syria and Iraq.

"We think of the poor Rohingya of Myanmar. As they leave their land to escape persecution they do not know what will happen to them," he said.

He then turned his thoughts to the final farewell each person will make before leaving this world. Francis encouraged attendees to do an examination of conscience, asking themselves: “What will I leave behind?”

St Paul himself makes an examination of conscience when he speaks of the things he has done during his life and the uncertainty that faces him in Jerusalem, the pope observed.

He said that it is good for each person to imagine their final farewell, saying that “We don't know when it will happen, but it will be that moment when expressions like 'see you later,' 'see you soon,' 'see you tomorrow,' 'goodbye for now,' will become 'farewell.'”

The pope concluded his homily by praying that the Holy Spirit would teach each person how to say “farewell” and how to truly entrust themselves to God at the end of their lives.

With additional reporting from AFP

In Vatican mass, Pope Francis speaks of plight of stranded Rohingya migrants ucanews.com

Turkish military ship joins efforts to reach Rohingya Muslims
ANKARA

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The Turkish navy is carrying out efforts to reach Rohingya Muslims stranded in boats off the coast of Thailand and Malaysia, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said.

Addressing a group of young people at Çankaya Palace May 19, Davutoğlu said that Turkey was doing its best to reach Rohingya Muslims at sea with the International Organization for Migration (IOM), with the help of a ship from the Turkish Armed Forces already sailing in the region.

Some 7,000 to 8,000 Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants are currently thought to be in the Malacca Straits, unable to disembark because of crackdowns on trafficking networks in Thailand and Malaysia, their primary destination.

Boats carrying about 500 members of Myanmar’s long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim community washed ashore in western Indonesia on May 10, with some people in need of medical attention, a migration official and a human rights advocate said.

The men, women and children arrived on two separate boats, holding 430 people and 70 people respectively, said Steve Hamilton, deputy chief of mission at the IOM in Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital.

Rohingya Muslims have suffered for decades from state-sanctioned discrimination in Myanmar.

Attacks on the religious minority by Buddhist mobs in the last three years have sparked one of the biggest exoduses of boat people since the Vietnam War, sending 100,000 people fleeing, according to Chris Lewa, director of the Arakan Project. The project has monitored the movements of Rohingya for more than a decade.

Tightly confined and with limited access to food and clean water, Lewa said she worries that the migrants’ health is steadily deteriorating. Dozens of deaths have been reported in the last few months.
May/19/2015

Turkish military ship joins efforts to reach Rohingya Muslims - DIPLOMACY
 
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UNHCR Meets with Kalla on Rohingya Refugees
WEDNESDAY, 20 MAY, 2015

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) representative Thomas Vargas met with Vice President Jusuf Kalla to discuss the influx of Rohingya refugees who reached shore in Aceh.

"We had a fruitful discussion. I'm grateful for Indonesia's response in helping humanitarian needs and issues policy to share the responsibility," said Thomas on Wednesday.

Thomas said the UNHCR aas really grateful for the help by the Indonesian government to Rohingya refugees. He also said that the talks with Jusuf Kalla were about how to handle the Rohingya refugees.

According to Thomas, a concrete solution is necessary to deal with the problem faced by Rohingya refugees. "The important thing is that governments of related countries must share responsibility," he said.

Thomas also advised the Indonesian government to build new shelters for the refugees. "That can be one of the options," he said.

He went on to say that related countries must also help re-unite the Rohingya refugees with their families. "This is important and this is what I hope I can see from the international community."

Thomas added the UNHCR and other international institutions would help Indonesia deal with Rohingya refugees. Around 1,300 Rohingya and Bangladeshi refugees were stranded in Sumatera waters. Activists are worried that thousands of other refugees had drowned between the Mallaca Strait and the Andaman Sea.

UNHCR Meets with Kalla on Rohingya Refugees | International | Tempo.Co :: Indonesian News Portal
 
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Indonesia and Malaysia Agree to Care for Stranded Migrants
By JOE COCHRANEMAY 20, 2015

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A Bangladeshi who arrived by boat in Aceh Province, Indonesia. Bangladeshis tend to be economic migrants. Credit Beawiharta/Reuters

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia and Malaysia agreed on Wednesday to take in thousands of migrants stranded at sea until they can be sent home or resettled in a third country, in the first official action by Southeast Asian nations to try to resolve a crisis well into its second week.

Responding to international pressure to save the migrants, many of whom have been adrift in rickety boats for weeks with little food or water, the agreement by the foreign ministers of Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand was a potential lifesaver even as experts said it offered only a temporary fix to deeper problems.

It reverses the previous position of those governments, whose navies had been pushing boatloads of desperate migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar away from their shores in what international aid groups characterized as a dangerous game of human Ping-Pong.

“It’s extremely welcome news,” said Joe Lowry, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration in Bangkok. “It’s the right thing to do. They should get the helicopters and planes and boats out there to look for these people.”

But in a sign of the underlying problems that remained, the migrants’ home countries, Bangladesh and Myanmar, did not participate in the talks in Malaysia that led to the agreement on Wednesday. And Thailand, which has been a way station for the migrants and until recently a haven for traffickers, did not agree to take in any migrants.

The agreement came as fishermen on the Indonesian island of Sumatra rescued at least 370 migrants from sinking ships and brought them ashore. Those migrants included passengers from a boat that was spotted by journalists adrift in the Andaman Sea near Thailand and Malaysia last Thursday.

An estimated 7,000 to 8,000 migrants are still at sea, many of them abandoned by traffickers after a recent crackdown by Thailand on human smuggling. An additional 3,500 migrants — mainly Bangladeshis seeking jobs and ethnic Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar — have landed in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, or have been rescued offshore, since May 10. Many of them are women and young children.

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21Migrants1-web-articleLarge.jpg


Women and children from Myanmar and Bangladesh after arriving at the port in the village of Julok in Aceh Province, Indonesia, on Wednesday. Credit Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images
In the agreement announced on Wednesday, Indonesia and Malaysia said they would “provide humanitarian assistance to those 7,000 irregular migrants still at sea.” They also agreed “to offer them temporary shelter provided that the resettlement and repatriation process will be done in one year by the international community.”

The statement called on countries to “share the burden” by providing financial support.

While the details have not been worked out, Mr. Lowry called on regional governments and commercial shipping companies to help pinpoint the locations of migrant boats and provide them directions to landing points in Malaysia and Indonesia, or rescue them if necessary.


Document: Joint Statement on the Asian Migrant Crisis

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees called the agreement “an important initial step” and “vital” for saving lives, but said further action was required to address the root causes of crisis.
Tens of thousands of Rohingya, a stateless Muslim ethnic group that lives primarily in Rakhine State in western Myanmar, have fled the country during the last several years, most going to Malaysia or Bangladesh. The government in Myanmar does not recognize the Rohingya as citizens and has refused to accept any back.

Officials from Myanmar did not attend Wednesday’s meeting in Malaysia and had no plans to attend a regional conference in Bangkok on May 29 to discuss the issue, said U Zaw Htay, deputy director general of the office of President Thein Sein of Myanmar.

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MIGRANTS-master180.jpg


An ethnic Rohingya migrant from Myanmar is processed in Indonesia, which, with Malaysia, is sheltering refugees for now. Skepticism has met Europe’s new migrant policy. Credit Sutanta Aditya/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
In a statement on Tuesday, Myanmar’s Foreign Ministry said the government was “deeply concerned” with the problem and was “making serious efforts” to combat trafficking and illegal migration. But officials have made no suggestion of reconsidering their policies toward the country’s one million Rohingya.

Surin Pitsuwan, a former Thai foreign minister and former secretary general of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, said Myanmar’s cooperation would be essential to finding a more lasting solution to the crisis.

“Myanmar has to demonstrate to the world that it can resolve its own internal complexities and resolve this citizenship problem” with the Rohingya, he said, as well as the government’s failure to provide them education and health care.

While the migrants from Myanmar may be allowed to apply for asylum, in Indonesia, Malaysia or perhaps a third country, those from Bangladesh are mainly economic refugees who are likely to be sent home, experts say.

They are likely to resist repatriation: Many have made great financial sacrifices to make the voyage and many have relatives working abroad whom they had planned to join.

“Those who are identified as Bangladeshi nationals, we will bring them back to our country,” said Khandker Mosharraf Hossain, Bangladesh’s minister for expatriates’ welfare and overseas employment. He called the decision by Malaysia and Indonesia to take in migrants “a very good decision because our primary concern was to save their lives.”

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Migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar bathing after being rescued on Wednesday. Credit Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images
The military government in Thailand, where the migrant issue has been divisive, was still grappling with its response, including whether to take any migrants.

“Whether to accept them or not, I don’t know,” Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha told reporters on Wednesday. “We are discussing it.”

Human Rights Watch described Thailand as “missing in action.”

“Let’s hope that this failure of Thai leadership is temporary, and that Bangkok recognizes that it should urgently revamp its stance and join with Indonesia and Malaysia to save these people on the high seas and provide them with humanitarian shelter and assistance ashore,” said Phil Robertson, the organization’s deputy director for Asia.

Officials in the Philippines expressed willingness this week to accept migrants, but did not make specific pledges as to how many might be taken in and under what circumstances. They have said that if migrants make it to the shores of the Philippines, they will not be turned away.

But the crisis is unfolding more than 1,500 miles away with migrants using flimsy boats, and so far none have come near the Philippines.

One issue that was not controversial was human trafficking, which all of the countries involved, including Myanmar, agreed to try to stop.

The migrants who have made it to shore in Indonesia told stories of weeks of horror and brutality at the hands of the traffickers, who extorted them for money, provided little food or water and then abandoned them on the open sea to evade a crackdown on smuggling networks by the government of Thailand. There have been reports of passengers dying of starvation and their bodies being tossed overboard.

During their meeting on Wednesday, the three foreign ministers pledged to take necessary action against human traffickers, and they called for an emergency ministerial meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to discuss transnational crime.

The migrants saved by fishermen in Indonesia were on several ships rescued separately on Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning off Aceh Province, on the northern tip of Sumatra, said Maj. Gen. Fuad Basya, chief spokesman of the Indonesian military.

He said they all were taken to a camp in Langsa, in East Aceh District, one of two camps opened in the province last week.

Chris Lewa, coordinator of the Arakan Project, a human rights group that tracks migration in the Andaman Sea, said that one of the ships that had arrived in Aceh had been first discovered last week by journalists off the coast of Thailand.

Reporting was contributed by Poypiti Amatatham from Bangkok; Floyd Whaley from Manila; Wai Moe from Yangon, Myanmar; and Julfikar Ali Manik from Dhaka, Bangladesh.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/21/w...ngya-bangladeshi-migrants-agreement.html?_r=0

Can Indonesia provide an island for the Rohingya refugees?
merdeka.com reports: With 17.000 islands - of which around 6,000 are uninhabited - could Indonesia provide an island for the Rohingya refugees?

rohingya-refugees-at-sea.jpg
Rohingya migrants sit in a boat off the coast near the city of Geulumpang in Indonesia's East Aceh district of Aceh province before being rescued on May 20, 2015. (Photo: AFP/JANUAR)
JAKARTA: Rohingya refugees from Myanmar and Bangladesh continue to land in North Aceh, and the Indonesian government is working to find a solution for these refugees. Until now, there has not been any commitment from Myanmar to take responsibility for the plight of these migrants.

Can Indonesia provide an island for the Rohingya refugees? International relations expert from the Institute of Social and Political Sciences in Jakarta, Zein Latuconsina on Tuesday (May 19) said Indonesia can accommodate the Rohingya refugees stranded in Aceh.

“There are thousands of islands that are uninhabited across the archipelago that can be used to accommodate the Rohingya refugees,” said Mr Zein. “Indonesia can play an active role and give help just like in the past, when it sheltered Vietnamese refugees in the Riau islands.”

Of the more than 17,000 islands in the Indonesian archipelago, around 6,000 are uninhabited.

However, in the case of the Rohingya refugees, it will depend on the wisdom of the government to resolve the issue. “Actually, this is an opportunity for Indonesia to prove to the international community that it can tackle the Rohingya problem,” said Mr Zein.

He added that Indonesia can offer help to this humanitarian crisis, because Malaysia and Vietnam will not accommodate the refugees.

“After that, ASEAN members can consolidate and respond to the humanitarian problem,” said Mr Zein. “ASEAN countries' wish to discuss the humanitarian disaster has already been rejected by the Myanmar government. This shows there isn’t any good faith from Myanmar.”

He added: “ASEAN needs to take a strong position and respond to Myanmar’s refusal; the international community too has to get involved and investigate if this can be categorised as ethnic cleansing.”

Read the original report at merdeka.com here.

Can Indonesia provide an island for the Rohingya refugees? - Channel NewsAsia


 
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You are right. They are mixed people.


So what? North and South Indians look different. Kashmiris look like Arab, Shikhs look different, North Eastern Indians look like Chinese. And many people of WB, Bihar, Assam and Tripura look alike Bangladeshis. And Arakan was an independent kingdom. Its natives are Rakhines, not Burmese. And we have ethnic Rakhine population who took shelter in BD kuakata during ethnic cleansing by Burmese kings. Burma and Arakan were hostile to each other.
Idiot Bihar has nothing to do with Assam or Bengal. We are similar to Jharkhand and UP. Stop trying to claim us. We call you guys Kala chooha here so how can we be similar idiot? We speak different language, have different clans and castes and eat different foods. We are Ganga people like UP Wallas.
 
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Idiot Bihar has nothing to do with Assam or Bengal. We are similar to Jharkhand and UP. Stop trying to claim us. We call you guys Kala chooha here so how can we be similar idiot? We speak different language, have different clans and castes and eat different foods. We are Ganga people like UP Wallas.

Stupid did you ever check the map of Bihar? Your western Bihar is similar to UP and Eastern Bihar has similarity with our NW. And take your stranded Biharis from Bangladesh. Idiot BC MC Bhumihar you are different than the Dalit Hindus and those Dalit Hindus are very similar to our NW hindus. Even BD Muslims have similarity with UP Muslims. Many of them migrated during partition from UP, Bihar. Check my post again I said Many people not all people


capture-20150522-000144.png
 
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Stupid did you ever check the map of Bihar? Your western Bihar is similar to UP and Eastern Bihar has similarity with our NW. And take your stranded Biharis from Bangladesh. Idiot BC MC Bhumihar you are different than the Dalit Hindus and those Dalit Hindus are very similar to our NW hindus. Even BD Muslims have similarity with UP Muslims. Many of them migrated during partition from UP, Bihar. Check my post again I said Many people not all people


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Idiot, since when did Bangladeshi become expert on Bihar? Even Eastern Bihar is very different to Bangladesh and they speak Maithili which is similar to Nepali. Not filthy Bangladeshi language. Those stranded Biharis in Bangladesh are Dalit converts and therefore similar to majority Bangladeshis and South Indians sudra kala. Eastern Bihar has Yadav and Kurmi caste who are not found in Bengal so how can they be similar? Idiot Bangladeshi low caste, use your brain.
 
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Idiot, since when did Bangladeshi become expert on Bihar? Even Eastern Bihar is very different to Bangladesh and they speak Maithili which is similar to Nepali. Not filthy Bangladeshi language. Those stranded Biharis in Bangladesh are Dalit converts and therefore similar to majority Bangladeshis and South Indians sudra kala. Eastern Bihar has Yadav and Kurmi caste who are not found in Bengal so how can they be similar? Idiot Bangladeshi low caste, use your brain.

Bihari idiot grow some grey matter people are same at those low distances. Dialects can be different. Even NW Bangladeshi dialect is different from the standard Bengali we speak.
 
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Idiot, since when did Bangladeshi become expert on Bihar? Even Eastern Bihar is very different to Bangladesh and they speak Maithili which is similar to Nepali. Not filthy Bangladeshi language. Those stranded Biharis in Bangladesh are Dalit converts and therefore similar to majority Bangladeshis and South Indians sudra kala. Eastern Bihar has Yadav and Kurmi caste who are not found in Bengal so how can they be similar? Idiot Bangladeshi low caste, use your brain.
I think they are called Musahar in Bihar.
 
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The min cause of this crisis is the inhuman treatment of rahinga people in their country unless this problem are solve this kind of crisis will emerge again .
 
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