COMMEMORATING ONE YEAR SINCE BOAT CRISIS OF ROHINGYA REFUGEES IN ANDAMAN SEA
Mary Scully Report
(Photo is Rohingya on a drifting boat in the Andaman Sea from a Financial Times article about the crisis & about Ziaur) |
Ziaur
Rahman is a 24-year-old Rohingya refugee & victim of human
trafficking. He has now become an advocate for Rohingya human rights
against genocide in Myanmar, against human trafficking, against state
persecution & incarceration in countries where they sought
asylum. It’s been one year since thousands were adrift in the
Andaman Sea without food & water. Regimes in the region like
Thailand & Indonesia turned them away & regimes around the
world didn’t lift a finger to rescue them–some because their
navies were occupied in the Mediterranean thwarting African refugees.
Let
Zaiur speak on behalf of the Rohingya:
********
One
year on, no justice for the ‘boat crisis’ survivors & human
trafficking victims.
Still
survivors are deteriorating in sub-human conditions with constant
threat to life & liberty. With no legislation for the protection
of boat survivors & kidnapped victims, they are suffering &
human rights abuses continue. Governments are failing to protect
survivors & UNHCR is failing to register & give protection to
the survivors. So many human rights groups have discussed these
concerns with EU & US officials as well as other members of the
diplomatic community. Still no investigations & no protection for
survivors.
Rohingya
refugees are being kept in indefinite detention. Hundreds of refugees
who survived the 15th May 2015 boat crisis in South East Asia have
been locked up in poor conditions in Malaysia ever since. Survivors
needs urgent action to stop detaining those out of prison &
release detainees from prison & detention camp & start
implementing genuine protections & urgent solutions, especially
for human trafficking & kidnapped victims.
After
harrowing footage of desperate refugees & migrants stranded at
sea was beamed around the world last May, Malaysia agreed to accept
1,100 people. Almost 400 of those were identified as Rohingya
refugees–people fleeing persecution in Myanmar. One year on, the
majority of the Rohingya remain in Malaysia’s Belentik Detention
Centre (IDC).
So
who is investigating the fate of the boat crisis survivors? Women,
men & children fled from persecution in Myanmar only to undergo
the horror of being abandoned at sea by the unscrupulous gangs who
run the sea routes. Malaysia should have been their place of safety
but instead they have spent a year in detention with no end in sight.
The
Malaysian government is criminalizing & punishing Rohingya
refugees who are most likely victims of human trafficking. I am
calling you to take action for the immediate release of the survivors
& to work with international partners to ensure they are given
the protection they are entitled to under international law.
The
15th May 2015 Andaman Sea ‘boat crisis’ claimed global attention
when dozens of boats carrying thousands of desperate people were
abandoned at sea & the governments of Thailand, Malaysia &
Indonesia refused to allow them to disembark. Malaysia &
Indonesia eventually accepted a total of three boats carrying more
than 2,900 refugees & migrants. They agreed to provide temporary
shelter to the group for a one-year time frame provided they would be
resettled or repatriated by the international community within that
period. To date, approximately 36 Rohingya refugees from the boat
survivors group in Malaysia were resettled to the USA on last 26th
May 2016.”
(This
is a slightly shortened & edited version of Ziaur’s article.)