World

More than 100 Rohingya brought to safety in Indonesia after protests

Following pressure from locals, Jakarta agrees to bring boat to shore on humanitarian grounds

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 31 Dec 2021 6:30PM

More than 100 Rohingya brought to safety in Indonesia after protests
Migrant Rohingya frequently pass by the Aceh province en route to Malaysia, where they seek work and a better life. – AFP pic, December 31, 2021

LHOKSEUMAWE – Indonesia’s navy rescued more than 100 Rohingya migrants travelling in a wooden boat, bringing them to safety early this morning following pressure from locals.

The naval ship arrived in Lhokseumawe on the north coast of the Aceh province shortly after midnight, according to AFP journalists at the scene.

Rough seas and pouring rain hampered the operation to bring the mostly women and children to shore, the navy said.

The rescue operation followed local protests and pressure from rights groups, including the United Nations Human Rights Council, after the Indonesian government initially refused entry.

Jakarta on Wednesday evening relented and agreed to bring the boat to shore on humanitarian grounds.

Local Acehnese fishermen first discovered the vessel on December 25 as it drifted between 50 and 70 nautical miles off the coast with a broken engine.

A video they sent from the scene showed the vessel dangerously overcrowded and sitting low in the water once it took on water in heavy seas after the engine failure.

The video and images circulated on social media, stoking support for the migrants – Muslim-minority Rohingya who are fleeing persecution in their native Myanmar, according to local residents.

Local Acehnese said they were motivated by memories of foreign assistance during more than 30 years of conflict and the devastating tsunami that killed hundreds of thousands in 2004.

“We sincerely want to help, especially because we know how it felt getting help from other countries during the tsunami,” said local fisherman Ridwan, 56.

“Everybody was eager to help since the beginning,” he said.

The migrants appeared exhausted and crammed onto the deck after being adrift for almost a month and short of food and water, the journalists at the port observed. 

A local fisherman earlier said the migrants told him a 17-year-old boy had died.

After they disembarked, the migrants were sprayed with disinfectant and transferred to buses before being driven away.

Officials said they would be moved to a nearby training facility where they would be tested for Covid-19, have medical checks, then quarantined for 10 days.  

Migrant Rohingya frequently pass by the Aceh province en route to Malaysia, where they seek work and a better life. – AFP, December 31, 2021

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