In this photo taken Jan. 1, 2013, a boat carrying 73 Rohingya refugees
is intercepted by Thai authorities off the sea in Phuket, southern
Thailand. (AP Photo)YANGON: About 13,000 boat people, including many
stateless Rohingya Muslims, fled Myanmar and
neighbouring Bangladesh in
2012 with hundreds dying during the perilous sea voyage, the UN said Friday.
A wave of
deadly sectarian violence in Myanmar's
western state of Rakhine has triggered an exodus of refugees, mostly heading
for Malaysia.
"We
know of at least 485 people who've drowned or are lost at sea," said
Vivian Tan, spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency, adding the real death toll
was probably far higher.
"These numbers are very worrying," Tan
said.
"The
fact that even women and children are increasingly risking this journey shows
the growing sense of desperation among the Rohingya in Myanmar and Bangladesh," she added.
More than 10,000 people have attempted the sea
voyage since October 2012 -- a sharp increase on last season's departures,
according to the Arakan Project, which lobbies for the rights of the Rohingya,
said by the UN to be one of the most persecuted minority groups on the planet.
October is the end of the monsoon season and
traditionally marks the start of an annual wave of migration by people trying
to reach Malaysiafrom the Bay of Bengal
-- often on rickety wooden boats.
Myanmar
views the roughly 800,000 Rohingya in Rakhine as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants
and denies them citizenship. Thousands more live in squalid refugee camps
across the border in Bangladesh.
Malaysia has become the sole hope for many
Rohingya refugees, after Bangladesh
closed its shared border to them and Thailand as well
asSingapore refused to provide asylum to members of the Muslim-minority
group.
Kuala Lumpur
expressed concern at the influx of refugees, saying Malaysia's patience was being
tested.
"There
is the humanitarian aspect," Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah
Aman told AFP on Friday,
citing the recent rescue of 40 shipwrecked Rohingya who were turned away by Singapore.
"But we
cannot allow Malaysia
to become a destination of choice," he added, noting that the country was
already sheltering some 80,000 Rohingya.
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