11 Rohingya found dead after Indonesia boat capsize: officials

Rohingya refugees hold a morning prayer in a temporary shelter at the Indonesian Red Cross Office, after being evacuated from the sea at Meulaboh, West Aceh, Indonesia. (AP)
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Updated 25 March 2024
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11 Rohingya found dead after Indonesia boat capsize: officials

  • The head of the local search and rescue operation, Muhammad Fathur Rachman said nearly half-a-dozen Rohingya were found dead at sea 14 nautical miles from shore

MEULABOH: The bodies of at least 11 Rohingya refugees have been recovered off Indonesia’s westernmost coast after their boat believed to be carrying around 150 people capsized last week, officials said Monday.

The mostly Muslim ethnic Rohingya are heavily persecuted in Myanmar, and thousands risk their lives each year on long and expensive sea journeys, often in flimsy boats, to try to reach Malaysia or Indonesia.

Indonesian rescuers called off the search for any remaining Rohingya refugees on Friday after 75 were rescued, despite reports from some survivors that dozens of people were swept away when their boat and another trying to help them capsized days earlier.

The head of the local search and rescue operation, Muhammad Fathur Rachman said nearly half-a-dozen Rohingya were found dead at sea 14 nautical miles from shore.

“Six more bodies are being evacuated right now,” he said by phone on Monday afternoon.

“They were all women. We heard about the bodies from a fisherman. The bodies will be taken to the hospital.”

Earlier on Monday, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees officials told AFP five bodies had been recovered in recent days. On Thursday, authorities staged a dramatic rescue of 69 Rohingya who had been adrift at sea for weeks before the boat capsized, with many found clinging to the hull of the overturned vessel. Six others were rescued by fishermen on Wednesday.

From mid-November to late January, 1,752 Rohingya refugees, mostly women and children, landed in the Indonesian provinces of Aceh and North Sumatra, according to the UNHCR.

The UN agency said it was the biggest influx into the Muslim-majority country since 2015, driven by worsening conditions in squalid camps in Bangladesh and the continuing threat of violence in the Rohingya’s native Myanmar.


Trump says US will intervene if Iran violently suppresses peaceful protests

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Trump says US will intervene if Iran violently suppresses peaceful protests

  • Trump says US will intervene if Iran violently suppresses peaceful protests
WASHINGTON: US President ​Donald Trump on Friday said that if Iran shoots and violently kills peaceful protesters, the United States of America will come to their rescue.
“We ‌are locked ‌and ‌loaded ⁠and ​ready ‌to go,” he said in a Truth Social post.
This follows the deaths of several people as Iran’s biggest protests in three ⁠years over economic hardship turned ‌violent across multiple provinces.
The ‍clashes ‍between protesters and security ‍forces mark a significant escalation in the unrest that has spread across the country since ​shopkeepers began protesting on Sunday over the government’s ⁠handling of a sharp currency slide and rapidly rising prices.
Iran’s economy has struggled for years since the US reimposed sanctions in 2018, after Trump withdrew from an international nuclear agreement during his ‌first term.