http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2009/02/2009234449163111.html

Rohingya migrants 'cast adrift'   
 
 
Thai authorities have been accused of
abusing Rohingya migrants [AFP]    Indonesian
authorities say a second boatload of Rohingya migrants found off the
western island of Sumatra have told them they were cast adrift in an
engineless boat after being beaten by the Thai military.
The group, numbering almost 200, were found by fisherman in the early hours of 
Tuesday morning. Navy
officials quoted survivors as saying they had been beaten by Thai
authorities, before being towed out to sea and set adrift.
At least 20 of the group died while they drifted for three weeks.
Tedi
Sutardi, an Indonesian navy officer, on Tuesday said there was no food
and water on board the boat and all the survivors were in very poor
health.
"They were drifting for about 21 days," he told AFP. "Most of them
are in critical condition and are receiving treatment at a local state
hospital in East Aceh district.
He said the survivors were still being interviewed by Indonesian authorities, 
but communication was difficult.
Last month Indonesian fishermen found another group of about 170
Rohingya drifting off Sumatra. Many of them had severe injuries they
said were the result of beatings from the Thai military.
Persecution
 
 A group found last month had injuries they said were inflicted by the Thai 
military
 
Myanmar's military rulers effectively deny citizenship rights to the
Rohingya, a Muslim minority who live in the west of the country. 
Human rights groups say the Rohingya face systematic discrimination
and abuse by Myanmar authorities, leading hundreds to try to flee the
country by boat every year.
Rather than finding refuge though, many say they have found even
more abuse at the hands of the Thai military who have been accused of
beating boatloads of migrants before pushing them back out to sea,
often without food or water, and in boats with engines removed.
Rights groups say hundreds may have perished at sea.
The Thai government has rejected allegations of abuse, and says the
Rohingya are economic migrants seeking a better life, not refugees
fleeing persecution.
Forced to convert
The latest group of Rohingya found off Sumatra on Tuesday said they
had left their homes in Myanmar's western Arakan state after being
forced to convert to Buddhism.
Al Jazeera correspondent Step Vaessen reporting from Jakarta said
navy officials found the survivors, one of whom was 13 years old, to be
very weak after their ordeal and said it was a miracle they had
survived.
The boat was so small that some of the group had been forced to stand.
She said there were also clear signs that they had been beaten, and
the Indonesian authorities are now trying to decide what to do with
them. 

 
It's only a transition...

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