A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, October 23, 2015
‘One Nightmare for Another:’ Rohingya Tell of Horrors at Sea After Escaping Myanmar


Posted By: admin
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Rohingya refugees and migrants who fled Myanmar earlier this year
“traded one nightmare for another,” having endured brutal conditions at
sea, and were tortured and killed if ransom money was not paid to their
traffickers, according to a damning new report from Amnesty International.
Many men, women and children belonging to the Rohingya Muslim minority group were
beaten or killed after escaping Myanmar earlier this year, where they
are denied basic human rights, including the right to vote and become
citizens. Amnesty interviewed more than 100 Rohingya, including
children, who were among the 1,500 people aboard five boats that landed
in Aceh, Indonesia, in May.
Amnesty said in the report that it considers most Rohingya outside of
Myanmar refugees, “given the scale and severity of the human rights
violations” in the country. Myanmar’s government refers to the country’s
1.3 million Rohingya as “Bengalis”—implying they are migrants from
Bangladesh living in the country illegally. Rohingya have been forcibly
displaced from their homes by Myanmar’s military over the past several
decades, sending tens of thousands to live in neighboring Bangladesh,
and have been routinely attacked by Buddhist mobs, Amnesty said. A
particularly severe bout of violence erupted following the alleged 2012
rape of an ethnic Burmese woman by three Muslim men and forced 125,000
Rohingya into internally displaced people camps.
“The daily physical abuse faced by Rohingya who were trapped on boats in
the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea is almost too horrific to put into
words,” Anna Shea, refugee researcher at Amnesty International, said in a
statement. “They had escaped Myanmar, but had only traded one nightmare
for another. Even children were not spared these abuses.”
The International Organization for Migration said as many as 8,000 Rohingya were trapped at
sea in May. Many were stranded for weeks or months at a time after the
smugglers abandoned the boats. The U.N. says 370 people died in the Bay
of Bengal and Andaman Sea between January and June, but Amnesty disputes
that number, believing it to be much higher, perhaps into the
thousands.
Many Rohingya, interviewed by Amnesty, said they were beaten for months
on board the boats, and the abuse did not stop until their families paid
ransom money, typically 7,500 Malaysian ringgit ($1,700), to their
traffickers. In one case, a father was called and forced to listen to
his daughter’s screaming and crying on the phone as she was beaten.
Being shot or thrown overboard were punishments for failing to pay
ransom. Others died from disease or lack of water.
“They threw us in the sea. We had to swim for hours—if we tried to hold
on to the ship, they would beat us,” a Rohingya boy told Amnesty. “When
we were nearly drowned, they would take us back on the ship and beat
us.”
Conditions on the ships were disgusting and overcrowded, with just two
toilets available for 600 passengers on one vessel and no access to
showers, according to witnesses. Those on board all the boats, including
a pregnant woman, were given miniscule amounts of food, such as a small
amount of rice and half a glass of water, which was expected to sustain
them for a day.
October marks the beginning of a new post-monsoon sailing season that
could see an influx of thousands taking to the seas to escape
persecution, violence and poverty, as well as being trafficked for work.
Amnesty is urging Southeast Asian governments, particularly Thailand,
Malaysia and Indonesia, to strengthen their anti-trafficking and
smuggling laws.
“There is a serious risk of another human rights crisis at sea in late 2015,” Amnesty said in the report.
