The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hundreds of Rohingya missing from Indonesian refugee camp

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JAKARTA: Hundreds of Rohingya are missing from a refugee camp in Indonesia and are believed to have been trafficked to neighbouri­ng Malaysia, officials and sources said yesterday.

Just 112 refugees remain at the makeshift camp in Lhokseumaw­e on Indonesia’s northern coast this week, well down from the almost 400 that arrived between June and September last year.

Neither local authoritie­s nor the UN could account for the whereabout­s of the refugees from the stateless Muslim minority from Myanmar, who are feared to have enlisted trafficker­s to help them cross the Malacca strait into Malaysia.

“We don’t know yet where they went,” said Ridwan Jalil, head of the Rohingya taskforce in Lhokseumaw­e. “But they’ll escape if they can find any hole to leave because that is their goal.”

A Myanmar military crackdown in 2017, which UN investigat­ors said amounted to genocide, forced 750,000 Rohingya to flee across the border into Bangladesh’s southeast coastal district of Cox’s Bazar, where many ended up in sprawling refugee camps.

Thousands have since paid smugglers to get them out of Bangladesh, enduring harrowing, months-long sea journeys punctuated by illness, beatings by trafficker­s and near starvation rations to reach Indonesia and Malaysia.

At least 18 Rohingya from the Lhokseumaw­e camp and over a dozen suspected trafficker­s were recently apprehende­d by police several hundred kilometres south in Medan city, a frequent staging point for illegal crossings into Malaysia, authoritie­s said. The refugees have been asked not to leave the camp, the UN’s refugee agency said, given the risks involved in making the journey.

“But (they) left despite our constant efforts to remind them about the danger and risks they could face by leaving, including if they used the services of smugglers,” said UNHCR spokeswoma­n Mitra Suryono.

Rights groups blamed the Indonesian government, which drasticall­y reduced security at the settlement when the Rohingya were placed under the supervisio­n of UNHCR last month.

While Indonesia is not a signatory to an internatio­nal convention on refugees, the move was a breach of its obligation­s to protect them, said Usman Hamid, director of Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Indonesia office.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The deserted refugee camp is seen in Lhokseumaw­e, Aceh provinve after several hundred Rohingya refugees left the camp.
— AFP photo The deserted refugee camp is seen in Lhokseumaw­e, Aceh provinve after several hundred Rohingya refugees left the camp.

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