At least 15 Rohingya Muslim refugees
died and many more were missing on Feb. 11, after a ship carrying about 130
people capsized in the Bay of Bengal while trying to reach Malaysia, a
Bangladesh coast guard official said.
About 70 of
those aboard the vessel were rescued alive, said the official, Hamidul Islam,
adding that it had set sail early on Feb. 11, packed with people trying to
illegally flee from camps near the resort town of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh.
“It was inhumane,” he said. “The boat was carrying roughly 130 people, while it had a capacity of 50.”
Women and
children make up the 15 dead, said Islam, adding that the vessel capsized near
St. Martin’s Island, off the southeastern tip of Bangladesh.
In 2017, a
crackdown by Myanmar’s military drove more than 730,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to neighboring
Bangladesh.
Buddhist-majority
Myanmar has denied U.N.
accusations that its military waged a campaign against Rohingya with
“genocidal intent”.
In November,
Bangladesh’s coast guard rescued 122 Rohingya Muslim refugees from the Bay of
Bengal as the vessel they had boarded to illegally flee to Malaysia started
sinking because of a mechanical problem.