The United Nations has urged Thailand to stop deportation of more than
250 Rohingya Muslim refugees after they fled persecution in Myanmar. On
Wednesday, a spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) asked Thai authorities to grant “temporary stay,
assistance and protection in Thailand until longer-term solutions are
found” for the 259 stateless Rohingya people arrested on November 8 if
they are found to have fled persecution. “We're seeking details from
the authorities and appealing for them not to deport the group to a
place where their lives or freedom could be threatened,” said Vivian
Tan. Thai police arrested 259 Myanmar Rohingya Muslims, including 13
children, on a boat en route to Malaysia near the southern province of
Ranong. Authorities are investigating whether the detainees had entered
Thailand illegally or were victims of trafficking. According to rights
groups, more than 10,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled the northern
Rakhine State in Myanmar on cargo ships since mid-October, with
Thailand and Malaysia as their main destinations. Thailand has been
criticized for pushing boatloads of Rohingya refugees entering Thai
waters back out to sea and holding migrants in overcrowded facilities.
Hundreds of Rohingyas have been killed and over 140,000 displaced in
attacks by extremist Buddhists over the past two years. Myanmar’s 1.3
million Muslims, who are denied citizenship, are one of the world’s
most persecuted communities, a fact that the UN also confirms. They
live in apartheid-like conditions and have little or no access to jobs,
schools or healthcare. The Myanmar government has been repeatedly
criticized by human rights groups for failing to protect the Rohingya
Muslims.
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