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Malaysia Beefs Up Sea Patrols Amid Migrant Boat Arrivals

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) — Malaysia has strengthened its sea patrols and begun blocking boats suspected of carrying illegal migrants, a senior official said Thursday, amid an influx of arrivals from Myanmar and Bangladesh.

"Vessels carrying illegal migrants will not be allowed to enter Malaysian waters," the director general of Malaysia's Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA), Amdan Kurish, told a press briefing.

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A traditional Thai style fishing boat which was used by Myanmar Rohingya refugees, stranded in Seunedon village of North Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia, 11 May 2015. EPA/STR

The intensified sea patrols, enacted Tuesday, come after more than 1,000 Myanmar Rohingya and Bangladeshi landed in the northern island of Langkawi earlier in the week.

Amdan said there were persistent reports that more vessels carrying Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants were heading for Malaysia.

Maritime officials declined to confirm media reports that two vessels carrying hundreds of Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants that attempted to land in the northern islands of Penang and Langkawi were turned back to the sea late Wednesday.

But Zafar Ahmad, president of the Myanmar Rohingyas Human Rights Organization in Malaysia, said he got it from reliable sources that two vessels were turned back by Malaysian authorities late Wednesday.

"We do know what happened to those vessels now," he told dpa by telephone.

Malaysia's Foreign Ministry was set to make a statement about the migrant arrivals after talks with "relevant countries, including Myanmar Indonesia and Thailand," according to deputy prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin.

"This is a matter that is related to the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) and comes under the responsibility of the Myanmar government," the state-run Bernama news agency quoted him as saying.

(Reporting by John Grafilo)

 

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Israel Embassy Condemns Thai Aristocrat's Praise of Hitler

A photo posted on Facebook by Rungkhun Kittiyakara that summarizes his ideas about Adolf Hitler.

BANGKOK — The Israeli ambassador in Thailand has criticized a Facebook post written by a member of the Thai royal bloodline that praised Adolf Hitler as an exemplary statesman and described the Holocaust as "propaganda."

Mom Luang Rungkhun Kittiyakara, 46, published a lengthy post on 20 April 2015 – the 126th anniversary of Hitler's birthday – alleging that the German dictator and his Nazi Party were falsely cast as evil for their attempt to "rescue" Germany's economy from the financial grip of "Zionist capitalists." 

"Hitler led his folk and nation back to glory, and reclaimed sovereignty, freedom, and liberation from being indebted to and slaves of an evil capitalist regime," Rungkhun wrote. "And what led to destruction of everything he built? The fact that he managed to find a way to rescue his nation from slavery? Because he showed the world that he could build a better future without the Zionist capitalist regime? Those are the truths. He was the hero of his people. He is the father of Germany. His people loved him, and he loved his people."

He ended the post with "Heil Hitler."

In a long postscript, Rungkhun went on to accuse Western governments and "Zionists" of fabricating the Holocaust, an extensively documented state-sponsored effort to exterminate Jewish people and other marginalized groups.

"The Holocaust, or the genocide, is a lie that never took place," Rungkhun wrote. "The story about the Holocaust is nothing more than deceptive propaganda." 

The post has been widely shared on social media, with many users expressing agreement.

Rungkhun is a distant member of the Thai Royal Family. He has the same surname as the Queen's maiden family name, and he holds the royal title of mom luang

A self-described "patriot," Rungkhun is a prominent member of Thailand’s elite social circles. He came into the public eye in 2014 when he led a campaign urging the military government to nationalize the energy industry and bar foreign petroleum companies from operating in Thailand. 

In an email statement to Khaosod English today, Israeli ambassador Simon Roded said it was a "pity" that "a well-educated person with better opportunity than others to obtain reliable information lacks common sense to differentiate facts from propaganda. It is always regrettable when that person needs only to do a simple research on historic events of which have been prominently proven in writing, material evidence as well as living witnesses, but fails to do so."

Roded continued, "And it would be most unfortunate if the motive behind this revolting post came from the need of a person who wants only to draw attention to himself, by expressing distorting facts on such a well-known and well documented atrocities. This post indeed shows the anti-Semitic sentiments and ignorance of the writer.  It is very shameful and the writer is a disgrace to his country."

The Thai version of the statement was also posted on a Facebook page run by the Israeli Embassy in Bangkok. 

The Israeli Embassy in Thailand has previously condemned public praise of Hitler and the Nazi Party in Thailand, where symbols related to the Third Reich are often used as fashionable decoration. 

In July 2013, a group of students at the prestigious Chulalongkorn University painted Hitler in a mural for new graduates to take pictures with on graduation day. 

Last year, the Israeli ambassador condemned a scene in a state-produced film that showed school children applauding a painting of Hitler.

 

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Funeral Hands Out Free Lottery Tickets

Residents of Surin province pray to a rise in the concrete they believe was formed by a local spirit, 14 May 2015.

AYUTTHAYA — The relatives of a late lottery seller in Ayutthaya province handed out over 300 lottery tickets at her cremation ceremony yesterday.

The tickets, which cost 30,000 baht in total, were distributed as souvenirs to honor the memory of Uthai Thongchart, who died on 10 May at the age of 57.

Uthai’s 44-year-old daughter, Israphorn Thongthai, said her her mother was a "fortune hunter" who sold lottery tickets in Petchburi province and participated in every bi-monthly draw.

"We did it for my mother, who liked to try her luck," Israphorn said. "And we want our neighbors who are lucky to win some prizes. The cremation for my mother was also held close to the next lottery draw [on 16 May]."

The state-run lottery is hugely popular in Thailand, with enthusiasts constantly on the hunt for supernatural signs that may hint at lucky numbers.

Today crowds of lottery hunters gathered to pray at a bump on a concrete road in Surin province. The worshipers said they believed the 10-inch rise in the concrete was caused by a local spirit, and could contain clues to lucky lottery numbers.

Wallop Ruengphorncharoen, chief officer of Mueang Surin District, said he would like residents to "exercise their wisdom." He also told reporters he has instructed officials to investigate the cause of the concrete bump. 

Lottery tickets currently cost around 120 baht, but Thailand's military government says it is working to lower the price.

 

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Asian Countries Top International Achievement Tests in Math, Science

A Chinese kindergarten teacher writes math equations on a board as a young boy looks on at the Qiang Jian Wen Wu school in the west side of Beijing. EPA/ROLEX DELA PENA

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) — Asian countries topped international achievement tests in mathematics and science, while African countries lagged at the bottom, according to a report published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Singapore headed the list of 76 countries included in the survey, followed by Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, according to the report entitled Universal Basic Skills: What Countries Stand to Gain.

At the bottom were Ghana and South Africa while Germany was on the 13th spot behind another Asian country, Vietnam. Australia placed 14th, Britain 20th and the US 28th.

The report aims to provide a comprehensive picture of the quality of learning outcomes around the world, and estimates the long-term economic gains of improving access to education and improving quality.

It will be presented to the World Education Forum in South Korea next week.

"This is the first time we have a truly global scale of the quality of education," OECD's education director, Andreas Schleicher, told British broadcaster BBC.

"The idea is to give more countries, rich and poor, access to comparing themselves against the world's education leaders, to discover their relative strengths and weaknesses, and to see what the long-term economic gains from improved quality in schooling could be for them," he said.

(Reporting by John Grafilo)

 

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Prayuth: Cabinet, Not Junta, Will Decide on Charter Referendum

Junta chairman and Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha at the Government House in Bangkok, 14 May 2015.

BANGKOK — Thailand's military ruler said his Cabinet will decide whether to hold a referendum on the new constitution written by a junta-appointed committee.

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led the May 2014 coup, said he will endorse the decision reached by a majority of Cabinet members, who he selected after installing himself as Prime Minister last year.

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Junta chairman and Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha at the Government House in Bangkok, 14 May 2015.

The general, who is also chairman of the ruling junta, declined to comment further on the referendum question, saying he did not want to influence the Cabinet members before a formal voting session is held.

"If I say now, the people in the Cabinet will be too afraid to voice different opinions," he said. "I don't want that. So I cannot say anything right now."

The junta, whose official name is the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), dissolved the previous charter after toppling an elected government last May. 

Gen. Prauyth also explained that the Cabinet, not the junta, will decide on the referendum because "the NCPO is all soldiers. None of them are lawyers. Therefore, whether there will be a referendum, what topic, and how, I alone cannot [decide]. And the NCPO alone cannot either."

His announcement came after the junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Committee (CDC) voiced its official support for a referendum yesterday. A committee spokesperson said the recommendation would be presented to Gen. Prayuth in the form of a letter, though the junta chairman said he has yet to receive one.

"I have not received the letter," Gen. Prayuth said. "It's not like I can just receive it because the media reported about it. I have not received any letter. As for the next procedure, once I have received the formal letter, I will have the Cabinet deliberate on on the matter." 

If the majority of the Cabinet agrees to a referendum, the government will ask the National Legislative Assembly to amend the current interim constitution accordingly, Gen. Prayuth said. The interim charter, enacted by the junta after the coup, does not mention a referendum. 

Deputy Prime Minister Visanu Kruengam confirmed to reporters today that the Cabinet will meet on 19 May to vote on the referendum. If adopted, the poll would likely take place in December or January, several months after the charter is set to be finalized in September 2015.

"We cannot do it in a week's time," Visanu explained.

Like Gen. Prayuth, Visanu declined to offer his personal opinion whether there should be a referendum, saying "I cannot answer that, because I am one of the Cabinet. If I [answer], it will be seen as an opinion of the Cabinet. So, I don't want to speak through the media."

The junta’s charter draft has drawn criticism from pro-democracy activists and politicians from major parties. Critics say the current draft of the junta's charter establishes an uneven balance of power that cripples elected politicians and favors appointed "independent" agencies, whose members are historically allied with the traditional elite. The charter’s most controversial features include the establishment of a mostly-appointed Senate and the option for an unelected Prime Minister.

Some pro-democracy activists and politicians have proposed the junta organize a referendum that would allow voters to choose between the junta’s charter and the 1997 constitution, which was written by an elected assembly and is known as the "People’s Constitution" for its egalitarian nature.

Other activists in Thailand have campaigned for a referendum that would give Thais the chance to elect a fresh assembly of drafters to pen a new charter altogether.

In the referendum for the post-coup 2007 charter, which was also drafted by a junta-appointed council, voters were only permitted to accept or decline the document. Critics say that many voters reluctantly approved the junta’s charter out of fear that the undisclosed alternative would be worse.

Yesterday, Gen. Prayuth suggested he was irritated by the question of a referendum. In a speech at a forum on Thai agriculture in Nonthaburi province, he expressed frustration by the media's persistent questions on the topic.

"They keep asking me, will you do it, how will you do it, they just keep asking! What do they want from me?" Gen. Prayuth fumed. "The reporters have asked me so many times that I feel annoyed. I won't answer them about it anymore. I would rather spend time thinking about running the country."

 

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Prayuth: Cabinet, Not Junta, Will Decide on Charter Referendum

Junta chairman and Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha at the Government House in Bangkok, 14 May 2015.

BANGKOK — Thailand's military ruler said his Cabinet will decide whether to hold a referendum on the new constitution written by a junta-appointed committee.

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led the May 2014 coup, said he will endorse the decision reached by a majority of Cabinet members, who he selected after installing himself as Prime Minister last year.

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Junta chairman and Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha at the Government House in Bangkok, 14 May 2015.

The general, who is also chairman of the ruling junta, declined to comment further on the referendum question, saying he did not want to influence the Cabinet members before a formal voting session is held.

"If I say now, the people in the Cabinet will be too afraid to voice different opinions," he said. "I don't want that. So I cannot say anything right now."

The junta, whose official name is the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), dissolved the previous charter after toppling an elected government last May. 

Gen. Prauyth said the Cabinet, not the junta, will decide on the referendum because "the NCPO is all soldiers. None of them are lawyers. Therefore, whether there will be a referendum, what topic, and how, I alone cannot [decide]. And the NCPO alone cannot either."

His announcement came after the junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Committee (CDC) voiced its official support for a referendum yesterday. A committee spokesperson said the recommendation would be presented to Gen. Prayuth in the form of a letter, though the junta chairman said he has yet to receive one.

"I have not received the letter," Gen. Prayuth said. "It's not like I can just receive it because the media reported about it. I have not received any letter. As for the next procedure, once I have received the formal letter, I will have the Cabinet deliberate on on the matter." 

If the majority of the Cabinet agrees to a referendum, the government will ask the National Legislative Assembly to amend the current interim constitution accordingly, Gen. Prayuth said. The interim charter, enacted by the junta after the coup, does not mention a referendum. 

Deputy Prime Minister Visanu Kruengam confirmed to reporters today that the Cabinet will meet on 19 May to vote on the referendum. If adopted, the poll would likely take place in December or January, several months after the charter is set to be finalized in September 2015.

"We cannot do it in a week's time," Visanu explained.

Like Gen. Prayuth, Visanu declined to offer his personal opinion whether there should be a referendum, saying "I cannot answer that, because I am one of the Cabinet. If I [answer], it will be seen as an opinion of the Cabinet. So, I don't want to speak through the media."

The junta’s charter draft has drawn criticism from pro-democracy activists and politicians from major parties. Critics say the current draft of the junta's charter establishes an uneven balance of power that cripples elected politicians and favors appointed "independent" agencies, whose members are historically allied with the traditional elite. The charter’s most controversial features include the establishment of a mostly-appointed Senate and the option for an unelected Prime Minister.

Some pro-democracy activists and politicians have proposed the junta organize a referendum that would allow voters to choose between the junta’s charter and the 1997 constitution, which was written by an elected assembly and is known as the "People’s Constitution" for its egalitarian nature.

Other activists in Thailand have campaigned for a referendum that would give Thais the chance to elect a fresh assembly of drafters to pen a new charter altogether.

In the referendum for the post-coup 2007 charter, which was also drafted by a junta-appointed council, voters were only permitted to accept or decline the document. Critics say that many voters reluctantly approved the junta’s charter out of fear that the undisclosed alternative would be worse.

Yesterday, Gen. Prayuth suggested he was irritated by the question of a referendum. In a speech at a forum on Thai agriculture in Nonthaburi province, he expressed frustration by the media's persistent questions on the topic.

"They keep asking me, will you do it, how will you do it, they just keep asking! What do they want from me?" Gen. Prayuth fumed. "The reporters have asked me so many times that I feel annoyed. I won't answer them about it anymore. I would rather spend time thinking about running the country."

 

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Over 200 Million Baht Seized From Suspected Human Traffickers

Police press conference in Songkhla province, 14 May 2015.

BANGKOK — Thai authorities say they have seized more than 200 million baht in assets from a network of alleged human traffickers operating in southern Thailand.

The assets, worth approximately 204 million baht, were seized from suspects in Ranong, Satun, and Nakhon Si Thammarat provinces this week, said Pol.Gen. Aek Angsananont, deputy chief of Royal Thai Police.

Thailand’s Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) is currently looking for any evidence that links the assets to human trafficking operations in the region. 

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The fifth and largest refugee detention camp found by police in the jungle in Songkhla, 12 May 2015.

After discovering a detention camp and mass grave of Rohingya corpses in the jungle near the Thai-Malysian border on 1 May, Thai authorities have launched an unprecedented crackdown on the well-established human smuggling operation in southern Thailand.

Over the past two weeks, four more large camps and at least 70 smaller sites have been found in the mountainous border region.

Police believe the camps were used by brokers to detain Rohingya and Bangladeshi refugees and demand hefty ransom fees from their relatives before smuggling them into Malaysia. 

Local Thai officials have historically offered protection to the human smugglers by looking the other way in exchange for bribes. 

Sixty-one arrest warrants have been issued in connection with the trafficking network since the beginning of the month, said Pol.Maj.Gen. Paween Pongsirin, deputy commander of Eighth Region Police. Twenty-six people have been arrested so far, with the latest suspect surrendering to police this morning. 

Several of the suspects are local Thai officials, including the mayor of Songkhla's Padang Besar district, where many of the camps are located.

Police say the ringleader of the regional trafficking network is Patchuban Angchotipan, aka Ko Tong, a former local administrative official and resort owner in Satun province who is still on the run.

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Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants are processed by authorities in Songkhla province on 10 May 2015.

Since the crackdown, security officers have encountered at least 276 refugees in Thailand who were left to fend for themselves after they were reportedly abandoned by their brokers. Many of the migrants showed signs of physical abuse and malnutrition. Some survivors of the camps said traffickers beat and even murdered captives whose families refused to send money.

Many of the refugees have been identified as Rohingya Muslims, a persecuted minority from western Myanmar. The others hail from Bangladesh, where an estimated 300,000 Rohingyas live in impoverished refugee camps.

The United Nations' refugee agency estimates that 25,000 people fled Myanmar and Bangladesh on boat in the first quarter of 2015, a number twice as high as the same period last year. The majority of those people were brought to jungle camps in Thailand, where starvation, beatings, and other abuse was common, according to the UN report.

The crackdown on Thai soil has disrupted traditional smuggling routes in the region and spurred many traffickers to abandon their ships at sea. Nearly 2,000 migrants have landed in Malaysia and Indonesia in the past week, and an estimated 8,000 are thought to be stranded off shore, as countries in the region hesitate to tackle the mounting humanitarian crisis. 

Pol.Maj.Gen. Paween said officers and their interpreters are questioning the suspected trafficking victims intercepted by police Thailand, whose testimonies will be used as evidence against the suspects facing trafficking charges.

Meanwhile, security officers raided five properties in Satun province to look for five suspects charged with human trafficking, but the suspects had already fled their homes. 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
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Over 200 Million Baht Seized From Suspected Human Traffickers

Police press conference in Songkhla province, 14 May 2015.

BANGKOK — Thai authorities say they have seized more than 200 million baht in assets from a network of alleged human traffickers operating in southern Thailand.

The assets, worth approximately 204 million baht, were seized from suspects in Ranong, Satun, and Nakhon Si Thammarat provinces this week, said Pol.Gen. Aek Angsananont, deputy chief of Royal Thai Police.

Thailand’s Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) is currently looking for any evidence that links the assets to human trafficking operations in the region. 

\
The fifth and largest refugee detention camp found by police in the jungle in Songkhla, 12 May 2015.

After discovering a detention camp and mass grave of Rohingya corpses in the jungle near the Thai-Malysian border on 1 May, Thai authorities have launched an unprecedented crackdown on the well-established human smuggling operation in southern Thailand.

Over the past two weeks, four more large camps and at least 70 smaller sites have been found in the mountainous border region.

Police believe the camps were used by brokers to detain Rohingya and Bangladeshi refugees and demand hefty ransom fees from their relatives before smuggling them into Malaysia. 

Local Thai officials have historically offered protection to the human smugglers by looking the other way in exchange for bribes. 

Sixty-one arrest warrants have been issued in connection with the trafficking network since the beginning of the month, said Pol.Maj.Gen. Paween Pongsirin, deputy commander of Eighth Region Police. Twenty-six people have been arrested so far, with the latest suspect surrendering to police this morning. 

Several of the suspects are local Thai officials, including the mayor of Songkhla's Padang Besar district, where many of the camps are located.

Police say the ringleader of the regional trafficking network is Patchuban Angchotipan, aka Ko Tong, a former local administrative official and resort owner in Satun province who is still on the run.

\
Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants are processed by authorities in Songkhla province on 10 May 2015.

Since the crackdown, security officers have encountered at least 276 refugees in Thailand who were left to fend for themselves after they were reportedly abandoned by their brokers. Many of the migrants showed signs of physical abuse and malnutrition. Some survivors of the camps said traffickers beat and even murdered captives whose families refused to send money.

Many of the refugees have been identified as Rohingya Muslims, a persecuted minority from western Myanmar. The others hail from Bangladesh, where an estimated 300,000 Rohingyas live in impoverished refugee camps.

The United Nations' refugee agency estimates that 25,000 people fled Myanmar and Bangladesh on boat in the first quarter of 2015, a number twice as high as the same period last year. The majority of those people were brought to jungle camps in Thailand, where starvation, beatings, and other abuse was common, according to the UN report.

The crackdown on Thai soil has disrupted traditional smuggling routes in the region and spurred many traffickers to abandon their ships at sea. Nearly 2,000 migrants have landed in Malaysia and Indonesia in the past week, and an estimated 8,000 are thought to be stranded off shore, as countries in the region hesitate to tackle the mounting humanitarian crisis. 

Pol.Maj.Gen. Paween said officers and their interpreters are questioning the suspected trafficking victims intercepted by police Thailand, whose testimonies will be used as evidence against the suspects facing trafficking charges.

Meanwhile, security officers raided five properties in Satun province to look for five suspects charged with human trafficking, but the suspects had already fled their homes. 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
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Asian Countries Top International Achievement Tests in Math, Science

A Chinese kindergarten teacher writes math equations on a board as a young boy looks on at the Qiang Jian Wen Wu school in the west side of Beijing. EPA/ROLEX DELA PENA

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) — Asian countries topped international achievement tests in mathematics and science, while African countries lagged at the bottom, according to a report published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Singapore headed the list of 76 countries included in the survey, followed by Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, according to the report entitled Universal Basic Skills: What Countries Stand to Gain.

At the bottom were Ghana and South Africa while Germany was on the 13th spot behind another Asian country, Vietnam. Australia placed 14th, Britain 20th and the US 28th.

The report aims to provide a comprehensive picture of the quality of learning outcomes around the world, and estimates the long-term economic gains of improving access to education and improving quality.

It will be presented to the World Education Forum in South Korea next week.

"This is the first time we have a truly global scale of the quality of education," OECD's education director, Andreas Schleicher, told British broadcaster BBC.

"The idea is to give more countries, rich and poor, access to comparing themselves against the world's education leaders, to discover their relative strengths and weaknesses, and to see what the long-term economic gains from improved quality in schooling could be for them," he said.

(Reporting by John Grafilo)

 

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Malaysia Denies Migrant Boat Reports

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) — Malaysian police Thursday denied reports of a boat carrying hundreds of Rohingyas from Myanmar and Bangladeshis said to have been turned away from its coast.

"There is no truth to reports that another boat full of suspected illegal migrants was seen off our shores," a senior police official told dpa on condition of anonymity.

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A Malaysian official marks an Rohinghya migrant in Kuah, on Langkawi island, May 2015, EPA/STR 

Media reports earlier said a boat with more than 500 migrants had been turned away by Malaysian authorities off the coast of northern Penang state late Wednesday.

A maritime surveillance official told dpa they were still working to confirm reports of a migrant boat seen heading to Penang.

"I do not have knowledge of the report that we have turned away boat people," he added.

Earlier in the week more than 1,000 migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh were found to have landed on the nearby island of Langkawi.

Related coverage:
8,000 Refugees Reportedly Adrift in South-East Asia
Thai Government Mulls Opening Refugee Camps for Rohingyas

 

 
 

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