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58 Rohingya refugees land on beach in Indonesia

Indonesian police watch a group of ethnic Rohingya people after they landed on Indra Patra beach in Ladong village, Aceh province, Indonesia on Sunday.
Indonesian police watch a group of ethnic Rohingya people after they landed on Indra Patra beach in Ladong village, Aceh province, Indonesia on Sunday.

AFP :
A broken-down boat carrying 58 Rohingya refugees landed on Indonesia’s western coast on Sunday after a month at sea, police said.
Thousands of the mostly Muslim Rohingya, heavily persecuted in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, risk their lives each year on long, expensive sea journeys — often in poor-quality vessels — in an attempt to reach Malaysia or Indonesia.
The wooden vessel with 58 men on board arrived around 0100 GMT on a beach in the westernmost Aceh province, local police spokesman Winardy told AFP.
“The boat had a broken engine and it was carried by the wind to a shore in Ladong Village in Aceh Besar (district),” Winardy, who goes by one name, said.
“They said they have been drifting at sea for a month.”
Winardy added that police arrived at the beach after being informed by some locals that the boat had docked there.
He said four of the men on board were sick and had been transported to a hospital.  
Telmaizul Syatri, the head of the local immigration office, said the refugees will be temporarily housed at a local government facility.
“We will coordinate with the International Organization for Migration and the UNHCR so that it can be handled well,” Syatri said.
This is the third Rohingya refugee boat to arrive in Muslim-majority Indonesia in recent months.
Two boats carrying a total of 229 Rohingya landed in Aceh on November 15 and 16, according to the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR).
Sunday’s arrival comes after the UNHCR and Southeast Asian politicians called for the rescue of another vessel  
carrying as many as 200 Rohingya refugees, inclu-ding women and children, which has been stranded at sea for several weeks. That boat has been reported in waters close to Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and India in the Andaman Sea and the Malacca Strait, one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.
The UNHCR said last week that it has been in the water since late November, and it had received reports of at least a dozen people dying on board. Those left on the boat have no access to food or water.