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Search continues for Rohingya in Andaman Sea despite all odds

11 Nov 2025, 2:01 AM
Search continues for Rohingya in Andaman Sea despite all odds
Search continues for Rohingya in Andaman Sea despite all odds
Search continues for Rohingya in Andaman Sea despite all odds
Search continues for Rohingya in Andaman Sea despite all odds

LANGKAWI, Nov 11 — Malaysian patrols continued to search coastal waters in the Andaman Sea yesterday for dozens of members of Myanmar's persecuted Rohingya minority, after a boat believed to be carrying them sank last week and another went missing.

At least 21 bodies have been found since the vessel went down on Thursday — 13 in Malaysia and nine in neighbouring Thailand — Kedah and Perlis Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) director First Admiral Romli Mustafa told reporters.

Without life jackets, it might be difficult for many to survive even 24 hours, but some could be holding on to floating objects and search operations would continue, he added.

"Weather conditions are not so friendly but anyhow, we're trying our level best," Romli said. So far, 13 survivors had been rescued, he added.

Police officers stand near the body of a victim after a boat carrying Myanmar refugees sank in waters near Langkawi, on November 10, 2025.

Long persecuted in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, the mainly Muslim Rohingya face escalating violence in their war-torn homeland and worsening conditions in crowded refugee camps in neighbouring Bangladesh where 1.3 million of them live.

Hundreds of Rohingya people boarded a vessel bound for Malaysia two weeks ago, and were transferred onto two boats on Thursday, according to Langkawi police chief assistant commissioner Khairul Azhar Nuruddin, at the centre of search operations here.

The smaller ship carrying around 70 people sank near Langkawi the same day and the fate of the other boat carrying 230 passengers remains unclear, authorities said.

'He left without telling anyone'

Among those who took a boat to Malaysia two weeks ago was 29-year-old Mohammed Ibrahim, according to his elder brother, Mohammed Younus.

"He left for Malaysia without telling anyone," he told Reuters from the refugee camps in Bangladesh.

"If I had known, I would never have let him go. He has a wife, three children — a three-year-old son and 10-month-old twin girls. Who will take care of them?"

In the last week of October, multiple boats carrying Rohingya left Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh, said Chris Lewa, director of the non-profit Arakan Project, which tracks the voyages.

It typically takes a week to 10 days to reach Malaysian waters, Lewa told Reuters. The boats might also have stopped in waters off Myanmar to pick up Rohingya coming from inland areas of Rakhine state, where a civil war has made displacement worse, she added.

More than 5,100 Rohingya boarded boats to leave Myanmar and Bangladesh between January and early November this year, and nearly 600 of them have been reported dead or missing, according to data from the UN Refugee Agency.

An MMEA officer checks the map of a search and rescue operation's area in Langkawi, on November 10, 2025.

'People are desperate'

Thailand and Malaysia have deployed air and sea patrols in a search operation that could last a week, Romli said.

Some Rohingya say people risk the perilous journeys because they see no future in Bangladesh, where foreign aid is shrinking, and they are too afraid to return to Myanmar.

"People are desperate," Naser Khan, a Rohingya refugee in Cox's Bazar, said.

"People are dying in the fighting, dying from hunger. So some think it’s better to die at sea than to die slowly here."

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