KOH LIPE, Thailand/BANGKOK, May 16 (Reuters) -Thailand has found more than 100 migrants on a southern island but thousands remain adrift as boats are pushed back out into Southeast Asia’s seas by governments who have ignored a UN call for a coordinated rescue. The crisis has arisen because smugglers have abandoned boats crammed with migrants, [...]

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Thailand finds over 100 migrants on island, many more still adrift

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KOH LIPE, Thailand/BANGKOK, May 16 (Reuters) -Thailand has found more than 100 migrants on a southern island but thousands remain adrift as boats are pushed back out into Southeast Asia’s seas by governments who have ignored a UN call for a coordinated rescue.

Thai fishermen (R) give some supplies to migrants on a boat drifting 17 km (10 miles) off the coast of the southern island of Koh Lipe, Thailand May 14 (REUTERS)

The crisis has arisen because smugglers have abandoned boats crammed with migrants, many of them thirsty and sick, in the Andaman Sea following a Thai crackdown on human trafficking.

The clamp-down has made the preferred trafficking route through Thailand too risky for criminals preying on Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution in Myanmar and Bangladeshis seeking to escape poverty.

About 2,500 migrants have landed on Indonesia’s western tip and the northwest coast of Malaysia over the past week. Thailand found 106 more on Friday on an island in the southern province of Phang Nga, provincial governor Prayoon Rattanasenee told Reuters. It was unclear how they got to the island, he said.

“Most of them are men but there are also women and children,” Prayoon said. “We are trying to determine whether they were victims of human trafficking.” Those that have made it to land are the lucky ones.

Two boats that crossed the Malacca Strait from the Thailand-Malaysia side have been turned away by the Indonesian navy, and on Friday another was towed out to sea by the Thai navy.

The boat towed out by Thailand was again near Thai waters early today, after heading first toward Indonesia and then Malaysia on Friday, said Thai Lieutenant Commander Veerapong Nakprasit.

The Thai and Indonesian navies have restocked the boats they have pushed back with food and water and said the migrants did not want to come ashore in their territory. But those on board have nowhere to go, and are not skilled navigators.

The region’s governments have been criticised by the International Organisation for Migration for playing “maritime ping-pong” with the migrants and endangering their lives.

Malaysia seeks ‘positive response’ from Myanmar on migrants: PM

KUALA LUMPUR, May 16 (AFP) -Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak said today his government was seeking a “positive response” from Myanmar to help solve the migrant crisis involving thousands of Rohingya fleeing the country.

“I hope they (Myanmar) will give a positive response as the refugees were due to internal problems that we cannot interfere with, but we want to do something before it gets worse,” Najib was quoted as saying by the country’s official news agency, Bernama.

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