BANGKOK, Jan 18: Thailand’s new premier Abhisit Vejjajiva said on Sunday he will meet with human rights officials to discuss recent allegations that the Thai navy set hundreds of asylum-seekers adrift at sea.

Survivors accuse Thai authorities of detaining migrants from Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority after they washed up on the southern Thai coast, and then towing them to sea with scant food and water.

“Tomorrow (Monday) I will meet with human rights officials to talk about everything including the violation of human rights and a few current incidents which have been reported,” Abhisit said.

Asked whether that included the Rohingyas, he replied: “Yes.” Abhisit did not expand on who the issue would be discussed with, but foreign ministry spokesman Tharit Charungwat said earlier on Sunday: “We are still investigating and verifying all the facts.” Thailand’s navy on Saturday denied the claims.

Local human rights groups and media reports suggest that hundreds of Rohingya washed up in Thailand in December as they fled oppression, abuse and poverty in their military-run homeland, only to be sent back out to sea.

Indian authorities said on Sunday they had rescued 446 people from four boats since the end of December — mostly Rohingyas and a handful of people from Bangladesh — but said hundreds more remained missing.

They said survivors gave accounts of being beaten by Thai authorities, before being towed back to sea and set adrift without engines or navigational equipment and with just a few bags of rice.

Rights groups say the Rohingya are stateless and face persecution from Myanmar’s military regime, forcing thousands into rickety boats each year to try to escape poverty and oppression and head to Malaysia.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Ultimate price
Updated 02 Nov, 2024

Ultimate price

To dismantle culture of impunity for crimes against journalists, state must ensure that perpetrators do not go unpunished.
Mastung bombing
02 Nov, 2024

Mastung bombing

INSTABILITY continues to haunt Balochistan, as Friday morning’s bombing in Mastung has shown. At least nine...
Plane speak
02 Nov, 2024

Plane speak

DESPITE all its efforts to facilitate PIA’s privatisation, it seems the government only ended up being taken for a...
Seeking investment
Updated 01 Nov, 2024

Seeking investment

Foreign visits will be fruitless unless crucial structural, policy reforms directly affecting investors are focused.
State-backed terror
01 Nov, 2024

State-backed terror

OVER the past year or so, India’s reportedly malign activities in foreign countries have increasingly come under the radar, with
Shared crisis
01 Nov, 2024

Shared crisis

WITH Lahore experiencing unprecedented levels of smog, the Punjab government has announced a series of “green...