World

Migrant crisis: Burma refuses to accept blame

Burma refused to shoulder the blame for an escalating migrant crisis on Saturday, and cast doubts on whether it will attend a meeting to be hosted by Thailand later this month aimed at easing an emergency that has left refugees stranded at sea.

Officials might not attend next month's meeting aimed at easing emergency

Migrants aboard a boat tethered to a Thai navy vessel in waters near Koh Lipe island await word on their fate on Saturday. (Olivia Harris/Reuters)

Burma refused to shoulder the blame for an escalating migrant crisis on Saturday, and the nation also known as Myanmar cast doubts on whether it will attend a meeting to be hosted by Thailand later this month aimed at easing the  emergency that has left boatloads of refugees stranded at sea.

"We are not ignoring the migrant problem, but our leaders will decide whether to attend the meeting based on what is going to be discussed," said Maj. Zaw Htay, director of the office of Burmese President Thein Sein. "We will not accept the allegations by some that [Burma] is the source of the problem."

 Sein has not spoken publicly about the crisis since it escalated May 1.

Boats filled with more than 2,000 desperate and hungry refugees have arrived in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia in recent weeks, and thousands more migrants are believed to be adrift at sea after a crackdown on human traffickers prompted captains and smugglers to abandon their boats.

Many of those on the overcrowded vessels are ethnic Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution in Myanmar. Others are Bangladeshis fleeing poverty.

Trying to reach Malaysia

Both groups seem intent on reaching Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country that has hosted more than 45,000 Rohingya over the years but now says it can't accept any more. Indonesia and Thailand have voiced similar stances.

All three countries have their navies stationed in boats at maritime borders to push boats away or execute a so-called "help-on" policy of giving the boats food and water — and pointing them to other countries.

Burma appeared to direct some of the blame for the current crisis on its neighbours.

"From a humanitarian point of view, it's sad that these people are being pushed out to sea by some countries," said presidential spokesman Zaw Htay.

Thailand has organized its May 29 regional meeting with officials from 15 countries to discuss the "root causes" of "irregular migration in the Indian Ocean."

Zaw Htay said Friday that Burma's government "will not attend a regional meeting hosted by Thailand if 'Rohingya' is mentioned on the invitation." He accused governments of trying to divert their human smuggling and slavery problems by dumping the blame on Burma.

On Saturday, he said an official invitation still had not arrived.

UN alarmed

An increasingly alarmed United Nations warned Friday against "floating coffins" and urged regional leaders to put human lives first. The United States urged governments not to push back new boat arrivals.

"The gravest violation of human rights are committed by those corrupt officials who are involved in human trafficking activities and colluded with the trafficking syndicates," Zaw Htay said.

Thai authorities, long accused of turning a blind eye to human trafficking in exchange for pay, launched a crackdown May 1 after finding dozens of bodies buried at traffickers' jungle camps on Thailand's border with Malaysia. Dozens of Thai officials were arrested and more than 50 police are under investigation for complicity.

The UN calls the Rohingya one of the world's most persecuted minorities. For decades, the Rohingya suffered from state-sanctioned discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar. Denied citizenship by national law, they are effectively stateless.

In the last three years, attacks on Rohingya have left hundreds dead and sparked an exodus of an estimated 120,000 people who have boarded human traffickers' boats to flee to other countries. The flight helped fuel a longstanding human smuggling industry in the region.

Even the name Rohingya is taboo in Burma, which calls them "Bengalis" and insists they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though Rohingya have lived in the predominantly Buddhist Southeast Asian country for generations.