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Rohingya teen recalls horror of boat trip to start new life

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Muhammad Shorif, a 16-year-old Muslim Rohingya from Myanmar, dreamed of one day being a doctor. After fleeing a dismal upbringing in a refugee camp, he embarked on a dangerous sea voyage, only to find himself stranded on Indonesia's farthest shores.

The teenager had hoped to reach Malaysia where he would join his uncle, receive an education and start a new life far from the discrimination he suffered in his homeland.

But instead he was washed ashore in a wooden boat with nearly 600 other desperate migrants, after a harrowing journey where they were beaten and threatened by people-smuggling gangs.

"My dream is to be a doctor and if I do become one, I want to go back home to Arakan and treat my Muslim brothers and sisters, because a lot of them are sick," he told AFP, referring to the westernmost state of Myanmar where many Rohingya live in squalid conditions.

An illegal Bangladeshi migrant Jahangir Hussain looks out of a Malaysian police van in Langkawi  on ...
An illegal Bangladeshi migrant Jahangir Hussain looks out of a Malaysian police van in Langkawi, on May 11, 2015
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP/File

Clutching a bag of medicine provided by aid workers and nursing an injured leg, Shorif recalled how his parents scraped together US$1,000 from friends to put him on a small boat, which left Myanmar with around a dozen others.

The hopes of a fresh start turned to horror when he was transferred to a much larger ship far out at sea, where hundreds of migrants from nearby vessels were crammed together, always under the threatening gaze of armed men from China, Myanmar and Thailand.

"We couldn't sleep on the boat, because if we tried to lie down or stretch our legs out, they hit and kicked us," Shorif told AFP in Lhoksukon, a city in Indonesia's Aceh province where 582 migrants have being held since arriving at the weekend.

"They threatened to shoot us."

A young Rohingya boy looks on as he waits along with other illegal migrants at a temporary detention...
A young Rohingya boy looks on as he waits along with other illegal migrants at a temporary detention center in Langkawi on May 12, 2015
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP

The journey lasted a month, he said, with the passengers surviving on meagre rations of food and water and forced to endure the beating sun by day and cold at night.

Not everyone survived the ordeal, Shorif said, with some of those on board succumbing to the harsh conditions.

"Six people on our boat died due to illness and hunger, and the captain ordered that their bodies be thrown to the sea," he said.

- 'We all cried' -

Shorif is one of nearly 2,000 boatpeople from Myanmar and Bangladesh who have swum ashore, been rescued or intercepted off Malaysia and Indonesia in recent days after Thailand -- a key stop on human-smuggling routes -- launched a crackdown on the trade.

His tale of hardship and mistreatment sheds light on the trade in human misery, and the lengths Rohingya -- a Muslim minority that is unwanted by Myanmar's government -- go to escape persecution in their homeland.

Illegal Bangladeshi migrants wait at the police headquarters in Langkawi on May 11  2015  after arri...
Illegal Bangladeshi migrants wait at the police headquarters in Langkawi on May 11, 2015, after arriving on the Malaysian shores earlier in the day
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP

The Arakan Project, a Rohingya rights group, says as many as 8,000 people may be adrift at sea, and the International Organization for Migration has called for urgent search and rescue operations to find the boats before it's too late for those on board.

Shorif was lucky to reach land alive. He said when they were near the border of Malaysia and Indonesia their Thai captain abandoned ship, saying a speedboat was on its way to take them the rest of the journey.

"We all cried because nobody knew how to navigate the boat, and we couldn't do anything because they threatened to shoot us," he said.

Now the Rohingya youngster is crammed into a sports hall with hundreds of others where space is limited, ventilation poor and the toilets filthy.

But he still has hope, flashing around a faded UNHCR identity card and proudly declaring himself a "Burmese Muslim".

Shorif still plans to join his uncle in Malaysia, and is seeking assistance from IOM officials in Aceh.

But stranded in an unfamiliar country, he also thinks of his family, and hopes they know he is still alive.

"I miss my parents and my sisters," he said, fighting back tears.

"If I remember my father, mother, my sisters I can only cry, I can only pray to God to give strength to my parents."

Muhammad Shorif, a 16-year-old Muslim Rohingya from Myanmar, dreamed of one day being a doctor. After fleeing a dismal upbringing in a refugee camp, he embarked on a dangerous sea voyage, only to find himself stranded on Indonesia’s farthest shores.

The teenager had hoped to reach Malaysia where he would join his uncle, receive an education and start a new life far from the discrimination he suffered in his homeland.

But instead he was washed ashore in a wooden boat with nearly 600 other desperate migrants, after a harrowing journey where they were beaten and threatened by people-smuggling gangs.

“My dream is to be a doctor and if I do become one, I want to go back home to Arakan and treat my Muslim brothers and sisters, because a lot of them are sick,” he told AFP, referring to the westernmost state of Myanmar where many Rohingya live in squalid conditions.

An illegal Bangladeshi migrant Jahangir Hussain looks out of a Malaysian police van in Langkawi  on ...

An illegal Bangladeshi migrant Jahangir Hussain looks out of a Malaysian police van in Langkawi, on May 11, 2015
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP/File

Clutching a bag of medicine provided by aid workers and nursing an injured leg, Shorif recalled how his parents scraped together US$1,000 from friends to put him on a small boat, which left Myanmar with around a dozen others.

The hopes of a fresh start turned to horror when he was transferred to a much larger ship far out at sea, where hundreds of migrants from nearby vessels were crammed together, always under the threatening gaze of armed men from China, Myanmar and Thailand.

“We couldn’t sleep on the boat, because if we tried to lie down or stretch our legs out, they hit and kicked us,” Shorif told AFP in Lhoksukon, a city in Indonesia’s Aceh province where 582 migrants have being held since arriving at the weekend.

“They threatened to shoot us.”

A young Rohingya boy looks on as he waits along with other illegal migrants at a temporary detention...

A young Rohingya boy looks on as he waits along with other illegal migrants at a temporary detention center in Langkawi on May 12, 2015
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP

The journey lasted a month, he said, with the passengers surviving on meagre rations of food and water and forced to endure the beating sun by day and cold at night.

Not everyone survived the ordeal, Shorif said, with some of those on board succumbing to the harsh conditions.

“Six people on our boat died due to illness and hunger, and the captain ordered that their bodies be thrown to the sea,” he said.

– ‘We all cried’ –

Shorif is one of nearly 2,000 boatpeople from Myanmar and Bangladesh who have swum ashore, been rescued or intercepted off Malaysia and Indonesia in recent days after Thailand — a key stop on human-smuggling routes — launched a crackdown on the trade.

His tale of hardship and mistreatment sheds light on the trade in human misery, and the lengths Rohingya — a Muslim minority that is unwanted by Myanmar’s government — go to escape persecution in their homeland.

Illegal Bangladeshi migrants wait at the police headquarters in Langkawi on May 11  2015  after arri...

Illegal Bangladeshi migrants wait at the police headquarters in Langkawi on May 11, 2015, after arriving on the Malaysian shores earlier in the day
Manan Vatsyayana, AFP

The Arakan Project, a Rohingya rights group, says as many as 8,000 people may be adrift at sea, and the International Organization for Migration has called for urgent search and rescue operations to find the boats before it’s too late for those on board.

Shorif was lucky to reach land alive. He said when they were near the border of Malaysia and Indonesia their Thai captain abandoned ship, saying a speedboat was on its way to take them the rest of the journey.

“We all cried because nobody knew how to navigate the boat, and we couldn’t do anything because they threatened to shoot us,” he said.

Now the Rohingya youngster is crammed into a sports hall with hundreds of others where space is limited, ventilation poor and the toilets filthy.

But he still has hope, flashing around a faded UNHCR identity card and proudly declaring himself a “Burmese Muslim”.

Shorif still plans to join his uncle in Malaysia, and is seeking assistance from IOM officials in Aceh.

But stranded in an unfamiliar country, he also thinks of his family, and hopes they know he is still alive.

“I miss my parents and my sisters,” he said, fighting back tears.

“If I remember my father, mother, my sisters I can only cry, I can only pray to God to give strength to my parents.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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