Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Malaysia finds more graves and human remains near Thai border

-

Malaysian police said on Sunday they had found 24 human skeletons - all believed to be victims of trafficking - in newly discovered graves along the Thai border in the northern Malaysian state of Perlis.

The latest gruesome discovery comes after police found 139 graves and 28 abandoned "detention" camps capable of housing hundreds of people in May, laying bare the grim extent of the region's migrant crisis.

The new graves were found on Saturday near the peak of a hill surrounded by jungle terrain and along the Thai border, not too far from the graves unearthed in May, Perlis police chief Shafie Ismail was quoted as saying by Bernama, the country's official news agency.

"It is believed that heavy rain had eroded the graves," he said.

After May's unearthing, the remains of 106 people were exhumed, mostly believed to be Muslim Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar, as well as Bangladeshis seeking better opportunities abroad.

Mass graves were also discovered on the Thai side of the border.

The Rohingya, a Muslim minority from Myanmar, have for years sought to escape what they say is worsening persecution by the country's Buddhist majority.

Fleeing abroad by the thousands each year, they typically put their lives in the hands of often brutal smugglers and traffickers who arrange a perilous passage by sea and land, usually destined for Muslim-majority Malaysia.

Malaysian police said on Sunday they had found 24 human skeletons – all believed to be victims of trafficking – in newly discovered graves along the Thai border in the northern Malaysian state of Perlis.

The latest gruesome discovery comes after police found 139 graves and 28 abandoned “detention” camps capable of housing hundreds of people in May, laying bare the grim extent of the region’s migrant crisis.

The new graves were found on Saturday near the peak of a hill surrounded by jungle terrain and along the Thai border, not too far from the graves unearthed in May, Perlis police chief Shafie Ismail was quoted as saying by Bernama, the country’s official news agency.

“It is believed that heavy rain had eroded the graves,” he said.

After May’s unearthing, the remains of 106 people were exhumed, mostly believed to be Muslim Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar, as well as Bangladeshis seeking better opportunities abroad.

Mass graves were also discovered on the Thai side of the border.

The Rohingya, a Muslim minority from Myanmar, have for years sought to escape what they say is worsening persecution by the country’s Buddhist majority.

Fleeing abroad by the thousands each year, they typically put their lives in the hands of often brutal smugglers and traffickers who arrange a perilous passage by sea and land, usually destined for Muslim-majority Malaysia.

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.

You may also like:

Business

American AI developer Anthropic plans to "lay the risks out on the table" even as it restricts deployment of a new model dubbed Mythos.

World

Oil prices surged Monday on a re-escalation of hostilities in the Middle East war after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz at the weekend.

Tech & Science

A push to reduce reliance on foreign compute and give researchers access to more power

Business

New peer-reviewed research finds that actively questioning and refining AI output, not avoiding it, is what keeps people's reasoning sharp.