Thai navy tows migrant boat back out to sea

The Thai navy towed a boat full of migrants out to sea towards Indonesia and away from its southern islands in the Andaman Sea, a Reuters witness said on Saturday.The boat was being towed southwest by Thai navy patrol boat number 911, the Reuters witness said.The navy was unable to confirm if the boat was the same one it towed out of Thai waters on Friday.Thousands of migrants are adrift in Southeast Asian waters, abandoned by people smugglers in the Andaman Sea following a Thai crackdown on human trafficking.Meanwhile, Associated Press reported that US president Barack Obama renewed his authority for a year to maintain sanctions on Myanmar, amid international alarm over the plight of Rohingya Muslims whose mass flight has caused a refugee crisis in Southeast Asia.The White House notified Congress of the renewal on Friday, five days before the existing authority was due to expire. It said that despite significant progress on some reforms, concerns persist over conflict and human rights abuses, particularly in ethnic minority areas and Rakhine State.Although the renewal was widely expected, it comes as thousands of the stateless Rohingya who have fled apartheid-like conditions in western Myanmar are believed to be stranded in boats abandoned in the Andaman Sea because of crackdown on human smugglers. The flight of Rohingya over the past three years is the region’s largest exodus of boat people since the Vietnam War.The US is calling for a regional response to ‘save lives,’ but Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand appear unwilling to take more Rohingya.


State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said the US is urging governments in the region not to push back new boat arrivals. He said Secretary of State John Kerry called his Thai counterpart to discuss the possibility of Thailand providing temporary shelter to the migrants. Rathke did not disclose the Thai response.He said the US was also pressing Myanmar to ‘do more’ to improve the humanitarian situation in Rakhine State.‘We’re working on this now at high levels because of the crisis it’s created,’ he said.The displacement of Rohingya has been a black mark on Myanmar’s historic transition from decades of military rule, a shift often touted as a US foreign policy success. Myanmar regards the Rohingya as illegal migrants from Bangladesh and doesn’t recognize them as an ethnic group although many have lived in Myanmar for generations.The United States eased broad economic sanctions on Myanmar in 2012 to reward its political opening but it still restricts business with some individuals and companies who it says oppose the democratic transition or have ties to North Korea.Patrick Ventrell, a National Security Council spokesman, said the US will continue to review sanctions policies as it monitors Myanmar’s progress on political and economic reform.

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