Indonesia to let stranded Rohingya refugees ashore after local, international protests
on Wednesday said it will let dozens of come ashore after protests from locals and the international community over its plan to push them into Malaysian waters.
At least 100 mostly women and children aboard a stricken wooden vessel off Aceh province were denied refuge in Indonesia, where authorities on Tuesday said they planned to push them into the neighbouring Southeast Asian country after fixing their boat.
After a day-long meeting on Wednesday between officials in the coastal town of , Jakarta backtracked and said the refugees' boat would be towed to shore on humanitarian grounds.
"The decision was taken after considering the emergency condition of the refugees on that boat," said Armed Wijaya, head of the national taskforce on refugees.
The Rohingya boat is now about 50 miles (80 kilometres) from Bireuen and would be pulled ashore, he said without elaborating on the timing.
"As it is now in the middle of the pandemic, all refugees will undergo medical screening," he said, adding that the taskforce will coordinate with related stakeholders to provide shelter and logistics for the refugees.
Indonesian authorities first spotted the wooden boat two days ago, stranded about 70 nautical miles off the Indonesian coast, according to a local navy commander. Local fishermen had alerted them on 25 December, one of them said.
On Tuesday, Amnesty International and the UNHCR called on the government to let the stranded group of Rohingya refugees land.
Archbishop of Canterbury praises sea rescuers, urges compassion for refugees in Christmas sermon
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The earlier plan by authorities in Aceh to send the refugees into Malaysia also angered locals in Bireuen, where a group of fishermen on Wednesday organised a protest demanding authorities to instead allow the Rohingya to disembark.
"We saw videos of their condition on social media. They need water and food. They must be treated with kindness as human beings," Bireuen resident Wahyudi told AFP by telephone.
"We, Acehnese, used to have the same experience with the Rohingya. We were in a prolonged conflict. We fled crossing the sea and were helped by people from various countries such as Malaysia, Australia."
The Rohingya people, who are largely Muslim,Ìýface a genocide in their native Mynmar, a Buddhist-majority country.
More than 700,000 have fled MyanmarÌýto camps in Bangladesh since August 2017, when the Myanmar military launched a clearance operation in response to attacks by a rebel group. Myanmar security forces have been accused of mass rapes, killings and the burning of thousands of homes duringÌýthe Rohingya genocide.