Dozens of Myanmar migrants held on train
BANGKOK: Thai police said on Monday they had charged 70 migrants from Myanmar and six Rohingya Muslims with illegal entry after they were arrested on a train bound for a southern province bordering Malaysia.The migrants were taken off the train from Bangkok at around 4:30 am in Nakhon Si Thammarat
By our correspondents
March 31, 2015
BANGKOK: Thai police said on Monday they had charged 70 migrants from Myanmar and six Rohingya Muslims with illegal entry after they were arrested on a train bound for a southern province bordering Malaysia.
The migrants were taken off the train from Bangkok at around 4:30 am in Nakhon Si Thammarat province when they failed to present valid travel documents, said local railway police sub-inspector Kraisorn Boonlum.
“All of the 76 were charged with illegal entry. The Myanmar ones will be deported back to their country, the six Rohingya must first have their nationalities identified,” he told AFP.
Kraisorn said the migrants claimed not to know one another and to have boarded the train bound for Narathiwat province at different stations along the route.
“The Myanmar ones said they wanted to find jobs in the south of Thailand but the Rohingya said they wanted to enter Malaysia,” he said.
Thousands of Rohingya — a Muslim minority group not recognised as citizens in Myanmar — have fled deadly communal unrest in the country’s western state of Rakhine since 2012. Most have headed for mainly Muslim Malaysia.
The six Rohingya migrants, all men in their 20s, and the Myanmar nationals — mostly adults and a handful of children — are being held at an immigration centre in Meuang district in Nakhon Si Thammarat.
The migrants were taken off the train from Bangkok at around 4:30 am in Nakhon Si Thammarat province when they failed to present valid travel documents, said local railway police sub-inspector Kraisorn Boonlum.
“All of the 76 were charged with illegal entry. The Myanmar ones will be deported back to their country, the six Rohingya must first have their nationalities identified,” he told AFP.
Kraisorn said the migrants claimed not to know one another and to have boarded the train bound for Narathiwat province at different stations along the route.
“The Myanmar ones said they wanted to find jobs in the south of Thailand but the Rohingya said they wanted to enter Malaysia,” he said.
Thousands of Rohingya — a Muslim minority group not recognised as citizens in Myanmar — have fled deadly communal unrest in the country’s western state of Rakhine since 2012. Most have headed for mainly Muslim Malaysia.
The six Rohingya migrants, all men in their 20s, and the Myanmar nationals — mostly adults and a handful of children — are being held at an immigration centre in Meuang district in Nakhon Si Thammarat.
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