[Most
of the thousands of migrants who survived the crisis and reached land in Indonesia , Malaysia and Thailand have either been returned to their home
countries or smuggled elsewhere. Several hundred, including Mr. Mohammed, languish
in refugee camps or detention centers, praying that a Western country will take
them in.]
By Joe Cochrane
BAYEUN,
Indonesia — When Mohammed Salim washed ashore on the coast of Aceh Province in
Indonesia during the Southeast Asian refugee crisis last year, he was hungry, thirsty,
emaciated and exhausted.
All
he wanted was rice, water and to get to a safe nation. “America , Australia , anywhere,” he told me then.
When
I caught up with him just over a year later, he appeared healthier and cleaner,
but nowhere closer to getting somewhere.
Most
of the thousands of migrants who survived the crisis and reached land in Indonesia , Malaysia and Thailand have either been returned to their home
countries or smuggled elsewhere. Several hundred, including Mr. Mohammed, languish
in refugee camps or detention centers, praying that a Western country will take
them in.
Only
46 have been resettled by a third country.
“It’s
not easy,” said Mr. Mohammed, 24, who was on the green-and-red fishing boat
packed with men, women and children that journalists found adrift in the
Andaman Sea last year. “Like I’m happy I’m alive, but mostly I’m unhappy. But
I’m always thinking, third country, third country, third country, please, please.”
The
crisis flared in May 2015 after the Thai authorities cracked down on brutal
smuggling rings based in southern Thailand that had been spiriting migrants to Malaysia from Myanmar and Bangladesh .
As
the smugglers fled, abandoning their charges at sea with no provisions or crew,
the situation grew into a full-blown humanitarian crisis.
With
international pressure mounting, Malaysia and Indonesia agreed to accept them temporarily. The
ethnic Rohingya refugees, who were fleeing persecution in Myanmar, were
expected to be granted refugee status andeventually resettled in a third
country, while those from Bangladesh, who were largely economic migrants, were
to be repatriated.
Most
of the 1,622 Bangladeshis who landed in Indonesia , Malaysia and Thailand have been sent home, with the rest expected
to follow this year.
Many
of the Rohingya made it to Malaysia clandestinely, blending in with the tens of
thousands of Rohingya already living and working there. The Malaysian
government has long turned a blind eye to this migration.
But
the price for the migrants is a life in the shadows, without official status
and prey to exploitation by unscrupulous employers, corrupt police officers and
loan sharks.
Most
of the nearly 1,500 Rohingya whose arrivals in Malaysia , Thailand and Indonesia were officially registered have been granted
refugee status or will eventually get it, according to the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
But
the vast majority remain in limbo, or worse. The 459 Rohingya officially
admitted into Malaysia and Thailand have been locked in detention centers and
will not be released until a third country agrees to take them.
A
report released in March by Fortify Rights, an advocacy group that investigates
criminal organizations and government officials involved in human trafficking, said
that the detention centers were not equipped for long-term detentions, and that
the conditions there were “inhumane.”
“We
thought that given all the international attention and media attention that was
put on the situation last year, there was momentum that the situation could
improve,” said Matthew Smith, the executive director of the group. “That has
not been the case.”
In
Indonesia , the government set up camps and shelters in
Aceh Province , on the northern tip of Sumatra island, for the 999 Rohingya who ended up
there.
The
Rohingyas were not confined, security is lax, and they can roam freely.
Within
weeks of the refugees’ arrival in Aceh, smugglers started scouring the camps, offering
passage to Malaysia . Since most of the refugees had intended to
go to Malaysia to find work, and most had gone deeply into
hock to get there, many left.
Chris
Lewa, coordinator of the Arakan Project, a human rights group that tracks
migration in the Andaman Sea, said smugglers had led the Rohingya to the city
of Medan — a drive of four to seven hours to the southeast — where they were
put on small Indonesian boats and then transferred to Malaysian boats bound for
the mainland.
According
to the intergovernmental International Organization for Migration, of the 999
Rohingya who arrived in Aceh in May 2015, 723 are believed to have made it to Malaysia .
At
least 53 Bangladeshis are also believed to have gone to Malaysia .
“Their
families are there, and they want to work,” Ms. Lewa said. “They have their own
community there and have jobs.”
Those
who remain in Indonesia are not allowed to work while they await
third-country resettlement. But they have been taking language classes in
English and Indonesian, vocational training such as sewing and hair dressing, and
even growing vegetables in a large garden.
There
have been numerous fights in the camps, cases of domestic violence, illegal
underage marriages and births, and frequent instances of anger and depression.
“There
have been issues throughout because of this sense of not knowing what comes
next — it’s helplessness,” said Mariam Khokhar, the head of the Organization
for Migration office in Medan , the capital of North Sumatra Province .
One
of those who did not flee is Jamal Hossain, 28. He and his wife, Sajidah, braved
the smuggler boats from Myanmar with four young children a year ago, and had
a fifth, a girl, in the Bayeun refugee camp in February.
Within
weeks after their arrival in Aceh, Mr. Jamal said, he began receiving phone
calls from a smuggling network offering the family passage to Malaysia with only a down payment on the total fee of
about $3,500.
Unlike
many others, he had no family in Malaysia , so he declined.
“I
received a second life,” he said. “Why should I risk it again?”
Last
month, the first Rohingya refugees from the 2015 crisis were resettled. The United States took in 43, and Canada three. Aid workers said the United States was considering taking in more refugees and
was encouraging other countries to do so.
The
flow of migrants out of Myanmar and Bangladesh has ebbed, for now at least, because of
increased patrols by those countries, as well as Thailand and Malaysia , according to international aid
organizations.
The
crackdown has deterred migrants and driven up the price, said Alistair Boulton,
assistant regional representative for protection at the United Nations refugees
office in Bangkok .
“The
price of the voyage has tripled or quadrupled,” he said.
Yet
demand remains high, thanks to poor conditions in Myanmar and Bangladesh, and
officials fear that smuggling could pick up again after monsoon season winds
down in September.
“Human
smuggling is more profitable than drugs or guns, so these guys presumably
running this are not amateurs,” said Joe Lowry, a spokesman for the
Organization for Migration in Bangkok .
“If
the international community and the regional governments drop their guards, this
will happen again,” he said. “People want to go where there are jobs; people
want to escape persecution.”
Follow
Joe Cochrane on Twitter @datelinejakarta.