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The IOM and UNHCR have voiced alarm in a joint statement at reports ‘that two boats carrying more than 500 people may have capsized off the coast of Myanmar in recent days’. Photograph: Chaideer Mahyuddin/AFP/Getty Images View image in fullscreen The IOM and UNHCR have voiced alarm in a joint statement at reports ‘that two boats carrying more than 500 people may have capsized off the coast of Myanmar in recent days’. Photograph: Chaideer Mahyuddin/AFP/Getty Images Hundreds of refugees feared dead after two suspected shipwrecks off Myanmar: UN Vessels believed to have departed from Myanmar in late June, with mostly Muslim Rohingya minority onboard The United Nations has said more than 500 people are feared dead after reports of two large shipwrecks off Myanmar since late June. The UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) and its refugee agency UNHCR voiced alarm in a joint statement at reports “that two boats carrying more than 500 people may have capsized off the coast of Myanmar in recent days”. Preliminary information indicated that the two vessels in question departed from war-torn Myanmar’s Rakhine state in late June, with mainly members of the country’s mostly Muslim Rohingya minority onboard, the statement said. ‘Like an open prison’: a million Rohingya refugees still in Bangladesh camps five years after crisis Read more Some had reportedly travelled from the huge camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar, where more than million Rohingya refugees live in squalid conditions. Rohingya undertake perilous sea journeys every year in search of better living conditions, travelling aboard rickety boats often operated by trafficking networks. The statement said one boat, believed to have been carrying about 250 people, lost contact shortly after departure. A second boat, reportedly carrying about 280 people, is meanwhile believed to have sunk off Myanmar’s Ayeyarwady coast on 8 July. “While the incidents and casualty figures have yet to be officially confirmed, UNHCR and IOM are gravely concerned by the potentially devastating loss of life,” the statement said. The UN agencies highlighted that the journeys “took place outside the regular sailing season, when maritime conditions are typically more hazardous”. “Recent torrential rain and flooding across the region have further increased the risks associated with such sea movements.” The statement cautioned that “if verified, this tragedy would add to the nearly 300 people reported to be missing or to have lost their lives in the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal so far this year, including Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals”. According to UNHCR, nearly 900 Rohingya refugees were reported missing or dead at sea in the northern Indian Ocean last year alone – out of more than 6,500 who had attempted such perilous sea crossings. Thursday’s statement stressed that the latest reported tragedies “underscore the devastating impact of protracted conflict and displacement, as well as the continued lack
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