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A staff member of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency searches for victims of a boat from Buthidaung, Myanmar, that sank near the Malaysia–Thailand border, during a search and rescue operation close to Langkawi, Malaysia November 9, 2025. Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency/Handout via REUTERS
Boat With Migrants Sinks Off Malaysia, Hundreds Missing
Updated: January 31, 2026 (Originally published November 9, 2025)
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 9 (Reuters) – A boat carrying members of the Rohingya community from Myanmar has sunk near the Thai-Malaysian border, with hundreds missing, seven dead and 13 rescued, the Malaysian maritime agency said on Sunday.
Rescuers were combing an area of 170 square nautical miles near Langkawi island on Saturday after a boat with 300 people on board left Myanmar’s Rakhine state three days earlier, said the maritime agency head for the area Romli Mustafa.
Images from the agency showed one survivor covered with a sheet and another on a stretcher.
A staff of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency checks on a survivor who was rescued by a fishing boat’s crew after a boat from Buthidaung, Myanmar, sank near the Malaysia–Thailand border, close to Langkawi, Malaysia November 9, 2025. Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency /Handout via REUTERS
Myanmar’s impoverished Rakhine state has suffered years of conflict, hunger and ethnic violence mostly targeting the Rohingya Muslim minority community. Driven out of Rakhine state following a brutal 2017 military crackdown, some 1.3 million Rohingya live as refugees in densely-packed camps in neighboring Bangladesh.
Malaysian state media Bernama cited Kedah province police chief Adzli Abu Shah as saying people initially boarded a large vessel from Myanmar but were instructed to transfer onto three smaller boats, each carrying about 100 people, to avoid detection as they neared Malaysia.
The status of the other two boats was unknown, and a search-and-rescue operation was ongoing, he said.
Facing violence at home in Myanmar and increasingly difficult living conditions in Bangladesh, Rohingya from both countries regularly attempt perilous journeys by sea, including to Malaysia.
More than 5,100 Rohingya have taken boats to leave Myanmar and Bangladesh between January and early November this year, with nearly 600 people reported dead or missing, according to data from the UN Refugee Agency.
(Reporting by Ashley Tang and Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by William Mallard and Andrew Cawthorne)
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