Mass graves of emigrants found in Malaysia forests

Dhaka: Around 30 mass graves believed to contain the bodies of hundreds of Rohingyas and Bangladeshis have reportedly been discovered near Malaysia’s border with Thailand, reports Sydney Morning Herald on Sunday.
The report says that the finding follows the discovery of similar mass graves in Thailand early in May, which prompted Thai authorities to crack down on human trafficking networks.
Malaysia has previously denied that people smuggler camps or graves were located on its territory, the destination of choice for tens of thousands of Rohingyas fleeing persecution in Myanmar that has prompted a humanitarian crisis across the Bay of Bengal and in South-east Asian waters.
Graves were found in mid-May in forests in Padang Besar and Wang Kelian, but the government in Kuala Lumpur did not announce the discoveries, says Sydney Morning Herald quoting The Mingguan Malaysia newspaper.
The newspaper also reported that several foreigners and local villagers had been arrested under anti-trafficking and anti-smuggling laws.
For years Malaysia has quietly allowed tens of thousands of Rohingyas and Bangladeshis who had been smuggled into the country by human traffickers to work as cheap labour. Many had been held in jungle camps and in boats at sea while traffickers demanded ransoms from their families.
Thailand’s crackdown forced traffickers to abandon their human cargo, leaving thousands stranded at sea as Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia pushed their boats back from their shores, reports Sydney Morning Herald.
Last week Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak ordered his navy and coast guard to comb the sea looking for up to 6000 people still stranded.
Malaysia has also agreed to attend a Thai-hosted summit of regional nations, including Australia, to discuss the crisis next Friday.
Meanwhile, the Royal Thai Armed Forces have rejected a US request to use the Thai resort island of Phuket as a maritime patrol base to assist Rohingya migrants, the Sunday Bangkok Post reports.
The Post quoted an unnamed source saying the rejection reflects Thai irritation over US pressure to resolve human trafficking problems.