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Teen rescued days after migrant shipwreck off Malaysia

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Wed, 12 Nov 2025, 1:24pm
Authorities in Malaysia and Thailand have recovered at least 21 bodies as they search for survivors after a boat carrying undocumented migrants capsized, police and maritime officials said on November 10. Photo / Hakim Mustapha, AFP
Authorities in Malaysia and Thailand have recovered at least 21 bodies as they search for survivors after a boat carrying undocumented migrants capsized, police and maritime officials said on November 10. Photo / Hakim Mustapha, AFP

Teen rescued days after migrant shipwreck off Malaysia

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Wed, 12 Nov 2025, 1:24pm

Rescued after days stranded on a Malaysian island, weak and shaken Iman Shorif recounted how he watched a child drown when their boat carrying migrants from Myanmar capsized.

Iman, who is 18 and from Myanmar鈥檚 persecuted Rohingya minority, survived last week鈥檚 shipwreck off the Thai-Malaysian coast that killed at least 26 people.

He was picked up by a Malaysian rescue boat in a bay on Langkawi Island, five days after the boat carrying some 70 undocumented migrants sank close to the maritime border between Southeast Asian neighbours Thailand and Malaysia.

Speaking to journalists after his rescue, Iman said the boat journey 鈥渟tarted from Buthidaung鈥, a small township in Myanmar鈥檚 Rakhine state, and had gone on 鈥渇or five to six days鈥 before it went down.

When the boat sank, 鈥淚 saw one death ... it was a child, I saw him drowning,鈥 said the visibly weak teenager.

Rescuer Mohd Zamri Abdul Ghani said Iman was spotted when he waved with a polystyrene board.

鈥淲e were really moved when we found him ... Because it鈥檚 already the fourth day鈥 of the search mission, Zamri told journalists.

鈥淗e was excited to see us ... Physically, he looked exhausted.鈥

Iman was stranded near a waterfall, meaning he had a source of fresh water, the rescuer said.

Missing boat

Officials say the migrants on the capsized boat were members of the Rohingya community trying to reach Malaysia.

They were likely part of a larger group of some 300 people who had left Myanmar two weeks ago and were split between at least two boats.

Police reported the second vessel as missing and its fate was unknown.

As search operations continued, Malaysian authorities said another eight bodies had been recovered by Tuesday afternoon, taking the total to 20.

On the Thai side, an official told AFP on condition of anonymity that six bodies had been found, including at least two who carried identification cards issued by the United Nations鈥 refugee agency UNHCR.

Fourteen survivors, mainly Rohingya and Bangladeshi citizens, have been rescued in Malaysian waters since rescue operations started on Sunday.

At least 12 vessels were searching for survivors in an area of around 250 square nautical miles, roughly the same size as Singapore.

鈥楿rgent concerns鈥

Relatively affluent Malaysia is home to millions of migrants from poorer parts of Asia, many of them undocumented, working in industries including construction and agriculture.

Sea crossings, facilitated by human-trafficking syndicates, are hazardous and often lead to overloaded boats capsizing.

The Rohingya have been persecuted in Myanmar for decades, and thousands risk their lives every year to flee repression and civil war, often aboard makeshift boats.

In 2024, some 657 Rohingya died in the region鈥檚 waters, according to UNHCR figures.

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said that the latest shipwreck 鈥渞aises urgent humanitarian concerns鈥.

鈥淣o one leaves Myanmar or Bangladesh by choice 鈥 these are dangerous boat journeys undertaken by people out of fear for their lives,鈥 MSF said in a statement.

-Agence France-Presse

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