Thursday, April 30, 2026

He Was Among Dozens Crammed Into a Trawler’s Cargo Hold. Then the Boat Capsized.

The New York Times
By Verena Hölzl
Reporting from Bangkok
Published April 16, 2026Updated April 19, 2026

 Hundreds of migrants from Bangladesh, including Rohingya refugees, are feared dead after a boat to Malaysia overturned.

A Rohingya survivor being carried on a bamboo stretcher to a hospital at a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, after being rescued last week from a capsized boat.Credit...Suzauddin Rubel/Associated Press

For two days and one night the teenager drifted in the open sea, holding on to a piece of wood. He had been on a boat that was supposed to take him to a better life. But it capsized in the middle of the Andaman Sea last week.

 

Imran, 17, a refugee who uses only one name, is one of nine survivors who were rescued by a ship sailing under the Bangladeshi flag that encountered them at sea. The United Nations announced the rescue on Wednesday, saying it feared the rest of the roughly 250 people who had been on board could be dead.

The vessel that capsized, an overcrowded fishing trawler, left Teknaf in southern Bangladesh in early April and was bound for Malaysia, according to the United Nations. It sank after a couple of days at sea. The passengers were a mix of Bangladeshi nationals and Rohingya refugees, some of them children.

More than one million Rohingya, members of a Muslim minority from Myanmar, have been living in precarious refugee camps in Bangladesh since 2017, after being persecuted in their homeland and driven away from it.

“The trawler was so packed with people, we could only sleep while sitting,” Mr. Imran said in a telephone interview from the Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. Every couple of hours, the boatmen forced another group of passengers into the suffocating fish hold where Imran had been placed. People regularly fainted, he said.

Fishing boats on a beach near the camps in Teknaf, Bangladesh, where the migrants began their ocean voyage.Credit...Mahmud Hossain Opu/Associated Press
Lining up for aid in Kutupalong camp. Earlier this month, food aid in the refugee camps was reduced to as little as the equivalent of $7 a month per person, following cuts to aid budgets in the United States and elsewhere.Credit...A.M. Ahad/Associated Press

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