A fishing trawler carrying around 250–280 people, including Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals, capsized in the Andaman Sea in mid-April 2026 while attempting to reach Malaysia. According to UNHCR - the UN Refugee Agency and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), around 250 people are feared dead or missing, based on preliminary estimates. The vessel departed from Teknaf in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, and was reportedly overcrowded and overwhelmed by rough seas.
Only around 9–10 survivors were rescued. Survivors reported that the boat travelled for about four days before capsizing, with some people floating for over 36 hours before being rescued by passing vessels.
“This tragedy highlights the devastating human cost of protracted displacement and the continued absence of durable solutions for the Rohingya,” the UNHCR and the IOM joint statement said on April 14, 2026.
More than 500 feared dead as officials investigate reports of boats capsizing in recent weeks
Since the 2017 Rohingya crisis in Rakhine State, over 7,00,000 Rohingya have fled to Cox’s Bazar, in Bangladesh. Myanmar’s 1982 Citizenship Law rendered them effectively stateless, denying basic rights. In Bangladesh, more than one million refugees live in congested camps with limited or no access to education and formal work. According to the UNHCR, funding cuts since 2023 have sharply reduced food rations. Smuggling networks exploit this vulnerability, charging high fees for passage to Malaysia, where informal labour opportunities and diaspora links exist.
The 1,500-nautical-mile Bangladesh–Malaysia route relies on unseaworthy boats, often carrying over 200 people with minimal supplies, for a journey that could normally take 5–7 days, boats often drift for weeks due to engine failure or fuel shortages.Reports by humanitarian agencies indicate that vessels are sometimes denied disembarkation or allegedly pushed back, leaving migrants stranded at sea.
According to a UNHCR report released on April 17 this year, 2025 was the deadliest year on record for Rohingya sea crossings, with nearly 900 dead or missing. The report observes that 6,500 attempted the journey, with about one in seven perishing. The trend has continued into 2026, with over 2,800 departures recorded between January and mid-April.
During the 2015 “boat crisis”, IMO estimated 6,000–8,000 migrants were left stranded at sea after Thailand’s crackdown on trafficking camps and regional governments delayed disembarkation.
A comparison with the Mediterranean Sea highlights both parallels and contrasts. The IOM estimates nearly 28,000 deaths there since 2014, as migrants fled conflicts in Syria, Eritrea, and Afghanistan.
Europe’s response, though contested, is relatively structured. Following the 2013 Lampedusa shipwreck, Italy launched Operation Mare Nostrum, rescuing around 1,50,000 people. It was followed by EU-led missions such as Operation Sophia, beginning in 2015, which targeted smuggling networks while also supporting rescue efforts. The Frontex coordinates joint operations, while the Common European Asylum System sets standards for asylum processing.
Legal accountability also plays a role. In Hirsi Jamaa v. Italy (2012), the European Court of Human Rights ruled that pushbacks violated international law. NGOs such as Médecins Sans Frontières and SOS Méditerranée have also rescued thousands. In contrast, Southeast Asia lacks binding frameworks. During the 2015 Andaman crisis, thousands were stranded at sea amid delayed responses. Without legal obligations or coordination, responses remain ad hoc.
The Mediterranean, despite ongoing tragedies, operates within a system of law, institutions, and scrutiny, conditions largely absent in the Andaman Sea.
The Rohingya maritime crisis exposes a governance vacuum in South and Southeast Asia. Conflict has strengthened the Arakan Army (a local Buddhist armed group), which by 2024 controlled large parts of Myanmar’s Rakhine State, driving displacement in the region. India faces a strategic dilemma, balancing China while tightening its Rohingya stance as borders in Mizoram and Manipur see influx of refugees and insurgency, highlighting tensions between security and humanitarian concerns. Geopolitically, Bangladesh pushes repatriation via the United Nations and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation but lacks leverage without China.
Also read: For Rohingya, there is no place called home
Bangladesh faces “compassion fatigue” amid declining aid, with repatriation stalled by instability in Myanmar. China is among Myanmar’s largest trading partner, with strategic influence through infrastructure investment. Projects like Kyaukphyu Port that deepen China’s stakes in the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea. A fragmented and isolated Myanmar under continued military rule remains strategically useful and within Beijing’s sphere of influence.
Countries such as India, Bangladesh, Thailand, and Malaysia are not signatories to the 1951 Refugee Convention, limiting formal protections and leaving rescue efforts largely ad hoc. The ASEAN’s 2021 Five-Point Consensus has been constrained by the non-interference principle and internal divisions between Indonesia and Malaysia versus Thailand and Myanmar, reinforcing policy paralysis.
Sustained international engagement, including burden-sharing through agencies like UNHCR, is essential to break this cycle, but it continues to be constrained by geopolitical divisions.
Much like the tragedies witnessed in the Mediterranean Sea, these repeated disasters expose systemic failures that go far beyond maritime safety. They reflect a crisis rooted in statelessness, regional neglect, and geopolitical hesitation.
(Saee Pande is a freelance writer with a focus on current affairs, international relations and geopolitics.)
Published - April 29, 2026 08:00 am IST