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Malaysian ship with aid for Rohingya arriving in Bangladesh 

News Desk (Associated Press)
Dhaka
Mon, February 13, 2017

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Malaysian ship with aid for Rohingya arriving in Bangladesh Myanmar protesters hold banners outside Thilawa port where a Malaysian ship arrived, in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, Feb. 9, 2017. The "Food Flotilla for Myanmar" carrying 2,300 tons of food and medicine to help members of Myanmar's persecuted Muslim Rohingya minority arrived in Yangon as rights groups accuse the army of mass killings, rapes and other crimes targeting the ethnic group. The protesters deny that the ethnic group Rohingya even exists. Many in Myanmar refer to the Rohingya as Bengalis, suggesting they belong in Bangladesh. (AP/Thein Zaw)

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Malaysian aid ship was heading to a Bangladeshi port Monday bringing relief goods for some of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who've fled Myanmar.

Shaheenul Islam, the military's public relations spokesman, said the ship anchored near Sonadia island off the coastal district of Cox's Bazar then had to be sent to Chittagong because the island had no unloading jetty facilities.

"There has been a change after the ship anchored near Cox's Bazar town. Now it is heading back to Chittagong seaport where the port authorities will arrange everything," Islam said. "This is purely an issue of how the goods would be unloaded, no other issues are involved."

"There will be an official handing over ceremony tomorrow morning and then the goods will be sent to Teknaf," he said.

(Read also: US accepts Rohingya refugees from Indonesia)

Ali Hossain, chief government administrator in Cox's Bazar, said they had received a list of goods to be unloaded from the ship, but the plan was changed as Malaysian authorities wanted better handling infrastructure.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya are camping in Teknaf officially and in unregistered camps.

The ship is carrying around 2,300 tons of food, medicine and other supplies.

Rohingya Muslims have long faced discrimination in majority-Buddhist Myanmar.

More than 300,000 have been living in Bangladesh for decades, while about 66,000 more have crossed the border since October amid renewed persecution and targeted attacks by soldiers and majority Buddhists in Myanmar's Rakhine state. (dan)

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