Rohingya refugee: Here's one man's story
Adie Sufian Zulkefli
May 14, 2015 18:42 MYT
May 14, 2015 18:42 MYT
While many of the Rohingya people enter Malaysia after being housed in temporary camps on the borders of Malaysia – Thailand, some are brought into the country through syndicates.
This was confirmed by one Rohingya national, Ismail Ayob, 32 who told Astro AWANI how he was brought into the country.
In the interview which took place at Shahab Perdana bus terminal in Alor Setar, Ismail said he had entered Malaysia in 2006 through a syndicate which promised him a high salary.
After his village was torched down and villagers killed, Ismail who also lost all contacts with his siblings, followed an agent who promised to get him to Malaysia.
He then took a boat, together with few passengers and left to Bangkok, Thailand where he stayed in an empty house with five more Bangladeshi refugees for three days.
They were then brought to Padang Besar border in a car after paying the agent between RM2,000 and RM3,000 where they managed to slip into the country, unnoticed by the authorities.
Ismail was then taken to Penang in a car with another agent, where he stayed at a house in the state, working as a construction worker for RM40 a day.
“I feel cheated because I was promised a job as a cleaner with a higher salary but I ended up working as a construction worker now,” he told Astro AWANI.
Fearing arrests by the authorities, he had applied for a UNHCR card, which he received in2007.
Ismail today lives with wife and two children, with all of them holding UNCHR cards.
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The Shahab Perdana bus terminal is believed to be a hotspot for the refugees where they usually board busses to get to other parts of the country.