THE United Nations refugee agency has appealed to Singapore to reverse its decision to refuse entry to 40 Burmese asylum seekers who have been stranded on a Vietnamese cargo ship for seven days.
A spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said the group plucked from the sea 30 hours after their boat sank should be allowed to ''safely disembark on humanitarian grounds''.
While not naming Singapore, the spokesperson said ''governments at the ship's closest port'' should accept the asylum seekers, who are Rohingya, a Muslim minority in Burma who were fleeing violent upheaval in the country's western Rakhine state.
The asylum seekers are on the 27,000-tonne Nosco Victory, which is believed to have been anchored off Singapore since Sunday when Singapore authorities refused it permission to dock, saying ''they do not appear to be persons eligible to enter Singapore''.
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The UNHCR spokesperson said the group should receive ''any medical or other urgent assistance as needed and for the process to begin of determining if they are in need of international protection''.
The incident is similar to the Tampa affair, when in 2001 Australia refused entry to Afghan asylum seekers.
Fairfax Media revealed on Tuesday that the Nosco Victory's captain had ignored advice by Indian rescue authorities to take the group to the ''nearest port of safety'' from where the asylum seekers were rescued in the Bay of Bengal on December 5, which was probably an Indian or Bangladeshi port.
But the captain continued to Singapore, its original destination, which took more than three days' sailing time.
The UNHCR spokesperson said while ''we can't confirm the identity of those rescued, we have reason to believe there could be people in need of international protection among them''.
The UN has described the Rohingya as among the world's most persecuted races.
''We urge all parties to respect the principle of non-refoulement [returning a person to a place of persecution] and ensure that the rescued individuals are not returned to any country where their lives could be in danger,'' the spokesperson said.