Haresa counted the days by watching the moon wax and wane over the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea. On a fishing boat with hundreds of others, she was crammed into a space so tight that she couldn’t even stretch her legs.
“People struggled like they were fish flopping around,” Haresa, 18, says of the other refugees on the boat. “Then they stopped moving.”
As the days bled into weeks, and the weeks into months, dozens of bodies were thrown overboard, some beaten and some starved, survivors say. Haresa’s aunt died, and then her brother.
Six months after she boarded the vessel in Bangladesh with hopes that human traffickers would ferry her to Malaysia for an arranged marriage, Haresa, who goes by one name, found sanctuary in Indonesia in September, along with almost 300 other Rohingya refugees. Her sister, 21, died two days after the boat landed.
Haresa counted the days by watching the moon grow and fade over the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea. She was on a fishing boat with hundreds of others. The space that she had to cram into was so tight that she couldn’t even stretch her legs.
“People struggled like they were fish flopping around,” Haresa, 18, says of the other refugees on the boat. “Then they stopped moving.”
The days bled into weeks, and the weeks into months. During the voyage, dozens of bodies were thrown overboard. Some had been beaten and some had starved, survivors say. Haresa’s aunt died, and then her brother.
Haresa goes by one name. She had boarded the vessel six months earlier in Bangladesh. She had gone on the journey with hopes that human traffickers would take her to Malaysia for an arranged marriage. In September, she found sanctuary in Indonesia, along with almost 300 other Rohingya refugees. Her sister, 21, died two days after the boat landed.