Another refugee was missing, External Affairs Ministry spokesman Anurag Srivastava said on Thursday, giving news of the rescue, reports Reuters.
The
United Nations refugee agency had raised the alarm earlier this week
over the missing boat, which had set off on Feb. 11 from Cox's Bazar in
Bangladesh, where refugee camps have been established for hundreds of
thousands of Rohingya who fled neighbouring Myanmar.
After four
days at sea the boat's engine failed, and those on board had run out of
food and water, Srivastava said. Many were ill and suffering from
extreme dehydration by the time they were rescued.
Two Indian
coast guard ships were sent to help the refugees, 23 of whom were
children, and the Indian government is in discussions with Bangladesh to
ensure their safe return, he said.
India is not a signatory to
the 1951 Refugee Convention, which spells out refugee rights and state
responsibilities to protect them. It does not have a domestic law to
protect the more than 200,000 refugees it currently hosts, including
some Rohingya from Myanmar.
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya fled to Bangladesh after a deadly crackdown by security forces in Myanmar in 2017.
"Bangladesh
is respectful of its international obligations under the UNCLOS (The
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea)," Bangladesh's foreign
ministry said in a statement.
On earlier occasions when other
littoral countries of the region repeatedly denied access to the
Rohingyas adrift on the sea, it was Bangladesh that came to the rescue,
the ministry added.
The statement said the boat had been traced approximately 1,700 km away from Bangladesh and 147 km from India.
"Other
states, particularly those on whose territorial water the vessel has
been found, bear the primary responsibility and they should fulfil their
obligation under international law and burden-sharing principle," the
ministry said.