REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, KUALA LUMPUR - An overloaded wooden boat carrying 97 suspected illegal Indonesian immigrants sank off Malaysia's western coast on Wednesday, with rescuers searching for at least 42 missing people, Malaysian officials said.
The passengers included women and children and the boat was not fit for a sea voyage, said Muhammad Zuri, an official with the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA). The boat was heading for Malaysia, Zuri said.
But another rescue official said the vessel was going from Malaysia to Indonesia's northernmost province of Aceh. He said the boat left from Malaysia's Carey Island, an area roughly a fifth the size of Singapore dominated by oil palm plantations.
"This was an illegal boat and all the passengers were Indonesians," Zuri told Reuters.
The maritime agency earlier said that 66 people were missing, but a local police official told Reuters that 55 passengers had now been rescued, leaving the total number of missing at 42. Malaysian rescuers were scouring the area for more survivors and had deployed a helicopter, one large ship and four smaller boats in the operation, officials said. Several fishing boats were also helping with rescue efforts. The MMEA said the boat sank at around 1 a.m. in the Strait of Malacca off the Malaysian coastal town of Banting.