Summary

Photograph of a wooden refugee boat, VT017, lying aground at the water's edge at Kuantan, East Malaysia in December, 1978. People stand on the beach nearby. The photograph is one of a series taken by PT Penkonindo employee Tim Baker. Another boat, PK 1867, arrived with refugees from Vietnam around the time this photograph was taken. They are believed to be the first refugees to arrive there from Vietnam.

Description of Content

Boat aground at beach with prow facing camera. The boat has an unpainted planked hull and cabin with a short foresail mast. There are a number of people standing on the beach near the boat. The boat has its number in white paint on the front of the cabin and two Red Cross symbols on top of the cabin roof. There is a low scrubby headland beyond at the end of the beach and a distant ship on the horizon.

Physical Description

Colour photograph printed on paper.

Significance

Statement of Historical Significance:
This collection enhances a significant collection of holdings by the Museum relating to refugee camp life and management. The Museum now holds photographs documenting refugee camp experiences from post-World War II Germany to Indonesia and Malaysia after the Vietnam War. This particular collection also demonstrates the early lack of infrastructure to manage refugee boat arrivals, in this case requiring harbour engineering workers to assist.

These photographs show a boatload of Vietnamese people who came as refugees by sea on what is believed to have been one of the first small boats to arrive on the Malaysian coast after the end of the Vietnam War with the fall of Saigon to the North Vietnamese on 30 April 1975. An estimated 800,000 Viernamese refugees left by boat between 1975 and 1995. Exodus by small boats to neighbouring South-East Asian countries began in about September 1978 and increased until in June 1979 neighbouring countries declared they would not take any more. A United Nations Conference in July 1979 brokered an Orderly Departure Program which increased the intake to Australia and other countries and decreased the exodus by boat.

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