At least 21 people, including nine children, died after a packed boat capsized in choppy waters yesterday as it approached the Rakhine state capital of Sittwe, according to the United Nations.
Most of the passengers were inhabitants of Sin Tet Maw, in Paukaw township, a camp for Rohingya Muslim minority members forced from their homes by bouts of communal violence.
"It (the boat accident) happened because of unsafe transport... We can not use direct transport (overland) to Sittwe to buy goods or medicine," Rohingya activist, Kyaw Hla Aung, told AFP from Sittwe.
The Rohingya have been forced to live in apartheid-like conditions ever since unrest between Buddhists and Muslims left hundreds dead in 2012.
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Their movement and access to services, including health care, is severely restricted by authorities in the Buddhist-majority country.
The activist said he had counted 22 bodies in Sittwe and they all were Rohingya.
Another Rohingya man, Tin Hla, who also lives in the camp of 1500 people, said his son was unaccounted for among the boat passengers.
Myanmar does not formally recognise the Rohingya as one of the country's patchwork of ethnic minorities.
A rising tide of Buddhist nationalism has in recent years deepened hostility towards the group - most of whom are rendered stateless by a web of citizenship laws.
Many Rohingya trace their roots in the country back for generations.
But officials rotuinely refer to them as "Bengalis" -- a pejorative term identifying them as outsiders from neighbouring Bangladesh.
They were among the victims of last year's Southeast Asian migrant crisis which saw trafficking networks suddenly unravel, leaving thousands of Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants stranded without food at sea.