<p>Thirty-seven people remained missing today after an apparently overloaded boat carrying Indonesian illegal migrants heading home for Ramadan sank overnight in rough seas off western Malaysia, killing at least two.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Officials said 58 people had been rescued or made it to land by themselves after the accident around midnight near Port Klang, Malaysia's largest port.<br /><br />"But 37 people are still missing and we have found two bodies," said Mohamad Hambali Yaakup, head of the Port Klang office of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency.<br /><br />"We plucked some of the survivors from the sea and others were found on land."<br /><br />The boat sank not far from shore, raising hopes that many of the missing had already made it to safety on their own, he added.<br /><br />Officials believe 97 passengers were aboard the wooden boat, including some children.<br /><br />Authorities said rescued passengers told them they were seeking to return home to Indonesia across the Malacca Strait -- the busy shipping lane between Malaysia and Indonesia's Sumatra island -- for the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.<br /><br />Officials had initially said the passengers were believed to be seeking to enter Malaysia.<br /><br />"From interviews with those rescued, they said they were returning to Aceh (in northern Sumatra). They did not have any travel documents," said Mohamad Hambali.<br /><br />"As in previous years, many Indonesian migrants will be leaving Malaysia ahead of Ramadan."<br /><br />Around two million illegal immigrants -- the vast majority of them from Indonesia -- are estimated to be working in Malaysia.<br /><br />Large numbers of them annually return home to Indonesia ahead of Ramadan, which begins around the end of June and will culminate in late July with Eid al-Fitr, Islam's biggest festival.<br /><br />Both countries are Muslim-majority.<br /><br />"We believe the boat was overcrowded and the sea was rough during the incident," Mohamad Hambali said.<br /><br />Access to survivors was not immediately available as they had been taken into custody by police.<br /><br />Authorities said five vessels and a helicopter were searching for survivors.<br /><br />Relatively affluent Malaysia is a magnet for migrant workers from poorer neighbours such as Indonesia, Bangladesh and Myanmar.<br /><br />Accidents, however, are frequent as thousands annually risk the sea journey in rickety boats to seek low-paying work -- typically shunned by Malaysians -- on plantations, construction sites and in factories.</p>
<p>Thirty-seven people remained missing today after an apparently overloaded boat carrying Indonesian illegal migrants heading home for Ramadan sank overnight in rough seas off western Malaysia, killing at least two.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Officials said 58 people had been rescued or made it to land by themselves after the accident around midnight near Port Klang, Malaysia's largest port.<br /><br />"But 37 people are still missing and we have found two bodies," said Mohamad Hambali Yaakup, head of the Port Klang office of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency.<br /><br />"We plucked some of the survivors from the sea and others were found on land."<br /><br />The boat sank not far from shore, raising hopes that many of the missing had already made it to safety on their own, he added.<br /><br />Officials believe 97 passengers were aboard the wooden boat, including some children.<br /><br />Authorities said rescued passengers told them they were seeking to return home to Indonesia across the Malacca Strait -- the busy shipping lane between Malaysia and Indonesia's Sumatra island -- for the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.<br /><br />Officials had initially said the passengers were believed to be seeking to enter Malaysia.<br /><br />"From interviews with those rescued, they said they were returning to Aceh (in northern Sumatra). They did not have any travel documents," said Mohamad Hambali.<br /><br />"As in previous years, many Indonesian migrants will be leaving Malaysia ahead of Ramadan."<br /><br />Around two million illegal immigrants -- the vast majority of them from Indonesia -- are estimated to be working in Malaysia.<br /><br />Large numbers of them annually return home to Indonesia ahead of Ramadan, which begins around the end of June and will culminate in late July with Eid al-Fitr, Islam's biggest festival.<br /><br />Both countries are Muslim-majority.<br /><br />"We believe the boat was overcrowded and the sea was rough during the incident," Mohamad Hambali said.<br /><br />Access to survivors was not immediately available as they had been taken into custody by police.<br /><br />Authorities said five vessels and a helicopter were searching for survivors.<br /><br />Relatively affluent Malaysia is a magnet for migrant workers from poorer neighbours such as Indonesia, Bangladesh and Myanmar.<br /><br />Accidents, however, are frequent as thousands annually risk the sea journey in rickety boats to seek low-paying work -- typically shunned by Malaysians -- on plantations, construction sites and in factories.</p>