Senior Bangladeshi officials and Malaysian diplomats gathered at Chittagong port as Nautical Aliya docked in the southern city, from where its aid cargo will be transported to Rohingya camps.
The shipment was received by local officials of the Red Crescent and International Organisation of Migration at the port's container terminal in a brief handover ceremony.
Trucks will carry the 1,472 tonnes of food, clothing and medical items to Cox's Bazar, some 200 kilometres south of Chittagong for distribution to tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees.
Abdul Aziz Mohd Abdur Rahim, a representative of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and a member of parliament who travelled with the ship, called for a "long-standing solution" to the Rohingya crisis as he handed over the aid cargo.
"Thirty million Malaysians are with you (Rohingya)," Rahim said.
There was, however, no representative of the Rohingya community or any of the elders at the port.
The ship initially planned to dock at Teknaf in southern Bangladesh, where almost 70,000 Rohingya have fled from Myanmar's Rakhine state since October to escape the violence.
It also tried to dock near the island of Kutubdia on Monday, but "technical issues" forced it to travel further north to Chittagong, chief administrator of the region Ruhul Amin told AFP.
Dozens of Buddhist monks and nationalist demonstrators last week protested the ship's arrival in Myanmar's capital, Yangon, with some waving national flags and signs reading: "No Rohingya".
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
