Reporters have been trying to access Thamee Hla Island at the mouth of the Irrawaddy since the authorities announced that 727 people, including 74 women and 45 children, had been found drifting in a boat off Myanmar's coast and had been taken there.
They are part of a recent exodus of persecuted Myanmar Rohingya Muslims and Bangladeshi economic migrants who have fled the region en masse in a crisis that regional nations have struggled to deal with.
Those returning said they had been ordered to sign documents promising not to try to make the journey again.
The navy was unavailable for comment Sunday.
Migrant boats are a hugely sensitive topic in Myanmar. Its discovery of two vessels crammed with people in recent weeks has deepened a tug of war between neighbouring Bangladesh and the formerly army-ruled nation over who is responsible for migrants found in the Bay of Bengal.
They face daily discrimination including controls on their movements, family size and access to jobs, forcing tens of thousands to flee overseas -- usually to Malaysia. That exodus increased dramatically after 2012 when scores were killed in communal bloodletting in Rakhine.
Myanmar has been keen to portray those leaving its shores as Bangladeshi economic migrants and rejects widespread criticism that its treatment of the Rohingya is one of the root causes of the current exodus.
But Bangladesh has insisted it will not take back any migrants who trace their origin to Myanmar.
And because Myanmar authorities refuse to use the term Rohingya, it is difficult to ascertain where exactly the migrants come from.
No media or aid group has yet been able to meet the migrants held on Thamee Hla Island to verify where they say they originate from.
A lucrative people-smuggling trade has long thrived in the region, largely ignored or colluded at by the authorities. But a recent crackdown by Thai police in the country's deep south threw smuggling networks into chaos as gangmasters abandoned their victims on land and sea.
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