“They looked exhausted,” Rote police chief Hidayat said. “One female
passenger is pregnant – we took her immediately to the hospital but she is ok
now.” Hidayat said the migrants told him they had been caught by Australian
customs on May 26, put in two blue and white boats, and sent back into
Indonesian waters. “The Australians provided them with food, drinks and
sufficient fuel to reach Indonesian land,” Hidayat said. He said the passengers included four women and three toddlers. Of the 65, 54 were from Sri Lanka, 10 from Bangladesh and one from Myanmar. They had started out from Pelabuhan Ratu in West Java on May 24 and were intercepted by Australian customs two days later. Hidayat said Indonesian police had arrested four of the six crew members. The captain, Yohanes, ran away. “He’s part of the smuggler network in Jakarta, according to the boat crews,” Hidayat said. There was confusion over the whereabouts of the sixth crew member, with some suggesting he was with Australian customs, although it was unclear what that meant. West Timor Care Foundation chairman Ferdi Tanoni said the migrants were expected to be transferred to Kupang, West Timor’s largest town and the capital of Nusa Tenggara Timur province.“According to the chief of immigration, the information they received was that these people wanted to go to Australia to ask for asylum,” Tanoni told Fairfax Media. Although there is an immigration detention centre on Kupang, Tanoni said it was full and the asylum seekers were likely to be accommodated in hotels. Fairfax Media is seeking comment from Australian Customs.The Australian navy has repeatedly turned back boats with asylum seekers on board after Prime Minister Tony Abbott came to power in 2013 vowing to “stop the boats”. The hardline tactic was also initially employed by Malaysia and Indonesia during the recent humanitarian crisis in the Bay of Bengal after boatloads of Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants were stranded at sea following a Thai crackdown on people trafficking. The crackdown led to people smugglers abandoning the boats at sea, leading to deaths and starvation. Malaysia and Indonesia later agreed to assist the migrants and asylum seekers and provide shelter for up to a year but insisted the international community had to help with their resettlement. |
Australia stops 54 Lankans, sends them to Indonesia
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