VIDEO: Vessel believed carrying Lankan boatpeople sinks
July 24, 2013 08:05 am
More than 100 asylum seekers who were feared dead have been rescued after their boat sank off the coast of Indonesia’s Java island, an official said Wednesday, confirming that one child had died.
Indonesia’s rescue agency
was alerted by Australian authorities on Tuesday evening.
“We don’t know exactly how
many were on board, so we’re focusing on searching for any more that may be out
there,” Bandung search and rescue chief Rochmali told AFP early Wednesday,
adding the figure would likely be between 100 and 200.
“We don’t know where these
people are from. We will just focus on ensuring they’re well and making sure no
one else is still at sea,” he said.
The boat sank in heavy seas
off the fishing town of Cidaun in western Java, from where rescuers set out in
their own boats and in vessels lent by the police and fishermen.
Survivors would be taken to
hospital, Rochmali said, adding the body of one child, the only confirmed dead,
had been recovered.
Reports in Australia said
the asylum seekers were mostly from Sri Lanka and Iran.
“I am the only one back,”
said a man named Soheil of a group of 61 Iranians he was travelling with, as
quoted by the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper.
He confirmed he had set off
from Cidaun.
“We have problem with motor
after two hours. For three hours, we try to come back (to shore).
“The sea very hard, the sea
no good. The ship break,” he added.
Soheil said the captain --
who he claimed was a Sri Lankan man using a Malaysian crew -- abandoned them.
“The captain go to small
boat,” he told the Telegraph.
“He no help me, he no help
children, he no help baby.”
Australia has struggled to
stem an influx of asylum-seekers arriving by boat, with record numbers turning
up in 2012 and more than 15,000 so far in 2013.
Hundreds have drowned
making the journey -- as recently as last week a boat sank, killing four people
-- with the latest disaster coming just days after Canberra announced a
hardline new plan to send all unauthorised arrivals to Papua New Guinea.
Asylum-seekers arriving in
Australian waters will now be sent to the Manus Island processing centre on PNG
and elsewhere in the Pacific nation for assessment, with no cap on the number
that can be transferred.
Even if found to be “genuine
refugees” they will have no chance of being settled in Australia, instead
having to remain in PNG, be sent back home or to third countries.
In a bid to smash the
lucrative people-smuggling networks, Australia on Sunday also announced it
would pay rewards of up to Aus$200,000 (US$180,000) for information leading to
their conviction, AFP reports.