Sri Lankan denies plans to pick up asylum seekers from Australian authorities mid-ocean
July 2, 2014 08:11 am
The
Sri Lankan military says it has not intercepted a boatload of Tamil asylum
seekers bound for Australia refuting reports the Sri Lankan Navy were preparing
to pick them up mid-ocean.
The
Sri Lankan military says it has not intercepted a boatload of Tamil asylum
seekers bound for Australia and it has no plans to do so.
The
boat, believed to be carrying 150 asylum seekers including 37 children, has not
been contactable since the weekend, indicating it may have been intercepted by
the Australian Navy or Customs.
Those
on board claim they are Sri Lankan, but began their voyage in India which is
home to many Tamil refugee camps.
Refugee
groups are concerned Australia handed the group over to the Sri Lankan Navy.
But
a spokesman for the Sri Lankan military told the ABC that has not happened.
“There
is no plan for the Sri Lankan Navy to take over asylum seekers bound for
Australia from [the] Australian Navy,” he said.
The
spokesman says he believes Australia is taking them to Christmas Island.
The
Australian Government is refusing to confirm or deny the boat’s existence or
its possible whereabouts.
However,
The Australian newspaper is reporting a Sri Lankan Navy boat was last night
preparing to pick up the asylum seekers mid-ocean from Australian authorities.
Immigration
Minister Scott Morrison has declined to comment on reports the boat had been
intercepted, saying that starving people smugglers of information about their
boats had successfully stopped them.
“In
accordance with the policy established by the Operation Sovereign Borders Joint
Agency Task Force commander, the Government does not comment on speculation or
reporting regarding on-water operations,” a spokesman for Mr Morrison said.
“The
Government will continue to act in accordance with our international
obligations, including applicable international conventions and to protect the
safety of life at sea.”
Mr
Morrison accused Labor and the Greens of “doing the bidding of smugglers” by
asking about the fate of the boats.
Greens
condemn ‘shocking and cruel’ treatment of asylum seekers
Greens
leader Christine Milne says sending asylum seekers back to Sri Lanka is the
equivalent of sending the persecuted back to the persecutors.
“They
have a shocking reputation for human rights,” she told a press conference this
morning.
“It
is now up to Prime Minister Abbott. Prime Minister tell Australians - are you
going to send 153 people back to the people who have persecuted them?
“Is
that what this nation has become under your leadership? Because I think the
overwhelming majority of Australians will be horrified by this.
“Not
only is it shocking and cruel for the people who have been persecuted and are
being treated like this, but it is absolutely in breach of our obligations
under the refugee convention.”
Local
authorities in India say they are not aware of any asylum seeker boat leaving
the country’s shores, ABC reports.