Over 160 people are feared dead after an unseaworthy boat packed with asylum seekers from Afghanistan and Iran sank off the coast of Indonesia yesterday. The tragedy again sparked debate over asylum seeker policy and offshore v. onshore processing.
There are differing accounts of survivor numbers, with Indonesian authorities saying 34 people are confirmed safe — including two small boys, while Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said 87 people were rescued by Indonesian fisherman. The boat was packed with between 215-250 asylum seekers — including 40 children — although it had an official capacity of just 100.
Survivors spoke of their escape to news.com.au:
“Khadzim Huzen, a 30-year-old Afghan, told AP that after the big wave hit, the ship started tipping into the water, and everyone rushed to the front. A fight broke out for life jackets.
There were only 25, he said, and nine already had been taken by the crew.
‘In the end, as everything was being swallowed up by the water, we just grabbed hold of anything we could,’ he said. ‘We formed small groups in the water and tried to help each other stay afloat.'”
Tom Allard in the Canberra Times explains how people smugglers sent the asylum seekers on their deadly voyage:
“Many of the asylum-seekers flew from Dubai to Jakarta, where Indonesian officials are said to be ready for the migrants to arrive, charging them each $500 to pass through the airport without visas.
They arrived over several days and were taken in four buses on a 23-hour journey to an unknown location on Java’s south coast.
The modus operandi highlights the increased confidence of the smugglers and the huge demand for their services.”
Cardinal George Pell, who was openly critical of John Howard’s treatment of asylum seekers in the early 2000s spoke publicly yesterday about the need for the government to adopt offshore processing.
“The people-smugglers are evil and irresponsible money-makers prepared to risk the destruction of their passengers. These deaths are a tragedy,” Pell told The Australian. “It’s difficult to see any alternative to the government and opposition promptly agreeing on effective offshore deterrents. Australians do not want more tragedies like this.”
Time to focus on the kingpins in the people smuggling war, not the bit players, writes Susan Metcalfe (author of The Pacific Solution) in The Age:
“I understand that it can be difficult to catch the heads of operations in other countries, and that corrupt officials often collude in smuggling operations. But there is no excuse for Australian laws that do not discriminate between different levels of involvement and do not allow room for leniency where it is warranted.
Like many other asylum policies and laws created for political reasons over the past decade, this is simply another that is ineffective, unfair and has no logical basis.
Both parties should now support investing more heavily in tracking those dealers who run the people-smuggling shows in the region.
If the Coalition genuinely wants a policy that deters boat arrivals and ensures the safety and rights of refugees, it should work with the government to ensure the security of anyone returned to Malaysia.”
The Coalition must help the government pass changes to the Migration Act to allow offshore processing so that these deadly boat voyages end, says The Australian‘s editorial.
“The people-smugglers are responsible for the deaths, but the onus is on Australia to do everything possible to stop the boats.”

88 thoughts on “Tragedy at sea: over 160 asylum seekers feared dead”
GeeWizz
December 19, 2011 at 7:30 pm[“You really are a nasty piece of work mate. Just when one thinks there’s nothing lower you manage to sink to new depths.”]
Lefties like you will take scream from your moral soapbox about how inhumane the right is an how evil Howards policies were, but when it’s shown leftie policies have been directly responsible for deaths of hundreds of people suddenly you don’t want to talk about the issue anymore and the right are “point scoring”.
The left are blameless. The left are without flaw. It’s always someone elses fault.
[“I wonder if these people had not been foreign – had they been say, victims of a bushfire, would you have chosen the chance to make a few cheap shots and point blame at the fire service.”]
If Labor had been actively encouraging people to light bushfires with economic rewards, a free house and a life time of centrelink hand outs then I would be making these exact same comments.
You reward people for good behaviour(waiting patiently inline in a camp with papers in hand) and you punish those for bad behaviour(jumping the queue, no papers and stealing spots). This is as how it should be… not the other way round.
Peter Ormonde
December 19, 2011 at 7:43 pm” encouraging people … with economic rewards, a free house and a life time of centrelink hand outs…”
Lower still.
Deep deep ignorance and bigotry.
It’s like watching a moral limbo exhibition … how low can he go folks?
shepherdmarilyn
December 19, 2011 at 7:55 pmGee, that does not happen. They are refugees, they are not stealing spots and if you think about how frigging ridiculous that sounds you might see sense, they are not doing anything remotely illegal so grow the hell up.
Third, the confusion, and often wilful
conflation, of Australia’s commitment to
offer asylum to those eligible under the
1951 Refugee Convention with a separate,
and discretionary, programme of resettling
6,000 UNHCR-referred refugees from
different part of the world each year.
This has led many to assume, wrongly,
that ‘proper’ refugees arrive through the
resettlement programme and ‘improper’
refugees arrive by boat, with the latter
accused of violating Australia’s borders
and hospitality by jumping the (mythical)
queue of more deserving people awaiting
resettlement. This false characterisation
has led, in our view, to a disappointing loss
of support for the institution of asylum at
a time, during the Refugee Convention’s
60th anniversary year, when we are asking
States to reaffirm the primacy of this
important human rights instrument.”
UNHCR newsletter for Australia 2011.
Lastly, as with the other 148 States
party to the Refugee Convention, UNHCR
believes that Australia needs to maintain its
fair and robust asylum procedures and that
regional initiatives should supplement rather
than replace them.
In other words we do not throw away and obligation in favour of a non-obligation.
Now how many different ways do you have to be told that refugees overseas do not have priority.
Lord Barry Bonkton
December 19, 2011 at 8:08 pmCrikey ! we have been invaded by Rightie Trolls
Subterranean Homesick Alien
December 19, 2011 at 8:23 pmI really can’t believe the garbage that’s being spouted here. Let’s be Honest about it- Howard was not interested in the welfare of refugees. Yet now people hold him up as some sort of saint because he had an immigration agenda that made Apartheid era South Africa look good? These people come to us as refugees- it doesn’t matter how they come, whether by boat or plane. We have an obligation as a civilised country to accept them, given their status as asylum seekers.
OK. Here’s a real solution to all of you who are wringing your hands over the deaths of these people. If you really care so much about them, you’ll be behind it 100%. How about Australia removes the incentive of people smuggling by providing transport from Indonesia, and removes the detention centres? No? Funny that. My guess is people like Geewiz and SB really aren’t all that interested in the wellbeing of refugees at all. Afterall, it seems that Geewiz is comparing asylum seekers with arsonists in his last post:
“If Labor had been actively encouraging people to light bushfires with economic rewards, a free house and a life time of centrelink hand outs then I would be making these exact same comments.”
What? I repeat, a person seeking asylum is not engaging in illegal activity, nor are they engaging in behaviour destructive to human life or property. The same cannot be said for the policies pursued by the Australian Government (both Labor and Liberal) for the last 20 years. It is ridiculous to compare them with somebody deliberately burning houses down.
These people come to us looking to start a new life, having given up everything, and all you want to do is shut them out and lock them up, by any means, fair or foul (it’s seems the foul ones proliferate). How do you sleep at night?
jeebus
December 19, 2011 at 8:38 pmWow, some pathetic gutter politics here from the noise brigade. Anything to score a cheap shot at the ‘other side’ right?
GeeWizz
December 19, 2011 at 8:47 pmFor the kids playing at home:
Illegals boat sinking under Howard(Siev X) = A horrible tragedy the direct result of evil inhumane Liberal Party policy and blood on Howards hands requiring endless quoting by the lefties and a Canberra memorial despite the boat sinking in International Waters in Indonesia’s search and rescue zone and having nothing to do with Liberal Party policy let alone Australia.
Illegals boat sinking under Rudd/Gillard = A horrible tragedy that we must not try and point score over and anyone daring to blame the massive pull factors of this incompetent Labor Government which has increased boat arrivals from 60 a year to 6000 a year is heartless and inappropiate.
Did I sum it up about right? Where can I go to see the Canberra memorial for this one… the one where the boaties blew up the boat murdering 5 and seriously burning another 12, the Christmas Island crash and the other half dozen boat sinkings under this incompetent…. Pull factor Government?
Won’t hold my breath.
GeeWizz
December 19, 2011 at 8:55 pm[“Wow, some pathetic gutter politics here from the noise brigade. Anything to score a cheap shot at the ‘other side’ right?”]
Jeebus,
Lefties have been handing out sh1t sandwiches for years, now it’s their time to take a bite.
The left can’t handle criticism and can never admit they got it wrong. It’s in their DNA, blame someone else.
Alexander Berkman
December 19, 2011 at 10:46 pm@Geewizz – I do believe words cannot describe how utterly despicable you truly are!
geomac
December 19, 2011 at 10:55 pmALEXANDER BERKMAN
Spot on.