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File photo
taken on Februay 8, 2014 shows a now-empty Australian lifeboat,
which carried
asylum seekers turned back by the Australian navy, docked at
western Java
island (AFP/File, Timur Matahari)
|
Cilacap — A
lifeboat carrying asylum-seekers has washed up on Indonesia's main Java island,
with those on board saying Australian authorities transferred them to the
vessel and turned it around, officials said Tuesday.
It was the
latest asylum-seeker turn-back by Canberra under its military-led operation
aimed at stopping an influx of would-be refugees who board rickety boats in
Indonesia and make the perilous sea crossing to Australia.
It was the
second occasion this month that one of the orange, hard-hulled boats purchased
by the Australian navy has washed up on Java. The asylum-seekers on the first
occasion also reportedly claimed the Australians had turned them around.
In the
latest incident 26 asylum-seekers and five Indonesian crew were detained by
Indonesian authorities at Karangjambe beach on Java's south coast Monday, local
navy officer Suwarto told AFP.
The boat
was carrying would-be refugees from countries including Iran, Iraq, Pakistan
and Egypt, said Suwarto, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.
"The
orange lifeboat which originated from Australia... became stranded on a coral
reef near the beach," he said, adding it appeared to have sprung a leak.
Local immigration
official Imam Prawira added: "The migrants told us Australian authorities
had put them into the lifeboat and turned them around." It was not clear
how close they were to Australia when they were turned around.
Authorities
in the Kebumen district of Central Java province also found a television,
navigation equipment, batteries, floats and food in the boat, Suwarto said.
The issue
of asylum-seekers has strained relations between Australia and Indonesia, which
were already under pressure due to a row over spying, with Jakarta criticising
Canberra's hardline policies.
Ties were
further soured when Canberra apologised to Jakarta for breaching Indonesian
waters during its people-smuggling crackdown.
Australian
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison last month confirmed for the first time
that boats were being turned around as part of the government's military-led
Operation Sovereign Borders.
Under the
operation, asylum-seekers can also be turned round in their original vessels if
it is safe to do so.
No boats
have made it to Australia since December 19 -- the first time in six years that
January has passed without a single boat arrival.
Hundreds of
asylum-seekers have died making the dangerous sea voyage from Indonesia to
Australia in recent years.
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