'You shall
not pass'
Jakarta Globe – AFP, February 7, 2014
Australian
Prime Minister Tony Abbott was unmoved by new reports Friday of asylum-seeker
abuse and claims a group was turned back to Indonesia in a lifeboat, saying his
harsh policies were “working.”
He rebuffed
suggestions the military should release official video of their “Operation
Sovereign Borders” missions after an asylum-seeker told Fairfax Media three men
on his boat allegedly had their hands held against hot engine pipes by navy
personnel to punish them for protesting.
Abbott was
peppered with questions about the government’s turnback policy after reports
also emerged of a lifeboat full of asylum-seekers, including young children,
washing up in Indonesia after being turned away by Australia’s navy near remote
Christmas Island with inadequate food to last the journey.
“What I’m
interested in doing is stopping the boats. That’s what I’m interested in doing
and that’s what the Australian public elected this government to do,” Abbott
told reporters.
“I’m
pleased that we’ve now had 50 days without an illegal boat arriving in
Australia and the message is getting out loud and clear to the people smugglers
and their would-be customers that the way is shut, you shall not pass,” he
said. “These policies are working. Yes they are tough, but they are working.”
There has
been an ongoing recent war of words between the conservative government and
public broadcaster ABC about allegations that asylum-seekers suffered burns
during a navy turnback operation.
The ABC
obtained images of the injuries and Fairfax on Friday published a new interview
with an asylum-seeker on board, Yousif Ibrahim Fasher, who claimed some of the
burns were deliberately inflicted during a protest against the navy limiting
access to onboard toilets.
“They
punished three of them, three of them, as a punishment, so they would never
want to go to the toilet again,” Fasher said. “They said, ‘Yousif, translate
for the people. Say to anyone: If you want to go to the toilet again, we will
burn his hands.’”
Fasher said
the men who suffered the burns were afraid to speak to journalists in case
Australia blacklisted them from claiming asylum.
Abbott
declined to release operational videotape, saying: “I don’t want to do anything
that might complicate that task of stopping the boats, and frankly I don’t want
to do anything that could cast aspersions on the professionalism of our naval
and customs personnel.
“They are
doing a fine job often under difficult circumstances, they act in accordance
with humanity… and I have seen nothing that credibly casts any doubts on that
professionalism,” he said.
Separately,
the ABC on Friday reported that an orange lifeboat recently purchased by the
Australian navy had washed up on Java’s south coast and those on board had
claimed they were turned back from Christmas Island.
They
claimed they were fed and medically treated by the Australian navy and then
turned back to Indonesia, running out of food 48 hours before landing. The
youngest on board was reportedly 18 months old.
Agence
France-Presse
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