Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 02, 2014
Some 157
asylum-seekers who were detained at sea for weeks by Australia have been sent
to the Pacific island of Nauru after rejecting a return to India, officials
said Saturday.
The group,
thought to be mostly ethnic Tamils from Sri Lanka and including 50 children,
left the Indian port of Pondicherry in June but were intercepted by Australian
authorities and held on a Customs ship for weeks.
They were
eventually brought to the Australian mainland so they could be interviewed by
Indian consular officials with a view to returning them to that country, but
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said Saturday they all refused to meet the
officials.
“The 157
illegal maritime arrivals… have been transferred to Nauru overnight for
offshore processing, following their decision to refuse to meet with Indian
consular officials,” Morrison said in a statement.
Morrison
said the government had provided a “rare opportunity” for many of those onboard
the vessel to “go back to where they had been living in safety in India, where
they have family and friends, rather than go to Nauru”.
“It is very
disappointing that after having had access to their legal representatives on
July 29, all 157 illegal maritime arrivals coincidentally chose not to talk to
Indian consular officials,” he said.
Lawyers
representing many of the group have challenged their treatment by Australia in
the High Court, claiming false imprisonment, but Morrison said the government
had acted methodically since they were picked up.
He has
previously said the group were likely economic migrants who had been living in
safety in India for some time.
Morrison
said Saturday that by refusing to speak to Indian officials the group were now
unable to take advantage of the offer made by the Indian government to consider
taking them back, even if they were not Indian citizens.
“There will
also now be around 50 more children on Nauru, many of which, if not all, could
have been going back to India,” Morrison said.
The group
is the first boatload of asylum-seekers to reach the Australian mainland since
December, after Canberra hardened its policy on unauthorised boats to ensure
some were turned back where possible.
Under
Australia’s policy to stop people-smuggling boats, all asylum-seekers arriving
by boat are sent to Nauru and Papua New Guinea for processing and resettlement,
even if they are found to be refugees.
Morrison
said in the current case, if they were found to be refugees they will be
resettled on Nauru, not in Australia.
“If they
are not found to be a refugee they will go back to Sri Lanka, not India. Going
back to India, where they are likely to have family and friends, is no longer
an option for those who were living there,” he said.
Agence France-Presse

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