Asylum seekers end stand-off with police

By Indonesia correspondent Matt Brown

Updated April 10, 2012 19:59:29

The stand-off between officials and asylum seekers onboard a tanker at the Indonesian port of Merak has ended after all 120 of those onboard were brought ashore.

The Afghan asylum seekers, who were originally bound for Christmas Island, were rescued on Sunday after their boat broke down and started taking on water.

They refused to leave the boat that rescued them, but after talking to Indonesian immigration officials, the UN refugee agency and the International Organisation for Migration, they won a guarantee that none of them would be sent to immigration detention centres.

Many of the asylum seekers were sceptical and there were angry scenes on deck while they argued and struggled with police.

Indonesian officials say they will be housed in a hotel while their claims are processed.

Armed members of the counter-terrorism unit were standing by on the dock as the asylum seekers boarded two buses and were driven away.

Four asylum seekers left the ship earlier today for negotiations, and while they were away their fellow passengers told the ABC they feared being held in Indonesian detention centres while their claims were assessed.

It was a stand-off reminiscent of one in 2009, when Tamil asylum seekers en route to Australia were hauled back to Merak at the behest of then-prime minister Kevin Rudd and refused to leave the Oceanic Viking.

Some of them are still languishing in Indonesia waiting for resettlement.

One of those on board the boat, Ali Liaqataliamini, says it was far from land when it broke down on Sunday.

“We saw that the boat is broken, the engine is down, the water pump is down. We didn’t have any communication at that time,” he said.

Mr Liaqataliamini believes the boat was in international waters when it failed and says that should have some bearing on the group’s hopes of being sent to Australia.

But he also says the boat was blown back into Indonesian waters before anyone could get a signal to call the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA).

Tags:

immigration,
refugees,
community-and-society,
java,
indonesia,
afghanistan

First posted April 10, 2012 12:29:37

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