Australia fears for 67 missing boat people
AUSTRALIAN authorities hold grave fears for 67 asylum seekers reported missing after they said they were leaving Indonesia in a rickety boat bound for Australia more than a month ago, an official said yesterday.
The news comes as Australia's government debates a tough new bill aimed at deterring the flood of asylum seekers making the perilous sea journey.
Australian Customs and Border Protection Service were alerted over the weekend that the 67 had not been heard from since they told relatives that they would embark on the 400-kilometer voyage to the Australian Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island in late June or early July, Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said.
Customs had since checked a list of names of the missing against the hundreds of asylum seekers who had reached the island aboard overcrowded fishing boats in recent weeks, he said.
"There is no evidence that those people have arrived in Australia," Clare said. "So we now have very grave fears for the safety of those people."
Smuggling boats
Earlier in June, more than 90 asylum seekers are believed to have drowned when two people smuggling boats capsized in the space of a week while attempting the same journey in rough seas. Another 240 were rescued and taken to a detention center on Christmas Island.
Australia's center-left Labor Party government plans to deter future arrivals by deporting new asylum seekers who arrive by boat to the Pacific atoll of Nauru or to Papua New Guinea. They would be held in tent camps for as long as they would have spent in refugee camps if they had not paid people smugglers to take them to Australia.
The plan came a step closer to reality with conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott announcing that his coalition will support enabling legislation when it goes to a vote in Parliament. His support ensures that the bill can pass the Senate this week without the votes of the Greens party, a government ally, which has condemned the deportation of would-be refugees as cruel.
A surge in boat arrivals and the deaths of more than 600 asylum seekers at sea in the past three years has promoted a tougher government attitude.
The news comes as Australia's government debates a tough new bill aimed at deterring the flood of asylum seekers making the perilous sea journey.
Australian Customs and Border Protection Service were alerted over the weekend that the 67 had not been heard from since they told relatives that they would embark on the 400-kilometer voyage to the Australian Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island in late June or early July, Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said.
Customs had since checked a list of names of the missing against the hundreds of asylum seekers who had reached the island aboard overcrowded fishing boats in recent weeks, he said.
"There is no evidence that those people have arrived in Australia," Clare said. "So we now have very grave fears for the safety of those people."
Smuggling boats
Earlier in June, more than 90 asylum seekers are believed to have drowned when two people smuggling boats capsized in the space of a week while attempting the same journey in rough seas. Another 240 were rescued and taken to a detention center on Christmas Island.
Australia's center-left Labor Party government plans to deter future arrivals by deporting new asylum seekers who arrive by boat to the Pacific atoll of Nauru or to Papua New Guinea. They would be held in tent camps for as long as they would have spent in refugee camps if they had not paid people smugglers to take them to Australia.
The plan came a step closer to reality with conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott announcing that his coalition will support enabling legislation when it goes to a vote in Parliament. His support ensures that the bill can pass the Senate this week without the votes of the Greens party, a government ally, which has condemned the deportation of would-be refugees as cruel.
A surge in boat arrivals and the deaths of more than 600 asylum seekers at sea in the past three years has promoted a tougher government attitude.
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