Refugees risk all to reach Aust

Editorial, Normal
Source:

The National, Wednesday July 11th, 2012

By PHIL MERCER
THE overloaded, decrepit fishing boat had defied the Indian Ocean for five punishing days when increasingly turbulent seas near the Australian territory of Ashmore Reef slowly began to swamp the tiny vessel.
Its panic-stricken cargo of about 60 asylum-seekers had, like thousands of others in recent years, risked everything sailing from Indonesia in search of a new life beyond the horizon.
“All we could do was pray that we would get to Australia,” Ali, a 26-year old Iraqi refugee who will never forget that fraught journey in December 2009, said.
The website designer had escaped violence in Iraq, and travelled through Iran and Malaysia before arriving in Indonesia, where trafficking gangs lie in wait for the desperate and vulnerable.
“When you are in the middle of the ocean, all you can see is the sky and the water. No one would know about you if something happened,” Ali told the BBC from his new home in Brisbane.
“It was a hard experience. It just was a little, old boat. We did not have enough space to sleep. It was scary. Fortunately, the (Australian) navy got to us before anything happened,” he said.
Others are not so fortunate, and we will never know how many boats have vanished en route.
Last month, about 90 asylum seekers died when their vessel capsized north of Christmas Island, an Australian territory in the Indian Ocean that is routinely targeted by smugglers.
A few days later, 130 people were rescued when their boat sank in the same region.
The maritime emergencies sparked another bitter and ultimately fruitless round of political squabbling in Canberra.
Both the Labor government and its conservative opponents want to send asylum seekers to neighbouring countries to have their refugee claims assessed far away from Australian soil.
But while ministers favour a “Malaysian Solution”, the other side insists that the Pacific island of Nauru would be a better deterrent.
It is argued that those who take the dangerous gamble trying to reach Australia by boat would think twice if they knew they could be shipped off for processing in another country.
No agreement could be reached and, while the political impasse remains, the boats continue their perilous voyages. Most leave Indonesia’s southern shores, but other vessels have recently made the long journey from Sri Lanka and even India, according to human rights campaigners.
“I find it very distressing that we’ve got both a government and an opposition that seem to be abrogating their responsibilities and just using slogans to deal with a very important and increasingly tragic issue,” refugee lawyer Marion Le said.
“I think it does shame us. We were one of the very early signatories to the UN convention of refugees and we used to hold our head very proudly in the world.” – BBC