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HAZARA NEWS WA
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Customs intercepts 60th asylum boat with 58 passengers aboard
A BOAT carrying 58 passengers and four crew was intercepted by Customs and Border Protection Command last night - the 60th and final boat to arrive in 2009.
One man suffering what was described as a “serious medical condition” was taken immediately to the mainland for treatment.
The Australian understands the man was gravely ill with septicaemia following a recent operation.
The boat was intercepted north of Ashmore Island at 10.15pm on New Year's Eve.
The boat's arrival comes amid fresh debate about how to handle the surge in arrivals.
On Wednesday, Liberal leader Tony Abbott attracted criticism following his pledge to tow seaworthy asylum boats back out to sea.
The proposal, which was also endorsed by Kevin Rudd prior to the last election, was attacked by refugee groups and church leaders as dangerous, illegal and inhumane.
A total of 60 boats carrying 2727 passengers and 138 crew arrived in 2009.
The arrivals represented a huge spike on the previous year, where just 161 people arrived by boat.
The opposition has blamed the spike on a series of measures by Labor aimed at softening Australia's treatment of refugees.
But the government says increasing instability and violence in source countries like Sri Lanka and Afghanistan is to blame.
-ABC 2009
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CIA mourns devastating loss in Afghanistan-8 DEAD
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is mourning the loss of seven employees in a suicide attack in Afghanistan, one of the deadliest blows ever for an agency increasingly on the frontlines of US wars.
The CIA lowered the flag to half-mast at its headquarters in the Washington suburbs, but did not release the names of the casualties who died cloaked in the same anonymity with which they lived.
"Your triumphs and even your names may be unknown to your fellow Americans, but your service is deeply appreciated," US President Barack Obama wrote in a letter to CIA employees.
Mr Obama said that since the September 11, 2001 attacks on the US, "the CIA has been tested as never before".
"Because of your service, plots have been disrupted, American lives have been saved and our allies and partners have been more secure," he said.
Mr Obama says stars will be added in their name to the 90 already on the Memorial Wall at CIA headquarters, honouring spies who have fallen in the line of duty.
Jack Rice, a former CIA officer in Afghanistan, says the attack will never be forgotten.
"The impact can be huge, not just in terms of the capabilities of these particular people, but in the relationships that they themselves have built," he said.
"You can't simply go pick up five or 10 more of these guys. They may be the best guys in the world at what they do and they're gone."
Bomber 'invited onto base'
While more than 500 US and coalition forces have died in Afghanistan this year, Wednesday's suicide attack showed a new level of sophistication for the Taliban, who infiltrated the very agency in charge of finding them.
The CIA said a Taliban bomber clad as an Afghan soldier managed to penetrate the defences of a forward base in Khost, a pivotal province near the Pakistan border, detonating an explosives belt in a room described as a gym.
The New York Times said CIA officers at the base recently had begun an aggressive campaign against a militant group run by Sirajuddin Haqqani.
Citing current and former intelligence officials, it said the early indications were that the bomber was brought onto the base as a possible informer and might not have been subjected to rigorous screening.
It was a devastating blow for the spy agency, the deadliest since a 1983 US embassy bombing in Beirut that killed eight CIA officers and decimated the agency's operations there.
US press reports said the seven dead included the base chief, a mother of three.
CIA director Leon Panetta says six others were wounded, their lives saved by US military doctors and nurses.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai "strongly condemned the terrorist attacks that killed foreign civilian and military personnel in the provinces of Khost and Kandahar".
The attack comes as the US increasingly relies on the CIA and other covert forces to pursue strategic goals.
CIA and special forces were at the forefront of the US invasion of Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks, paving the way to overthrow the Taliban's extremist regime.
More recently the CIA has been operating unmanned drones that target extremists in lawless areas of Pakistan.
Intelligence operatives are also seen as crucial in laying out the groundwork as Obama and NATO allies send in another 36,800 troops as part of a surge expected to last until late 2010.
-AFP
-ABC 2009
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Tuesday, December 22, 2009
MUHARRAM: HOLY MONTH FOR SHI'A ISLAM: ST MARRY'S MOSQUE
Muharram is observed by the Shia community of Muslims in commemoration of the martyrdom of Prophet Mohammed's grandson, Imam Hussain, who was killed in the Battle of Karbala in AD 680. The prophet's son-in-law Ali, and Ali's elder son Hassan, are also remembered during this period as having suffered and died for righteous causes.
Muharram, or the sacred month, marks the beginning of the Muslim year.
Muharram is one of the four sacred Months out of twelve. The other being ZiQad,ZilHajj and Rajab. It is a sacred month NOT because the grandson of Prophet Muhammad (saw) was martyred in this month. It is sacred because Allah made it sacred along with three other months and told us about it in the Quran.
The word muharram also means respect.
THE HAZARA ETHNIC SOCIETY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA (HESWA)
THE HESWA IS HOLDING THE MUHARRAM MOURNING 10 DAYS TO RECITE PLAINTIVE VERSES AT:
PLACE: St Marry's Mosque
TIME: 2000-2200 (8am-10pm)** (**=time variation due to assembling)
For contact details please contact the head of the HESWA.
To add more to this post or any thing else regarding the Holly month of Muharram please do not hesitate to contact me either by placing a comment on this post or by email at:
Email: hazara.eswa@yahoo.com
or hazaranewswa@yahoo.com
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Tuesday, December 15, 2009
55th asylum seeker boat intercepted
55th asylum seeker boat intercepted: Rudd under pressure
Authorities have intercepted another asylum seeker boat, taking the tally for the year to 55.
The boat was intercepted just after 8pm on Tuesday by HMAS Launceston about 30 nautical miles northeast of the Ashmore Islands.
Initial indications suggest there are 51 passengers and four crew on board the vessel. They will be transferred to Christmas Island where they will undergo security, identity and health checks.
The latest arrival comes as the government faces increasing pressure to do more to solve the asylum seeker problem with detention facilities on Christmas Island already stretched to their limits.
As of Tuesday, there were 1,487 detainees on the island, including 82 in tents which were erected as temporary accommodation to cope with the growing asylum seeker population.
7NEWS Ltd
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Sunday, November 22, 2009
Asylum seekers injured in riot-Christmas Island
Thirty-seven Afghans and Sri Lankans have been injured in a massed brawl on Australia's Christmas Island involving 150 detainees.
Ten of the detainees were taken to the island's hospital and three of the more seriously hurt - one with a broken leg, one with a broken jaw and one with a broken nose - were flown to Perth for treatment on Sunday.
Some guards suffered minor injuries while breaking up the fight, an Immigration Department spokesman said.
Christmas Island detention centre authorities have now separated the Afghan and Sri Lankan detainees, with those believed to be the cause of the trouble placed in "stronger" detention, Immigration Minister Chris Evans said.
Senator Evans rejected suggestions the brawl was caused by tensions arising from overcrowding at the offshore detention centre, blaming the incident on anxiety caused by the repatriation of some Sri Lankans.
"We've had some people removed back to Sri Lanka found not be refugees," he told ABC Radio on Monday.
"But essentially we've had a fight between some detainees which got out of hand."
There was always a tension inside a detention centre for 1000 people, Senator Evans said.
"It's like any other place where you have to detain large groups of people."
There will be a full investigation by the Australian Federal Police, he said.
WEAPONS USED
The trouble began about 6.30pm on Saturday. As the confrontation between the Afghans and more recently arrived Sri Lankans developed, those involved wielded pool cues, broom handles and branches.
Detention centre staff moved in quickly to break it up but it took them 30 minutes to get those fighting under control.
"This was a confrontation between a group of detainees, it was not aimed at staff or the centre itself," the spokesman said.
There are 969 asylum seekers detained in the centre, which is designed to take 1088.
The spokesman said the detention centre was not overcrowded and all of the detainees were accommodated appropriately.
The two groups involved had been separated to ensure there was no further friction, he said, and they were being kept apart in two sections of the centre.
''All is calm and there have been no further incidents,'' the spokesman said.
The Opposition immigration spokeswoman, Sharman Stone, described it as "very disturbing" and called on the Federal Government to launch an independent inquiry into what went wrong.
She said it was a "serious breach of internal security" and both detainees and staff were in real danger.
Forty-four boats carrying 2094 passengers, most of them from Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Iraq, and 92 crew have arrived in Australian waters so far this year.
The latest was intercepted by the Australian Customs vessel Roebuck Bay south-west of the Ashmore Islands on Friday.
It was carrying 53 passengers and two crew, and they were taken to Christmas Island.
The boat was the fifth to arrive in Australian waters in a week.
SMH
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Thursday, November 19, 2009
Theory: Origins of Hazaras
The origins of the Hazaras are not fully reconstructible and thus debatable.
At least partial Mongol descent is difficult to rule out, because the Hazaras' physical attributes and parts of their culture and language resemble those of Mongolians. Thus, it is widely accepted that Hazaras do have Mongolian ancestry, if not direct male-line descent from Genghis Khan, as some Hazaras allege. Some Hazara tribes are named after famous Mongol generals, including the Tulai Khan Hazara named after Tolui, the youngest son of Genghis Khan. Theories of Mongol or partially Mongol descent, are plausible, given that the Il-Khanate Mongol rulers, beginning with Oljeitu, embraced Shia Islam. Today, almost all Hazaras adhere to Shiism, whereas Afghanistan's other ethnic groups are mostly Sunni.
Another theory proposes that Hazaras are descendants of the Kushans, the ancient dwellers of Afghanistan famous for constructing the Buddhas of Bamiyan. Its proponents find the location of the Hazara homeland, and the similarity in facial features of Hazaras with those on frescoes and Buddha's statues in Bamiyan, suggestive. However, this belief is contrary not only to the fact that the Kushans were Indo-European Tocharians, but also to historical records which mention that in a particularly bloody battle around Bamiyan, Genghis Khan's grandson, Mutugen, was killed, and he ordered Bamiyan to be burnt to the ground in retribution, renaming it Ma-Obaliq ("Uninhabitable Abode") while replacing the local population with his armies and settlers[citation needed].
A third theory, and the one accepted by most scholars, maintains that Hazaras are a very mixed race. This is not entirely inconsistent with descent from Mongol military forces. For example, Nikudari Mongols settled in eastern Persia and mixed with native populations who spoke various Iranian languages. A second wave of mostly Chagatai Mongols came from Central Asia and were followed by other Turko-Mongols, associated with the Ilkhanate (driven out of Persia) and the Timurids, all of whom settled in Hazarajat and mixed with the local Persian population, forming a distinct group.
vBulletin: Hazara
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HAZARA GENETICS-MONGOL LINKED Y-CHROMOSOMES
HAZARA GENETICS-MONGOL LINKED Y-CHROMOSOMES
Genetically, the Hazara are primarily a mixture of eastern Eurasian and western Eurasian peoples.
Genetic research suggests that they are related to neighboring peoples, while there also seems to be a distant relation to Turkic and Mongol peoples of Inner Asia,such as the Uyghurs of China.
A Mongol element in the ancestry is supported by studies in genetic genealogy as well, which have identified a particular lineage of the Y-chromosome characteristic of people of Mongolian descent ("the Y-chromosome of Genghis Khan"). This chromosome is virtually absent outside the limits of the Mongol Empire except among the Hazara, where it reaches its highest frequency anywhere. About two thirds of the Hazara males sampled carry a Y-chromosome of this lineage.
vBulletin: Hazara
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Aid staff pull back from asylum boat: Hostage probability
THE International Organisation for Migration has withdrawn its staff from a dock at the Indonesian port city of Merak, fearing they could be taken hostage by 247 increasingly desperate asylum seekers staging a sit-in on their boat.
For more than a month, the Tamils, led by spokesman ''Alex'', have refused to leave, demanding to be taken to Australia or at least be seen by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Neither wish has been granted so far and Indonesia is negotiating with Sri Lanka to deport them back to their homeland.
''If we are going to be deported, we will become martyrs,'' said Alex. ''We would rather die than go back.''
According to IOM spokesman Chris Lowenstein-Lom, the staff who have been feeding and providing medical care to the asylum seekers for the past month have been in repeated conflict with them in recent days and are now scared.
''If relations deteriorate further, there is a real risk that they could become hostages,'' he said. ''IOM has therefore pulled back to a building 15 minutes' walk from the dock and the navy has taken over the tent.''
Alex, whose real name is Sanjeev Kuhendrarajah, said the IOM had been increasingly neglectful but he rejected as absurd the suggestion that he or the others on board would take them hostage.
''They are trying to discredit me,'' he said. ''They are trying to make me look like a terrorist.''
He said the IOM - the multinational body charged with caring for irregular migrants - had refused to provide medical attention to one of the asylum seekers, who had since been taken to hospital, a trip paid for by the Tamils.
The port in Merak has been locked down for several days, and tensions are rising. A policeman threatened to shoot the Tamils, according to Alex.
The withdrawal of the IOM means the Indonesian navy has to deliver food, water and organise medical care.
Many of those on the boat are suffering from a variety of ailments as the monsoon season brings heavy rain.
THE AGE 2009
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Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Asylum seekers are genuine, says UN
The 78 Sri Lankans are refusing to leave the Oceanic Viking because they do not want to be transferred to an Indonesian detention centre.
The UN's regional representative, Richard Towle, says some of the group have already been recognised as needing refugee protection.
"It's difficult for us to say exactly who's on board and what their background and profile is, but we understand there are a number of cases who are known to UNHCR - either as refugees or people who have some registration with our organisation in south-east Asia," he said.
The agency has not been asked to go on board the customs ship carrying the asylum seekers.
Mr Towle says it has become a complex political issue.
"We haven't been on board at this point because we haven't received a specific request from the government of Indonesia and of course, their consent and request would be a prerequisite of us going on board," he said.
Senior officials from the Australian and Indonesian governments are looking at ways to end the standoff.
Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor says productive discussions are underway.
"Those discussions will continue. It's a difficult challenge," he said.
"We are patient as the Indonesians are and we want to do this in a civil way and will continue to focus on that.
"Let's remember, we rescued these people. They were in grave danger and now pursuant to the agreement reached, we want to have a peaceful transfer of these passengers onto Indonesian soil."
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Boat tragedy: teens among missing-Sri Lankan
LATEST NEWS-08:30 WAST
Of the 39 people who were on board, 27 have been rescued and three have been confirmed dead but the bodies of two are yet to be recovered from the water.
Nine people remain missing - two of which are 13 and 14 - and a 15-year-old is among survivors.
The survivors are on board the commercial vessel the LNG Pioneer and will be taken to Christmas Island at a later stage.
Mr O'Connor has told Radio National that the search is continuing but once it is light a decision will be made on whether to stop.
"The appropriate authorities look at the survivability of those that are yet to be recovered. It would appear that if there is in fact no hope when it's light they'll proceed to Christmas Island," he said.
Mr O'Connor said he has not yet had official confirmation that the Sir Lankans are seeking asylum but if they are they will be assessed on Christmas Island.
Political debate
In the wake of the disaster, the Federal Opposition has warned that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's border protection policy was destined to put more lives at risk.
Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull says he will put in place policies that will stop people smugglers heading to Australia.
"Every Australian government's policy should be to secure our borders and ensure that people smuggling does not occur and there are no, or as few as possible, unauthorised maritime arrivals of asylum seekers," Mr Turnbull said.
The comments follow the latest Newspoll, which shows the electorate is losing faith in Mr Rudd's handling of the asylum seeker issue.
The Government's primary vote was down seven points to 41 per cent, putting it on equal footing with the Coalition, which jumped seven points from its 34 per cent rating two weeks ago.
The slump was also reflected in the two-party preferred polling results.
In the last poll, Labor had an 18-point lead over the Coalition - that has now been narrowed down to just four points, with Labor on 52 per cent and the Coalition at 48.
Mr Rudd also slipped by two points to 63 per cent in terms of preferred prime minister.
But Mr Rudd has refused to back away from his policy stance.
"What the Government is doing is ensuring that it implements its tough, responsible but fair policy - the one that we took to the people prior to the last election - and it's the one which serves Australia's long-term interests," Mr Rudd said.
"It's tough and hardline on people smugglers. It's humane on asylum seekers. That is a responsible policy in the national interest."
Australian Broadcasting Corporations
Rudd Government slumps-One confirmed dead, 11 feared drowned as boat sinks
Boat passenger confirmed dead
At least one person is confirmed dead and another 11 remain missing, feared drowned, after a boat sank off the West Australian coast on Sunday night.
The Home Affairs Minister, Brendan O'Connor, says 27 people have been rescued since the boat went down in the Indian Ocean, 350 nautical miles off the Cocos Islands.
It is believed the boat was carrying 39 people when it sank.
The rescued passengers remain on board two commercial vessels that were the first on the scene of the incident and continue to help in the search.
The Federal Government says it does not know the origins of the boat or its occupants, and it has not ruled out taking the survivors to Christmas Island.
It has marshalled three planes to help search for the missing passengers.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says it is an unfolding rescue operation.
"This has only unfolded in the last 24 to 36 hours. It's still underway," he said.
"There are still people who we believe are unaccounted for.
"We've got the deployment of vessels, we've got deployment of RAAF aircraft, we've had rescue rafts released from those aircraft."
Coordinated rescue
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority is coordinating the rescue operation in Australia's vast search and rescue zone.
A Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) jet has been sent from Perth and a Customs Dash 8 aircraft has also joined the search.
Stephen Langford from the RFDS says time is critical.
"It's temperate waters, so it's really a matter of getting out there to see if there are any survivors still there," he said.
"Obviously in this case time is critical because one wouldn't expect the people on board the boat would have much in the way of safety equipment."
Mr O'Connor says the Government has decided to work with the boats already in the region to carry out the rescue operation.
"We'll ensure that we do everything we can, firstly to rescue any remaining passengers that are at sea and provide whatever other support is required to assist the commercial vessels," he said.
SEVEN NEWS
Asylum seeker issue erodes-PM's support-Ratings Plung...
Newspoll shows support for the Rudd government has slumped as the asylum seeker
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is standing firm despite clear signs the electorate is losing faith in his border protection policies.
Amid a stand-off between authorities and 78 asylum seekers aboard an Australian Customs vessel, voters have clearly indicated their disapproval of Mr Rudd's "Indonesia solution".
The 78 Tamils aboard the Oceanic Viking, anchored for more than two weeks off Indonesia's Bintan Island, are refusing to disembark.
High-level talks between Australian and Indonesian officials took place on Tuesday in a desperate effort to resolve the situation.
But the damage had already been done.
The latest Newspoll shows support for the Rudd government has slumped over the past fortnight as the asylum seeker issue continued to dominate politics.
The poll, conducted at the weekend and published on Tuesday, shows support for Labor fell seven percentage points to 52 per cent on a two-party preferred basis.
It comes as the surge in asylum seekers took a deadly turn with at least one dead with almost a dozen still missing after their boat sank off the Cocos Islands.
Mr Rudd's approval rating also fell by four percentage points.
However, the prime minister says he will not resile from his stance on asylum seekers, maintaining his policy is "hardline on people smugglers" and "humane on asylum seekers".
"Polls go up, polls go down. My job is to govern in the national interest, because my job is to make decisions in the long-term national interest," Mr Rudd told ABC radio.
"What the government is doing is ensuring that it implements its tough, responsible but fair policy, the one that we took to the people prior to the last election, and it's the one which serves Australia's long-term interests.
"I understand that it won't necessarily be popular. People from the right of politics won't like it, people from the left of politics won't like it, but my job is to get on with the business of doing it."
Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner said he wasn't fazed by the polling slump.
But he admitted he might be worried if future polls showed a similar shift.
"If that is replicated in the next two or three polls, then that starts to become something of significance."
The slide in support for Labor has seen the coalition claw its way back to 48 per cent on a two-party preferred basis.
But that has not translated into a lift in the polls for Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull.
Mr Turnbull's approval rating was steady at 32 per cent.
The opposition leader responded by attacking the government's asylum seeker policy, including the removal of the Howard government's Pacific solution policy.
Mr Turnbull said if elected he would introduce tough measures to stop the people smugglers.
"We've done it before and we'll do it again," he said.
But he would not specify what action he would take over the 78 asylum seekers aboard the Oceanic Viking because he said he wasn't privy to all the detail.
Liberal frontbencher Tony Abbott described Mr Rudd's border protection policies as a "comprehensive failure".
Independent senator Nick Xenophon said the poll results represented a "confused" approach to the asylum seeker issue.
The voters wanted clarity, he said.
"They will respect you for standing by your principles and sticking by them but I think there is confusion as to what the government stands for."
SEVEN NEWS AUSTRALIA
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Air Force plane hours from rescue scene- missing people
LATEST NEWS: 15:30 hrs WST
MISSING BOAT
Where are the missing people who were on board?
The Australian Government has marshalled three planes to search for passengers missing after their boat sank in the ocean hundreds of miles from the Cocos Islands.
Nineteen people have been plucked from the sea and about 20 are still missing, but it is still not clear whether the boat was carrying asylum seekers trying to reach Australian waters.
Seventeen of the rescued were picked up by a natural gas carrier and the Federal Government has confirmed they are all men aged between 20 and 40.
Another two people were collected by a Taiwanese fishing boat.
The Government says it does not know the origins of the boat that sank or its occupants, and it has not ruled out taking the survivors to Christmas Island.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority is coordinating the rescue operation in Australia's vast search and rescue zone.
The capsized boat is 2,700 kilometres from the mainland and more than a day's sailing from the nearest Australian government vessel, HMAS Larrakia.
And the Federal Government says a Royal Australian Air Force plane, a P3 Orion, is still hours away from the scene.
A Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) jet is flying from Perth and a Customs Dash 8 aircraft will also join the search.
"It's just such a long way away it's a matter of trying to get aircraft to the region as quickly as possible," said Stephen Langford from the RFDS.
He says time is critical.
"It's a fairly urgent task because there's still people in the water and the weather is not fantastic," he said.
Government rescue efforts
Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor says the Government has decided to work with the boats already in the region to carry out the rescue operation.
But he will not say where the rescued people will be taken.
"We'll ensure that we do everything we can, firstly to rescue any remaining passengers that are at sea and provide whatever other support is required to assist the commercial vessels," he said.
"That's our focus at the moment, but of course we'll look to the other issues about where the passengers should head as soon as we've done everything we can to save people that may be in the sea at this point."
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says it is too soon to consider where the people should be taken.
"Our priority right now has to be, as you would expect of any government, to deploy necessary resources to attend to lives at risk on the high seas," he said.
Night-time accident
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority received a distress signal from the stricken boat about 11:15pm last night.
A spokesman for the Home Affairs Minister's office says a small Taiwanese fishing boat nearby told the Safety Authority that the boat of asylum seekers was taking on water but was not sinking.
The Taiwanese fishing trawler was not big enough to take the people on board and it stayed alongside until a Bahamas-flagged merchant ship, the LNG Pioneer, arrived.
The ABC understands the merchant ship arrived at the very moment the boat started sinking.
The Chief of the Defence Force, Air Chief Marshall Angus Houston, has shed some light on what happened next.
"When the first ship got there, this vessel was still intact," he said.
"Somehow or other during the process of the interaction between the ship and the trawler and also the stricken vessel, there has been a capsize and people have ended up in the water."
All 40 people on board the sinking boat ended up in the ocean.
The Government said there was no moonlight and that made search and rescue very difficult.
Australian Broadcasting Corporations 2009
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Friday, October 30, 2009
Kids destined for detention: Jakarta
SENIOR Indonesian officials have rejected outright a claim by Kevin Rudd that women and children asylum-seekers aboard the Oceanic Viking could be accommodated in regular housing, rather than behind razor wire in an Australian-funded detention centre.
"We've already got a detention centre (at Tanjung Pinang) and in it we already separate men and women," the Foreign Ministry's most senior official for international security, Sujatmiko, told The Australian.
"Indonesia does not need to be directed how to act. We've gotten the detention centre ready and we've already helped Australia for humanitarian reasons.
"There is commitment from both sides, and Indonesia has the commitment, but Indonesia is not your country."
A spokesman for Mr Rudd said last night that the Prime Minister stood by his earlier comments.
On Wednesday, Mr Rudd told parliament: "The Indonesian authorities have advised the government that women and children will be offe
red the option of staying in a house near the Tanjung Pinang detention facility.
women and children will be offered the option of staying in a house near the Tanjung Pinang detention facility."The Prime Minister's office did not respond to Dr Sujatmiko's comment last night.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's most senior adviser on international affairs, Dino Patti Djalal, also refused to confirm claims made by Mr Rudd in parliament that the women and children among the 78 Sri Lankans would be housed separately.
After a brief silence in response to the question yesterday, Mr Djalal said simply: "I couldn't comment on that. We're waiting for Australian officials to go on board later today and convince them to come off, because that's all they can do.
"They're on Australian territory so we can't do anything about it. We just hope Australia can get them off the boat."
Mr Rudd's "Indonesia solution" is facing growing opposition from Jakarta, with senior Indonesian officials saying they will not allow their country to become a processing site for Australia-bound boatpeople.
As officials continued to negotiate an end to the standoff with the 78 Sri Lankans aboard the Oceanic Viking, now in its 12th day, there were fresh signs the impasse was taking its toll on relations between Australia and Indonesia.
Yesterday, Indonesian Foreign Ministry spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said talk of an "Indonesia solution" to intercept the boats had become a sore in Indonesia.
"We don't want to be caught in the domestic issues in Australia," Mr Faizasyah told The Australian.
"We don't want to be the object of insults from your dynamic, political dynamic, in your country."
Mr Faizasyah said Indonesia has a "bigger picture" when it came to bilateral relations.
"This will certainly irritate Indonesia to be associated with a new form of policy which in your country itself is still being debated," he said.
Asked if it was likely Jakarta would agree to intercept and process more boats, Mr Faizasyah replied: "I don't think so. We are not a country to process refugees because more importantly we are not parties to the refugee convention, so what we are doing (is) only based on our humanitarian perspective."
But Dr Sujatmiko said Indonesian officials had responded promptly to Australian requests to supply food, water and other necessities to the Oceanic Viking, and in facilitating visa arrangements for an expected crew change aboard the vessel.
"We have helped with everything (possible) but we are not going to force (the asylum-seekers) to come off the boat," he said.
Indonesian officials also revealed privately they were furious at the inactivity from Sri Lanka through the crisis, and were talking privately about making Colombo directly responsible for repatriating the next boat load of Tamils they intercept. Strategists in Jakarta believe this would send "one of the strongest signals ... if next time one of these boats is picked up, it just gets sent straight back to Sri Lanka".
Mr Djalal suggested that the move "should give some discouragement to them (asylum-seekers), after making all that effort to get here".
Late yesterday afternoon the Sri Lankan ambassador to Indonesia agreed to visit the 78 Tamils on board the Oceanic Viking and make an offer of repatriation.
"If even half or a quarter of them could be repatriated, that would be a great thing," Mr Djalal said.
Security on the Oceanic Viking was ramped up yesterday, with the Sri Lankans herded behind fluorescent tape and kept under guard by armed Customs officials.
The Customs officers confirmed they had been directed to prevent any communication between journalists and the Sri Lankans.
Fellow Tamil refugee "Alex", on board the Jaya Lestari 5, a wooden cargo boat moored with 251 asylum-seekers at the port of Merak in western Java, said he could confirm that those on board the Oceanic Viking had had "at least one telephone communication with the outside world".
"However, I can tell you that contact is waiting for a follow-up call, so whether it came from one person on board who had a phone but no longer does, I couldn't say."
The Sri Lankans appeared relaxed yesterday, washing on the top deck where they were being guarded early in the morning and then retreating under tarpaulins and below deck when a violent thunderstorm struck in the middle of the day.
THE AUSTRALIAN
HAZARA NEWS WESTEREN AUSTRALIA (HNWA)
www.hazarawa.blogspot.com
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Australia could use force against asylum seekers
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has not ruled out the use of force by Australian officials against a group of asylum seekers who are refusing to leave a Customs ship, saying the Government is dealing with a "complex and difficult situation".
As the 78 asylum seekers spend their 10th day on board the Oceanic Viking off the coast of Indonesia, Mr Rudd has faced a barrage of questions in Parliament from the Opposition over the stand-off.
Despite a deal made by Mr Rudd and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono for Indonesia to take the group last week they are yet to leave the ship and local officials are resisting efforts to bring them ashore.
With the issue dominating Question Time this week, Mr Rudd was repeatedly asked by the Opposition to detail his involvement in continuing developments but Mr Rudd would not elaborate on any discussions which he said were of a "diplomatic nature".
When asked whether Australian officials could use force against the asylum seekers, Mr Rudd replied: "We are dealing with a complex and difficult and challenging set of circumstances."
"I have confidence that our men and women who are working in these professional agencies will discharge their professional responsibilities with the greatest degree of skill and tact and humanity that they can, but this is a very difficult situation," he added.
The asylum seekers are due to be taken to a detention centre on the island of Bintan, but Mr Rudd says Indonesian authorities will not insist on locking up the women and children of the group.
"I'm advised by the Indonesian authorities that women and children will be offered the option of staying in a house near the Tanjun Pinang detention facility," he said.
The Opposition insists the Government's change in border protection policy is responsible for a recent surge in boat arrivals and Leader Malcolm Turnbull says the Government has "outsourced" the country's refugee program to people smugglers.
"Not one question about the Oceanic Viking has been answered other than with a contemptuous, savage and sneering attack on the Opposition," he said.
"The truth is that this debacle is a disaster entirely of the Government's own making."
Mr Rudd also also faced criticism from within his own ranks with Australian Workers Union boss Paul Howes saying the asylum seekers should be brought to Christmas Island.
"These are 78 people - can anyone really run any serious argument that this poses any threat to us whatsoever?" Mr Howes asked.
"The Prime Minister ... has the opportunity to show leadership and actually inject some common sense and get a bit of the heat and rhetoric out of this debate."
O.P.C. by: Emma Rodgers
Monday, October 19, 2009
Australia will meet legal obligations to asylum-seekers: Gillard
JULIA Gillard has told Parliament Australia will follow the letter of the law on where 78 asylum-seekers intercepted in Indonesian waters will be sent.
Asked in question time why the asylum-seekers remain in limbo after being picked up by the Australian Navy in Indonesian waters, the acting Prime Minister said consultations were continuing.
Ms Gillard, who earlier pledged the government would get the balance right beween a hardline border control policy and showing compassion to refugees, confirmed one female passenger was suffering from fever and was being monitored.
“We will act in a way entirely consistent with out legal obligations,” she said.
“We will follow the letter of the law.”
Opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull questioned her claims that a rise in asylum-seekers was sparked by push factors not a softening of policy.
“Why is the government trying to trick the Australian people with spin,” he asked.
Mr Turnbull said the government had rolled out the red carpet to people-smugglers.
The government is also under pressure today to explain whether a warning the government's policies would lead to a rise in people-smuggling was “excised” from a report prepared by Australian Federal Police.
The AFP refused to be drawn on the issue yesterday in Senate estimates on the grounds it was classified.
Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor also refused to comment, but accused the opposition of verballing the AFP on the issue today in question time.
HAZARA NEWS WESTERN AUSTRALIA
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The Australian