|
|
www.tonykevin.com |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Home Page
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=4353
When,
on March 24, Hassan Wirayuda,
the Indonesian Foreign Minister, criticised
the just-announced Australian Government’s decision to grant
temporary protection visas to 42 West Papuan asylum-seekers
who had landed on Cape York in January, after a dangerous open-seas
voyage by canoe from We
have seen inconsistencies on the part of the Australian Government
in dealing with issues of illegal migrants. We have been working
very closely with them in the past three years,
and for that matter the decisions of the Australian Government
and in this case Immigration Department's reflect in their inconsistencies.
And we are afraid this would weaken co-operation among parties
in dealing with cases of illegal migrants. The
Indonesian style is allusive and elliptical. There may be more
to this than meets the eye. Let us recall a little recent history. A sharp upsurge
of Middle Eastern asylum-seekers, in unauthorised
entry boats, tried to reach Australian territory from There
is credible evidence to suggest that the upsurge in people smuggling
from Indonesia had been encouraged by some Indonesian national
security agencies, which may have given a green light to the
activities of favoured people smugglers,
possibly sharing the profits with them, as a way of penalising Australia for its role in achieving the independence
of East Timor in 1998-99. In
response, Australian agencies AFP and DIMIA (possibly also involving
ASIS) were authorised by the Australian
Government to set up covert people-smuggling disruption operations
in Indonesia between 1999 and 2001, using paid local agents
like Kevin Enniss and supportive teams
within the Indonesian police, to disrupt voyages, sabotage engines
and even sink boats (see official testimony, in particular from
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty,
in the 2002 Senate Committee on a Certain Maritime Incident). It
seems possible - we don’t know, because even now nobody in officialdom
is talking - that a covert struggle developed in these years
on Indonesian soil, between agencies trying to mount unauthorised
voyages and agencies trying to disrupt them. It
all may have come to a head with the internationally headlined
tragedy of the sinking of SIEV X on October 19, 2001, drowning
353 Middle Eastern asylum-seekers (mostly women and children)
in international waters monitored by Operation Relex,
50-60 miles south of the The
shock of the sinking of SIEV X, however it was caused, forced
the Indonesian Government’s hand. Almost overnight Foreign Minister
Hassan Wirayuda
agreed to Australian demands for an international conference
in Bali against people smuggling, which The
conference was co-chaired by Wirayuda’s reminder that There
are still understood to be quite a large number of Middle Eastern
origin asylum-seekers being maintained in transit camps or hostels
in various parts of This
might help explain a recent statement by Senator Ellison (Minister
for Customs and responsible for Coastwatch,
which in normal times manages Australian border protection)
that Australian border protection surveillance in the waters
south of Only
this week, Indonesian President Yudhoyono
publicly renewed Wirayuda's
warnings of ten days earlier. According to press agencies, Yudhoyono
reportedly said, " One
can't get much clearer than that. And you read it here first
in On Line Opinion. -
Tony Kevin,
|
||||||||||||||||||||
![]()