From their hospital beds, shocked migrants yesterday recounted the horror of spending three days in violent seas clinging to wreckage after their overloaded boat sank off Indonesia, en route to Australia.
Seventeen-year-old Afghan student Samin Gul Afghani broke down in tears as he described seeing his uncle and two younger brothers sink exhausted under the waters.
Afghani, one of 13 survivors found on Monday 100km from Saturday’s capsize, recalled seeing dozens of fellow migrants drowning as they waited in vain to be rescued.
“Many people did not know how to swim and were sitting on a large plank of wood from the wreckage. When the waves hit one side, we shifted to the other,” recounted Afghani, receiving medical treatment together with a handful of other survivors at a hospital in Lumajang in Indonesia’s East Java Province.
“One by one, they were swept away by the waves and drowned. Many were old people and young children,” he added.
His uncle and two brothers were non-swimmers, Afghani said.
“They died in front of my eyes. I could do nothing to save them,” he said, sobbing.
Survivors said most of the roughly 250 migrants on the boat were Afghans or Iranians.
“People-smugglers first brought me to Indonesia. From here, I got on the boat at around 3am on Saturday,” said 25-year-old Syed Ghasem, another Afghan.
“I was on one of four buses loaded with people like me who were trying to get to Australia,” he said. “Six hours into the [sea] journey we were in a very, very violent storm, and the next thing I knew the boat had capsized.”
Ghasem said about 50 survivors managed to climb onto the large plank of wood, but many were lost when it broke apart.
“Thirteen of us managed to hang on and we were adrift for three days and two nights before being picked up by a ferry,” Ghasem said.
So far, 47 survivors have been rescued after the fiberglass vessel, which had a capacity of 100, but was carrying about 250 migrants, sank 40 nautical miles (74.1km) off eastern Java.
Crewmembers and migrants had wrestled over 25 life vests on the doomed boat, officials and survivors said.
Officials said they were trying to establish whether two Indonesians found on Monday near eastern Java’s Malang city were crewmembers. One of the Indonesians said he was a fisherman.
“There was nothing for us. We didn’t eat, we didn’t drink. We were so thirsty. We thought we were going to die,” Afghani said. “One Iranian tried to swim to shore and get help. He never came back.”
Afghani said he saw rescuers on two boats on Sunday, but were disappointed when they turned back.
“They couldn’t get to us because the waters were very disturbed, very big waves,” he said.
The Australian newspaper reported Monday that a principal suspect responsible for sending the latest boat was an associate of the jailed kingpin Sayed Abbas, whom Australia is pursuing for extradition from Indonesia.
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