Indonesia yesterday demanded answers from Australia over allegations an official paid thousands of dollars to turn back a boat of asylum seekers, saying such a development would mark a “new low.”
The call came after Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Friday refused to deny allegations that the captain and five crew of a boat carrying asylum seekers were each paid US$5,000 by an Australian immigration official to return to the Southeast Asian nation.
The claims were made to local police on Rote Island in eastern Indonesia, where the boat carrying 65 asylum seekers came ashore late last month after being intercepted by the Australian navy.
Photo: AFP
The escalating row risks further damaging relations between Australia and its northern neighbor, which are already tense after Indonesia executed two Australian drug smugglers by firing squad in April.
Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir said Jakarta was seeking clarification from Australia on the issue.
“We have consistently said that the Australian government’s push-back policy is on a slippery slope,” he said, referring to the Abbott administration’s hardline policy of turning back asylum boats when it is safe to do so. “If this latest incident is confirmed, this will be a new low for the way that the Australian government is handling this issue.”
Indonesian Minister of Foreign Affairs Retno Marsudi also raised the issue yesterday on the sidelines of a conference in Jakarta with Australian Ambassador to Indonesia Paul Grigson, adding that Jakarta would be “really concerned” if the claims were true.
“I just asked him: ‘What is it about, tell me, what is it?’” she told reporters at the event. “He promised to take my question, my inquiry, to Canberra and he promised to get back to me again.”
Grigson only returned to Jakarta recently after being recalled by Australia in protest at the executions.
Indonesian authorities have launched an investigation into the alleged payments to the crew of the boat carrying asylum seekers from Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka, which was intercepted en route to New Zealand.
Abbott on Friday said Australia would do “whatever we need” to combat people-smuggling — but repeatedly refused to deny that a payment was made.
“By hook or by crook, we are going to stop the trade,” he said. “We have stopped the trade and we will do what we have to do to ensure that it stays stopped.”
Canberra has embarked on a tough immigration policy since Abbott’s conservative coalition came into power in September 2013 and refuses to accept asylum seekers arriving by boats.
The policy includes military-led efforts to turn back such boats, which mostly come from Indonesia, and sending asylum-seekers to camps on the Pacific island outpost of Nauru and Papua New Guinea for resettlement, despite strong criticism from human rights groups.
Australia has also signed a deal with impoverished Cambodia to accept unwanted refugees in return for millions of dollars in aid over the next four years.
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