An asylum-seeker boat has reached Australia for the first time in almost four years, the government said yesterday, with many of those on board the Vietnamese vessel fleeing into a crocodile-infested mangrove rainforest after running aground near the coast.
Locals said passengers from the rickety vessel disappeared into the dense forest near the Daintree River, north of Cairns, in the tropical far north of Queensland on Sunday.
They will have to avoid crocodiles, venomous snakes, ferocious sandflies and giant cassowaries — one of the world’s deadliest and most aggressive birds — that all call the ancient Daintree rainforest home.
Photo: EPA-EFE
Queensland Police Minister Mark Ryan told the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) that 15 passengers had been found so far.
The ABC added that two others, including the boat’s captain, were still missing.
The Brisbane Courier Mail reported that up to 20 were unaccounted for. It said those detained were well dressed and in good health.
Queensland State Emergency Service area controller Peter Rinaudo said earlier his crews were searching through the mangroves and near the mouth of the river, reportedly with dogs.
“It’ll be a hard slog, it’s still quite warm in there and it’ll be tough conditions for the guys,” he told the ABC. “I hope the people, however many there are, get located — it’s not a nice area for them to be in.”
A fisherman who spotted two asylum seekers hiding in the mangroves said he took the pair on a tour of the river.
“We gave them a ride up the river and had a few laughs and we got them to help us pull in the crab pots,” fisherman Justin Ward told television broadcaster Channel Nine, adding that they were taking photographs and selfies.
He later broke it to the men that he would hand them over to the police.
Australian Home Affairs minister Peter Dutton said the partially sunk vessel had come from Vietnam and was the first boat of asylum seekers to reach the country since 2014.
“Australia, we believe, has received the first ... people-smuggling venture in over 1,400 days,” he told reporters. “We will work with the agencies to make sure we can repatriate these people back to their country of origin, once we understand the facts of the matter.”
Dutton did not say how many passengers were on board.
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