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Australia jails Indonesian people smugglers for role in deadly boat voyage

Monde

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Australia jails Indonesian people smugglers for role in deadly boat voyage

More than 100 asylum seekers drowned when vessel sank off Christmas Island in June 2012


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 05 June, 2014, 3:14pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 05 June, 2014, 3:14pm

Agence France-Presse

indonesia-australia-pakistan-afghanistan-immigrati_31802681.jpg


Australia is a favoured destination for asylum seekers travelling by boat from Indonesia. Photo: AFP

Two Indonesian nationals were on Thursday sentenced to six and nine years in jail in Australia for people-smuggling, after a doomed venture in which more than 100 people drowned.

The men were not charged with organising the people-smuggling venture or with the deaths of any passengers who perished when the boat sank off Christmas Island in June 2012.

Boy Djara, thought to be aged 26 or 27, was effectively second in charge on the boat which was crammed with more than 200 asylum seekers mostly from Pakistan and Afghanistan when it sank.

He was found guilty of six counts of people-smuggling in Perth District Court and sentenced to nine years in jail, with a non-parole period of six years, a court official confirmed.

His co-accused Justhen, 44, who was a deckhand on the ill-fated voyage and goes by one name, was found guilty of trying to assist illegal non-citizens into Australia and sentenced to six years’ jail.

He will be eligible for parole after four years.

Scores of asylum-seekers have drowned when their boats foundered en route to Australia in recent years, most of them having paid people-smugglers to bring them on wooden vessels from Indonesia.

In the incident in June 2012, the small wooden fishing boat started taking on water and eventually capsized about 200km from Australia’s Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island.

Australian authorities rescued 110 people, but the rest could not be saved.

In sentencing, Judge Patrick O’Neal said the vessel was overloaded and carrying life jackets which were not suitable for the open sea.

“If sheep or cattle had been transported like this, people would have rightly lined the wharves ... to protest,” O’Neal said in sentencing comments reported by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

Australia tightened its rules regarding asylum-seekers following a series of sinkings, with those arriving by boat now refused resettlement in Australia and sent to Papua New Guinea or Nauru.

In July last year, unrest rocked the centre in Nauru, causing Aus$60 million (US$431 million) in damage and prompting charges against 63 asylum-seekers.

Nauru Magistrate Ropate Cabealawa on Thursday jailed two people over the riots – giving one a sentence of two years and five months for unlawful assembly and rioting and another 11 months for rioting, the Australian Associated Press said.


 
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