Australia
stoops to 'new low' if boat payment confirmed: Indonesia
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[June 13, 2015]
By Randy Fabi and Nicholas Owen
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Australia would have
stooped to a "new low" if reports that its navy paid people-smugglers
bound for Australia thousands of dollars to turn back their boat are
true, an Indonesian government official said on Saturday.
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Australia has vowed to stop asylum-seekers reaching its shores,
turning boats back to Indonesia when it can and sending
asylum-seekers to camps in impoverished Papua New Guinea and Nauru
for long-term detention.
A boat captain and two crew members arrested this week on suspicion
of human trafficking told Indonesian police Australian authorities
had paid each of them A$5,000 ($3,860) to turn back their vessel
with 65 migrants on board.
The passengers, including children and a pregnant woman, were from
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Immigration Minister
Peter Dutton have both denied reports of payment to the smugglers
but Prime Minister Tony Abbott has declined to comment, citing
operational security.
"Under Australian's push-back policy we have been consistently
saying they are on a slippery slope," Indonesian foreign ministry
spokesman Armanatha Nasir told Reuters on the sidelines of a
conference.
"Should this situation be confirmed and it turns out to be true, it
would be a new low for the way the government of Australia handles
the situation on irregular migration."
Nasir said it would be the first time such an incident occurred
involving Australian authorities.
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Indonesian foreign minister Retno Marsudi raised the issue with
Australia's ambassador to Indonesia, Paul Grigson, on the sidelines
of a foreign policy conference in the Indonesian capital.
"He promised to bring my question to Canberra," Marsudi told
reporters. "We are really concerned, if it is confirmed."
Indonesia plans to ask Australia for clarification, he said.
The United Nations and human rights groups have criticized Australia
over its tough asylum-seeker policy, which Abbott defends as
necessary to stop deaths at sea.
(Editing by Robert Birsel and Clarence Fernandez)
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