Sri Lankan asylum seekers rescued after being in rough seas for nine days without food or water
Sikakap,
Indonesia: Indonesian fishermen on Friday rescued 43 starving,
dehydrated Sri Lankans who had been adrift in a boat for nine days after
their engine broke down while trying to reach Australia to seek asylum,
police said, NDTV reported quoting Associated Press
Another group of about 60 Sri Lankans in a boat, also apparently heading for Australia amid a surge in attempts to arrive before a tough deportation policy takes effect, were seeking food and drink from communities nearby on Mentawi island in western Indonesia, Police
Captain Abdurachman Suryanegara said, citing reports from residents in the area.
Australian officials have noted a big spike in asylum seekers trying to make the dangerous sea journey to the country ahead of an immigration policy that goes into effect in the coming weeks.
A boat with about 150 asylum seekers from Afghanistan and Pakistan sank off Indonesia’s main island of Java on Wednesday, leaving at about 95 people missing.
The Sri Lankans with engine trouble were discovered by fishermen off Mentawi island on Friday and towed the ashore, where the passengers were given medical treatment and placed in a temporary shelter pending processing by immigration authorities, Suryanegara said.
Members of the group, which includes four women and three children, are weak but in stable condition, he said. The group had run out of food and water after losing engine power nine days earlier, he said.
“Thank God they were found. They would have died if they were found any later,” Suryanegara said.
He said police would try to catch up with the second group of Sri Lankans on Saturday.
The islands of Indonesia have long been a transit points for people fleeing war-ravaged countries on their way to Australia. Read More
Another group of about 60 Sri Lankans in a boat, also apparently heading for Australia amid a surge in attempts to arrive before a tough deportation policy takes effect, were seeking food and drink from communities nearby on Mentawi island in western Indonesia, Police
Captain Abdurachman Suryanegara said, citing reports from residents in the area.
Australian officials have noted a big spike in asylum seekers trying to make the dangerous sea journey to the country ahead of an immigration policy that goes into effect in the coming weeks.
A boat with about 150 asylum seekers from Afghanistan and Pakistan sank off Indonesia’s main island of Java on Wednesday, leaving at about 95 people missing.
The Sri Lankans with engine trouble were discovered by fishermen off Mentawi island on Friday and towed the ashore, where the passengers were given medical treatment and placed in a temporary shelter pending processing by immigration authorities, Suryanegara said.
Members of the group, which includes four women and three children, are weak but in stable condition, he said. The group had run out of food and water after losing engine power nine days earlier, he said.
“Thank God they were found. They would have died if they were found any later,” Suryanegara said.
He said police would try to catch up with the second group of Sri Lankans on Saturday.
The islands of Indonesia have long been a transit points for people fleeing war-ravaged countries on their way to Australia. Read More
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