Boat in distress found off Indonesia
Australian authorities yesterday found a boat believed to be carrying
up to 180 asylum-seekers, which issued a distress call after taking on
water off the coast of Indonesia, officials said.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said the defence ship
HMAS Wollongong had located the vessel south of Indonesia after
officials called on boats in the area to offer assistance to the
stricken vessel.
“Due to adverse weather conditions it is not safe for HMAS Wollongong
to attempt to board the vessel to confirm the nature of the distress,”
AMSA said in a statement.
The boat, thought to have between 130 and 180 people on board, is the
latest in a series of asylum-seeker vessels attempting to reach
Australia’s remote territory of Christmas Island from nearby Indonesia.
More than 90 people are estimated to have drowned when two
asylum-seeker vessels went down in the waters between Christmas Island
and Indonesia in separate incidents in recent weeks.
AMSA said it had been coordinating efforts with Indonesia’s search
and rescue authority Basarnas. It earlier said the vessel was thought to
be about 63 nautical miles southwest of West Java and 200 nautical miles
northwest of Christmas Island.
The location is within Indonesia’s maritime search and rescue zone.
“We have received information about a boat in distress from
Australia, but we are not in touch with the boat and have no other
information about it,” Basarnas spokesman Gagah Prakoso said before the
boat was found.
“We are getting ready to send a C-130 Hercules plane to drop off
things like life jackets to the stricken boat. We also have 150
personnel getting ready for rescue efforts.” AMSA said after receiving
the distress call it had issued a broadcast to ships in the area,
advised the stricken vessel to head for the nearest land and requested
assistance from Australian border protection ships and aircraft.
Australian Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare earlier said the vessel was
motoring its way back to Indonesia but authorities were taking the
distress call seriously.
“The boat has rung, said it’s in distress, that it’s taking on
water,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. “Whenever you
have a call like that, you take it seriously.
“If the vessel is sinking, if the vessel cannot make it back to
Indonesia, we will have HMAS Wollongong on the scene, as well as any
merchant vessels that might be available, to rescue the people on the
boat.”
More than 5,200 asylum-seekers have come to Australia so far this
year on boats, many of which are fragile, wooden vessels from transit
hubs in Indonesia. AFP
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