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26 April 2024

6 alive from missing Indonesia asylum boat

Published
By AFP

Six people were plucked alive from the ocean by a cargo ship and other survivors were spotted Thursday, a day after an asylum-seeker boat disappeared off the Indonesian coast with 150 people aboard.

The recovery of the survivors by the APL Bahrain, after nearly a day in the water, came after Indonesian rescuers abandoned their search.

"We have had confirmation that six survivors have been rescued by a merchant vessel," an Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) spokeswoman told AFP, adding that the distress call they received said 150 were on board.

In an update, AMSA said more survivors were spotted later in the day.

"HMAS Maitland is attempting to recover the survivors. We do not have confirmed numbers at this stage," the organisation said, adding that crews at the scene had also sighted debris.

Indonesia's National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) received an alert from AMSA early Wednesday that a boat was in distress between Java and Sumatra, 220 nautical miles from the Australian territory of Christmas Island.

Basarnas sent two police rescue boats and a helicopter but found nothing and returned to base, only for AMSA to task the Bahrain, which responded to an earlier broadcast to shipping, to attend a broader search area.

The captain of the Bahrain said screams and whistles alerted his crew as it scoured the Sunda Strait in darkness.

"We were doing scheduled searching. At the last moment when I was thinking to abort, I heard some noises, and we spotted them in the water," Captain Manuel Nistorescu told the Sydney Morning Herald's website.

"I (sent) a crew to get them and it was not easy... It was dark."

He said the rescued men appeared to be in good condition, adding that they said the pump on their boat failed and the vessel began taking on water.

"They had an engine break and the water was coming, and the pump for pumping out the water was not working and the boat sinks. This is what I understand from them," he said.

Australian Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said there were serious concerns for those still missing, who include women and children.

"We have grave fears for a lot more," he said. "Don't underestimate how hard it is to find people in the middle of the sea."

AMSA said the survivors would be taken to Merak in Indonesia for medical attention. An Indonesian rescue boat carrying doctors is steaming to the area where the boat sank.

Three merchant vessels were continuing the search alongside Australian naval vessel HMAS Maitland and two Australian P3 Orion aircraft.

Australia is facing a steady influx of asylum-seekers arriving by boat, many of whom use Indonesia as a transit hub, paying people-smugglers for passage on leaky wooden vessels after fleeing their home countries.

Canberra this month said 300 boatpeople had died en route to the country this year, with vessels being intercepted by the Australian navy on almost a daily basis.

Two weeks ago, Canberra announced its intention to transfer asylum-seekers to Nauru and Papua New Guinea in the Pacific as part of a tough new policy to deter them from making the dangerous sea voyage.

But more than 1,000 boatpeople have arrived since the policy was adopted.

"My message to them is, don't get on the boat," said Clare.

"What we've seen today is there is a real risk people will die... that people will end up at the bottom of the sea."