bwood1946 wrote on Dec 16
th, 2010 at 8:05am:
nichy wrote on Dec 16
th, 2010 at 7:53am:
philperth2010 wrote on Dec 16
th, 2010 at 7:40am:
Howard lied when he claimed Siev X sunk in Indonesian waters......An Australian navy ship was the closest vessel to the sinking and the Howard government did nothing to prevent the tragedy despite knowing the vessel was in trouble......the truth is a lot different to the crap peddled by the right......Siev X was allowed to happen!!!
Didn't the Indonesian Government receive very many Aussie dollars to prevent this type of tragedy - where is the money - what is Indonesia doing about it ?
The other awful thing is do we want the type of men in his country who would do what was reported by an eyewitness as follows :
"Then the boat crashed into the cliff. There was chaos in the water, there was small children, women. The men seemed to hug the life jackets and it was not a nice sight to see men pushing women away from life jackets, looking after themselves." nichy were did the highlited bit come from
UN calls for refugee rethink
By Samantha Hawley
Posted 18 minutes ago
The United Nations refugee agency says yesterday's Christmas Island shipwreck reinforces the need for the international community to cooperate to find ways to stop perilous boat journeys.
At least 28 people died after an asylum seeker boat carrying up to 100 people was smashed against rocks by heavy seas on the shoreline near Flying Fish Cove.
UNHCR regional representative Richard Towle says the incident is a "tragic loss of innocent lives".
But he says he is not surprised the boat was able to reach Christmas Island without being detected.
"There have been a number of boats come pretty close to Christmas Island over the last 12 or 18 months, so I'm not terribly surprised," he said.
"I know that the sea conditions have been very, very rough.
"It's a very difficult and very dangerous undertaking that people have been undertaking."
Mr Towle would not be drawn on whether the Government's policy on asylum seekers had contributed to the tragedy.
"I don't think this is a time for recriminations around policy," he said.
"This is a moment for some rather sad reflection and compassion for those who have lost their lives.
"This is a terrible incident. I think in many ways it's something that has been anticipated. It could have happened more frequently, but for the grace of God has not."
Mr Towle says the incident was a stark reminder of the dangers involved for those seeking new lives.
"The fact that this boat has capsized against the edge of Christmas Island, it's a tragic reminder of how dangerous it is for people who've put their lives into the hands of people smugglers and boat movements coming to Australia," he said.
"There are innocent women and children on board these boats. And the seas at this time of the year are very rough and dangerous.
"And we really do have to find options that will provide security and safety for people in other places, so that the need for protection through boat movements is reduced."
Tags: immigration, disasters-and-accidents, maritime-accidents, emergency-incidents, government-and-politics, federal-government, foreign-affairs, refugees, australia, christmas-island