Of the estimated 250 asylum seekers on board
the boat which capsized off the Indonesian coast in December, only 47 survived.
But despite surviving the tragedy, they face an uncertain future.
Most of the asylum seekers are now being held
in an Indonesian detention centre and do not know what will happen to them.
Those in detention say that they still haven’t been visited by UNHCR. Five have
asked to be returned to their homes in Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq and Turkey. The
rest are desperate and say that will get on another boat if they can.
The conditions in the Indonesian detention
centre are bad, say the asylum seekers. “I told them I was a refugee, that I
had lost my whole family,” said Dawood Waladbegi from Iran. His wife and two
children died in the boat sinking. “They spat on me, beat me and told me I was
in their country now and it was their rules.”
Ali Mohammad, from Afghanistan, has a black
eye and two deep gashes on his legs after the detention center guards beat him
for trying to escape. Survivors also said they had been hit with electrical
prods after a riot when they tried to break down the detention centre's fence
and threw rocks at staff.
One of the survivors who said he will return
home, Esmat Adine,
24, says that he signed the forms to return to Afghanistan because he could not
face being held in the detention centre in Indonesia for two years while UNHCR
decided whether he was a refugee or not. Even though he fears for his life if
he is sent back to Kabul, he says he will try to go to Canada instead. “If
Australia doesn't accept my request I will deport myself and go directly to
Kabul airport (and) to Canada,” he said.
The asylum seekers are also traumatized by
violent deaths of their families and loved ones. Ten-year-old Athena Hardani from Iran was on the boat with her father,
mother and sister. She is one of only three children of the twenty on board to
survive. The last thing she remembers before the boat rolled over is her little
sister’s face. “I learned to swim in school, but my sister Mobina didn’t,” she
says. “My heart is sad because my mother and sister are not here. I know
nothing about them.”
Athena was rescued soon after the boat
capsized by a passing fishing boat but her father, Mohammad, spent three days
clinging to the wreckage of the boat before being picked up by a ferry which
happened to be in the area. “We spent three days and two nights that way,” he
said. “I thought, ‘I can’t leave my little girl in this harsh world, I must live.
I owe her my life.’” The 36-year-old welder from Ahvaz in Iran said that
letting go of his younger daughter, eight-year-old Mobina, was the hardest
thing he has ever done. “I think my wife had a heart attack from shock, but
there was nothing I could do for my little girl.” Father and daughter are
believed to be the only related survivors and were reunited by Indonesian
authorities on Friday 23rd December 2011.
Another survivor spoke of what he had seen
while waiting to be rescued. “Most of the people came out through the windows
and died in front of our eyes,” said Syed,
a Pakistani Hazara. “I saw their dead bodies floating on the sea. We witnessed
all of this madness, death in the water for six hours.”
Jamble, a 25-year-old local fisherman, owns one of the fishing boats that rescued
the first group of survivors. He says that he spotted several dark dots from
his small wooden fishing vessel and decided to look closer. He and his three
crew members were horrified when they saw hysterical and exhausted people
clinging to anything that floated. He says the survivors immediately started
swimming towards his boat. “They were all fighting, scrambling to get into my boat,”
Jamble said. And although he only had room for 10 more people he managed to get
25 asylum seekers onto the boat. He says many of them injured and were begging
for water to drink. Those left behind were screaming and crying. “I'm so sad
... I feel so guilty, but there were just too many of them.” “I was worried if
we took any more we'd sink too,” he said.
Some people travelled to Indonesia from
Australia after the tragedy to see if any of the family or friends had
survived. Jeremy Jafari, an Afghan Australian, broke down at
Bhayangkara Hospital in Surabaya after police showed him a photo of the body of
his sister. “I'm certain it's my younger sister,” he said, crying. “I saw a
physical mark on her body.” He was supported by Said Abbas Sultani, another
Afghan living in Australia who had also travelled to Indonesia to search for
members of his wife's family from Iran.
The Indonesian Search and Rescue Agency said they had only been able to find 101 dead
bodies from the accident. “We have not found anymore bodies over the past two
days, so we decided to stop our search and rescue efforts,” they said.
The Australian Government blamed the tragedy on people smugglers. “They’re in
the business of making money and they don’t care if it kills people or not,”
the Home Affairs Minister said.
The boat journey from Indonesia to Australia
is very dangerous. In November another boat, carrying about 70 asylum seekers
from Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan capsized in the same area off Indonesia and at least eight people died.
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