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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 30, 2001 |
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International
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Australian forces board stranded vessel
By Amit Baruah
SINGAPORE, AUG. 29. Australian Special Air Service (SAS)
commandos today boarded the Norwegian vessel, Tampa, which has
434 refugees on board, after the captain of the freighter entered
Australian waters in a bid to land his human cargo on Christmas
Island.
The Tampa was not allowed to dock and Australian troops continue
to be on board the vessel in order to prevent it from coming into
Christmas Island. The ship was reported to be adrift after the
captain ordered the engines of the Tampa to be turned off.
The refugees on board the container vessel will be spending their
fourth night at sea after being rescued by the Tampa from certain
death on Sunday after their Indonesian ferry began to sink.
In Canberra, the Australian Prime Minister, Mr. John Howard, told
Parliament: ``The ship is now in the control of the SAS.''
Mr. Karsten Klepsvik, a Norwegian Foreign Ministry spokesman,
said if the commandos took physical control of the ship and
forced it out to sea that ``will be something else and will be a
very serious situation''.
Norway is also reporting Australia's refusal to allow the Tampa
to dock to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the
International Committee of the Red Cross and the International
Maritime Organisation.
``Norway has so far not asked for direct assistance, but we have
given them an orientation about the extraordinary situation on
board the ship,'' the Norwegian Foreign Minister, Mr. Thorbjoern
Jagland, said in Oslo.
According to Mr. Jagland, the 1951 International Convention on
Refugees made it clear that refugees rescued on the high seas
were to be taken immediately to the nearest port and Norway
wanted Australia to accept responsibility for the 434 refugees.
That the Australian Government has no intention of respecting
international maritime norms (the Tampa captain gave a Mayday
signal before sailing into Australian waters today) became clear
when a Bill was introduced in Parliament to allow the Government
to forcibly remove the Tampa from Australian waters.
``The Bill on entry into force will operate from 9 a.m. today,''
Mr. Howard was quoted as telling Parliament. The Bill will allow
the Government to order a vessel and all on board to be taken
outside the country's territorial waters even if the captain of
the vessel refuses to comply.
People who jump off the ship or are taken away for medical
treatment will be returned to the vessel and action taken under
the Bill will not be allowed to be challenged in a court of law.
The Australian action was condemned by the Norwegian Prime
Minister, Mr. Jens Stoltenberg, who has been in touch with Mr.
Howard. ``One cannot force a ship which the captain deems unfit
to sail into international waters... the Australian Prime
Minister did not agree with me,'' Mr. Stoltenberg was quoted as
telling Norwegian radio.
With the Government rushing through legislation in Parliament and
the public support for the Howard administration's actions from
the Opposition Labour Party, it is clear that Canberra is
charting its own course.
The strategy adopted by the Government is exactly what the anti-
immigrant, far-right ``One Nation'' party has advocated. At a
time when the Liberal alliance is in danger of losing power,
commando action in the high seas will, the Liberal alliance
hopes, bring some voters back to the fold. Interestingly, civil
society in the tiny Christmas Island has come out in favour of
letting the refugees land.
Several community groups and six of the Island's 10 elected
representatives said in a joint statement: ``The elected
representatives of the people of Christmas Island are ashamed of
the actions of the Prime Minister of our country. We believe it
is our humanitarian duty to assist the captain and crew of the
Tampa and the asylum-seekers by offering safe refuge on Christmas
Island,'' the statement added.
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Section : International Previous : Flights to resume | |
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