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Somalis get Aussie asylum option
Asylum-seekers arrive at Christmas Island
A boatload of asylum-seekers arrives at Christmas Island yesterday amid warnings the UN Refugee Convention is failing Australian border protection. Source: The Australian

The Australian
Monday, June 17, 2013

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PEOPLE-SMUGGLERS in Kenya and Somalia are telling Somalis seeking asylum they can easily get them to Australia through Malaysia and Indonesia. Australian Somali Association president Abdullahi Farah said he had been expecting an influx of Somalis arriving by boat as the message of an Australian option grew.

It comes as a woman was found dead on an asylum-seeker boat carrying about 60 Africans and people from the Middle East after it was stopped by HMAS Warramunga east-northeast of Christmas Island on Saturday.

The Australian Federal Police is investigating and will prepare a report for the West Australian Coroner.

The woman's body was brought to Christmas Island at approximately 1am yesterday. Her husband and three-year-old child were transferred ashore five hours later and offered counselling.

Mr Farah, who is based in Sydney, said brokers for people-smugglers in Nairobi were selling Australia as an alternative to the traditional route to asylum across the Sahara desert to Libya and across the Mediterranean Sea to Italy and Europe.

They were targeting Somalis who had crossed the border from Somalia and were living in and around the Kenyan refugee camps of Dadaab, which shelter more than 350,000 people.

"Smugglers are selling this message to people that they can come to Indonesia from Malaysia with a Somali passport and they can come here by boat. We were expecting this," Mr Farah told The Australian.

"Before, the people-smugglers with Somalis were going to Europe, to Italy through Libya. And a lot of people are dead and a lot of people are stranded, I think in Malta. It's interesting now they are coming this way. There's more people maybe coming."

As of last Friday, 11,819 asylum-seekers had arrived in Australia on 175 boats this year. They included 102 Somalis. Last year, excluding crew, there were 17,202 asylum-seekers on 278 boats. No figures were kept on Somalis.

Somalis started fleeing their country on the Horn of Africa after a civil war broke out in 1991 and most who have come to Australia, mainly to Melbourne, settled as refugees under the humanitarian program.

Refugee Action Collective spokesman Ian Rintoul said the fact most Somalis were Muslims made it easier for them to travel to Malaysia and Indonesia.

"When people haven't got the possibility of getting the safety they need through official channels, and that's true of a large number of the African asylum-seekers, then they find other ways of doing it, whether that's a leaky boat across the Mediterranean or a leaky boat to Australia," he said.

"Once there's the beginnings of a community then you find that it's one of the things that drives the numbers of particularly families and children that are coming at the moment . . . for family reunion.

"Very often their relatives have no alternative either than to try and find a way of getting here."

Immigration Minister Brendan O'Connor said "irrespective of where people come from they are subject to transfer to a regional processing centre and returned to their country of origin if found not to be a genuine refugee".

"The Gillard government is committed to deterring all people from taking dangerous journeys by boat and stopping those people-smugglers who profit from this evil trade," he said.

Opposition Immigration spokesman Scott Morrison said: "The mere presence of African asylum-seekers on boats shows just how far and wide the call has gone out that Australia's borders are open."

A Customs and Border protection spokesman said the woman on the asylum-seeker boat was already dead when crew from the Warramunga boarded but he would not speculate on the cause of death.

Others on the boat included African women dressed with headscarves, parents holding small babies or accompanying older children, and a woman put in a wheelchair once she arrived on land.



 





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