Australian officials destroyed a boat carrying
asylum seekers and then pushed them back to sea in another vessel, Indonesia
said on Friday.
Foreign Office chief of multilateral affairs Hasan Kleib
expressed concern that Australia took the action on its own.
"We are concerned when some countries like
Australia, rather than informing us or working with us, take unilateral action
and push back boats," he said.
Sixteen migrants from India, Nepal and Bangladesh and
their Indonesian skipper were found stranded in Indonesia's part of Timor
Island on Thursday.
The skipper, who is being questioned by police, said he
was paid about $1 600 to transport the migrants from Pelabuhan Ratu on the
southwest coast of West Java to Australia. They left November 18 and arrived at
Christmas Island on November 23.
The migrants reportedly said Australian officials
destroyed the boat that carried them to the Australian territory of Christmas
Island. They said they were detained for four days before they were pushed back
out to sea in a new boat.
Australian Border Protection Minister Peter Dutton
refused to comment, maintaining a government policy of secrecy surrounding
people smuggling operations.
Indonesia's many islands are a popular transit point for
people fleeing war-ravaged countries on their way to Australia.
The incident happened as Jakarta is holding a regional
meeting attended by representatives of Australia and 13 other countries to
discuss the root causes of the refugee crisis.
"Talk to us, call our law enforcement on what to do
with this, rather than just shifting the burden, shifting the responsibility
back to Indonesia," Kleib told reporters on the sidelines of the meeting.
He said he hoped the incident would not become a
stumbling block in overall cooperation between the two countries.
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