- Reaction score
- 7
- Points
- 230
GAP said:This has to stop.....
You do an end run....you get punted...
Hahahahha ooh that's a good one...
GAP said:This has to stop.....
You do an end run....you get punted...
old medic said:I'm curious to hear where the women and children are. Why is it only men of what appears to
be fighting age.
VANCOUVER — The 76 illegal migrants who were intercepted on a rusting ship off the west coast of Vancouver paid up to $45,000 U.S. each for a new life in Canada, one of their compatriots has claimed.
The suspected asylum seekers, who are being held in a Vancouver jail pending refugee claims, are believed to be one of four groups of Sri Lankans in four ships operated by human smugglers.
Australian authorities said the international human smuggling operation is linked to the notorious Abraham Lauhenapessy, known as Captain Bram, who has spent the last decade smuggling Sri Lankans, particularly Tamils.
The illegal migrants reportedly paid up to $45,000 U.S. for the Canadian option, which involved the cross-Pacific journey on the Ocean Lady that was intercepted and towed to Victoria last Sunday.
The other vessel with 254 Tamils aboard is currently tied at a wharf in West Java, Indonesia.
Australian and Indonesian authorities said that Lauhenapessy is on that boat, which was originally heading toward Australia.
Two other vessels carrying Sri Lankan Tamils were reportedly sending distress signals Monday morning. They are suspected to be in Indonesian and Malaysian territorial waters.
One of the illegal migrants on the boat in Indonesia identified by Australian and Indonesian media as Alex said he knew of the journey to Canada on board the Ocean Lady.
He said he was offered a place on the Ocean Lady, but chose the Australian venture because, at $15,000 U.S., it was much cheaper than the Canadian option.
However, Alex now said some on his boat wished they had chosen the boat heading for Canada.
Last weekend, the Tamils on the boat in Indonesia threatened to cause an explosion if they were not immediately resettled in Australia or another country.
"We can see some light. We hope we can receive the assurances about our future that will allow us to resolve the situation," said Alex, whose wife has just given birth to their third child in Sri Lanka. As well as the 254 Tamils, there is one Burmese man aboard the boat, which has only one toilet.
Those on board the Indonesian boat each paid human smugglers $15,000 U.S.. Parents even paid the full amount for newborn babies and young children.
The recent investigation into the Sri Lankan ships is expected to focus on Lauhenapessy, the Indonesian-based people smuggling kingpin.
As the Ocean Lady was heading toward Canada, Lauhenapessy was sailing on a wooden boat toward Christmas Island in the South Pacific with 254 asylum seekers planning to get into Australia. The asylum seekers had reportedly paid him a total of $4 million U.S..
Lauhenapessy turned the boat around close to the island because he missed a rendezvous with a smaller boat that was to pick him up, said Alex, who is acting as spokesman for the Tamils on the vessel.
"It was in the night and we were sleeping and we didn't know what was happening," Alex told Australian media by phone from the boat tied up at a wharf in West Java.
Lauhenapessy has reportedly brought more than 1,500 asylum seekers to Australia since he emerged as a pivotal organizer of Indonesia's people smuggling operations in 1999.
He turned the boat around and returned to Indonesia to avoid arrest as he could face up to 20 years in jail in Australia.
News of his presence on the boat in Indonesia has prompted Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to fly to Jakarta to seek a solution with the Indonesian government to stem the influx of asylum seekers into Australian waters.
Lauhenapessy, an Ambonese with strong links to a criminal network at Jakarta's main port, had been a top-priority target for Australian Federal Police for more than five years.
After eluding a number of elaborate "sting" operations by Australian and Indonesian police, including one in Cambodia in 2001, Lauhenapessy was eventually arrested in Jakarta in June 2007 following a long-term joint operation between the Australian Federal Police and Indonesian police.
An Indonesian court sentenced Lauhenapessy to two years in jail and fined him the equivalent of about $3,000 U.S. in December 2007 on charges of hiding, protecting, harbouring or providing a livelihood to people known to have entered Indonesia illegally.
The charges related to the arrival of 83 Sri Lankan asylum seekers in international waters off Australia in early 2007.
Canada's Immigration Minister has signalled that he intends to play hardball with 76 men believed to be from Sri Lanka who arrived on a rusty boat off Canada's West Coast, as the government battles the perception of Canada as a soft touch for asylum seekers.
While Tamil Canadians have urged Canadian officials to show compassion, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney told The Globe and Mail yesterday that that the migrants' illegal arrival highlights the growing problem of human smuggling.
The Conservative government has said it believes many refugee claims are bogus and has promised tougher legislation.
“We don't want to develop a reputation of having a two-tier immigration system – one tier for legal, law-abiding immigrants who patiently wait to come to the country, and a second tier who seek to come through the back door, typically through the asylum system,” Mr. Kenney said in an interview.
“We need to do a much better job of shutting the back door of immigration for those who seek to abuse that asylum system.” ....
A notorious people-smuggler arrested in Australia may be behind a boatload of would-be asylum-seekers being held in Vancouver.
The 76 asylum-seekers, believed to be from Sri Lanka, were taken into custody by the Canada Border Services Agency, after their ship, Ocean Lady, was apprehended off Vancouver Island on Friday.
The CBSA has refused to release any details about the passengers, including where they came from, their identities or where they're being held.
Canada's immigration ministry did not return calls by The Sun's deadline and Australia's foreign affairs department wouldn't comment.
But Australian media reports suggest the Canada-bound migrants may be linked to other would-be Sri Lankan asylum seekers found on a wooden cargo boat off the coast of Indonesia more than a week ago.
That boat, skippered by convicted human-smuggler Abraham Lauhenapessy, also known as Captain Bram, was headed toward Australia's Christmas Island with 254 Sri Lankan asylum seekers when it was intercepted off the coast of western Java....
With the arrival of 76 illegal immigrants aboard the Ocean Lady, Canada joins a global smuggling pipeline where thousands of Tamils, Afghans or Iraqis risk their lives in the waters between Malaysia, Indonesia and Australia.
In this shadowy world, millions of dollars are secretly exchanged, staffers at the Indonesian embassy in Kabul take bribes, Tamils transit through jungle camps in Malaysia and luckless Afghans die when their boat explodes as it is boarded by Australian sailors.
From a beat-up wooden ship moored in a Javanese port, comes the story of 254 Tamil migrants who, according to a passenger calling himself Alex, couldn't afford the $45,000 (all figures U.S.) to board the Ocean Lady to Canada.
Instead, they paid $15,000 each for a boat to Australia - but were caught by the Indonesian navy.
Now, they can only envy their 76 fellow Tamils who are poised to seek refugee status in Canada....
ModlrMike said:Hmmm... they can afford $45000 each to come here, yet they're poor, mistreated, exploited victims. Send them back, I say!
George Wallace said:What worries me most is what kind of Islamic fundamentalists, Tamil Tiger sympathizers, or other subversive element, may be amongst these men.
Bear in mind that "paid" in this case probably means "agreed to pay" - i.e. out of future earnings they expected to make here in Canada. Even still, I'm not greatly sympathetic to the refugee claim - there are lots of places Sri Lankan Tamils can take refuge that don't cost $45,000 to get to. The Tamil Nadu in India, for instance.GAP said:We also have to remember that these are not the poor "boat people" who sold/borrowed everything to get on a rickety leaking boat and take their chances....these guys paid $45,000 a piece for this trip...the economy cruise went to Australia.....
Sure I would. There are literally hundreds of millions of poor people in straightened circumstances in impoverished countries around the world who would do the same if they could. But I - and they - wouldn't be refugees from a crisis. We would be economic migrants seeking a better quality of life.Colin P said:I am not sure "economic refugees" is a totally accurate term, to play the devils advocate, how many here would take the same risks with their lives and family fortunes in the hope to have a better life for our kids?