Officials confirmed 41 of the estimated 80 people
thrown from the boat had clambered up the rocks or had been picked up
by customs and navy vessels.
helplessly as the wooden fishing vessel, which appeared to have lost
power, drifted for 45 minutes before being dashed against the rocks in
the swell.
“We were maybe 3 meters from the cliff, but we just
couldn’t help. … It was just too dangerous,” he told the national
broadcaster
Local electrician
Residents were alerted to the unfolding tragedy at dawn by the screams of those in the water.
“With the horrendous seas as they are, the only
thing that people could do from the mainland was really throw life
jackets back into the water or just advise them to swim away from the
rocks,” Foster said.
Locals said those aboard the boat — men, women, children and babies — were either Iraqis or Iranians.
In recent months, more than three boats a week have been landing on
More than 2,000 asylum seekers are in the
Arrivals this year are expected to be the highest on record.
He said the tragedy “highlights once again how very
dangerous this business is of people coming by boat and why it’s so
important again that we do everything possible to ensure that these
boats don’t come in this way.”
“It’s well known how difficult and dangerous this
journey can be, but so many asylum seekers continue to make this
journey because they feel they have few real options open to them,” he
said.
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(c) 2010, Deutsche Presse-Agentur GmbH (Hamburg, Germany).
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