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One year after the SIEV X drownings
Australian police agents involved in sabotage of refugee boats
By Richard Phillips and Linda Tenenbaum
21 October 2002
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October 19 marked one year since the tragic drowning of 353
asylum seekers when their boat literally broke up in international
waters between Indonesia and Australia. The refugeesfrom
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Palestine and Algeriawere packed
onto a small, unseaworthy fishing boat, now known as SIEV
X (Suspected Illegal Entry Vessel Number 10), which was
making its way from Indonesia to Australias Christmas Island.
Among the dead were 150 children.
In the 12 months since the catastrophe, the Australian government
has tried to cover up the fact that it had detailed knowledge
about the boats departure date and movements, but nevertheless
refused to mount any rescue operation (See: Did
the Australian government deliberately allow 353 refugees to drown?).
Prime Minister John Howard continues to brush aside evidence demonstrating
his governments culpability in the tragedy, while the opposition
parties in the Senate, including the Australian Labor Party (ALP),
voted to shut down the Senate inquiry investigating the incident
after Howard blocked key military officers and senior government
bureaucrats from testifying. The inquiry into a Certain Maritime
Incident (CMI) is due to release its report at the end of this
month.
In the meantime, disturbing new information has come to light
that Australian Federal Police (AFP) agents in Indonesia initiated,
on September 27, 2000, a program of deliberately sabotaging refugee
boats before they set sail for Australia. From the evidence now
available it is entirely possibleeven likelythat SIEV
X was one of them.
The shocking revelations were made last month on the Australian
television program Sunday, when AFP agent, Kevin John Enniss,
admitted he had paid local Indonesians on four or five occasions
to sabotage refugee boats. He claimed that while some of the boats
subsequently sank, none of them had travelled far and no lives
were lost.
The Sunday program featured interviews with asylum seekers
who revealed that Enniss collected thousands of dollars from them,
claiming that, as an undercover Australian police agent, he had
inside knowledge of Australian navy movements and could guarantee
arrival in Australia. One young Pakistani man told the program
he had paid Enniss $10,000 for passage in a boat that sank soon
after leaving Indonesia. He said he managed to swim to safety,
but had never been able to retrieve his money from Enniss.
While Sunday did not directly accuse Enniss or other
AFP operatives of sabotaging SIEV X, the police agents admissions
point to the distinct possibility that the vessels serious
leaks from the commencement of its voyage, the engines sudden
breakdown and the boats rapid disintegration after capsizing
were the result of interference by government agents.
Concerns that SIEV X may have been sabotaged were first raised
by Tony Kevin, a former Australian diplomat, in submissions to
the CMI inquiry earlier this year. Kevin posed the question: Might
an Australian agency or paid agent in Indonesia have organised
matters to make it likely that this boat sank in Indonesian waters
soon after leaving its embarkation point in Indonesia?
During the six months of the Senate inquiry, both the government
and the media managed to sidestep the issue. Then, three weeks
after the revelations on the Sunday program, and nearly
two months after the inquiry was shutdown, Labor Senator John
Faulknerwho sat on the inquirymade a series of statements
in parliament about the governments secret people
smuggling disruption program. Faulkner named Enniss and
called for an independent judicial inquiry into the SIEV X tragedy.
Addressing the Senate, Faulkner revealed that the Department
of Foreign Affairs, Australian Security Intelligence Service and
the Department of Defence were all involved in the extraordinary
disruption operation and called on government ministers,
AFP officials and senior bureaucrats to disclose detailed information
about it. He said there appeared to be no accountability
mechanisms, with most of the operation outside of
Australian legal jurisdiction, and demanded Immigration
Minister Phillip Ruddock, Federal Police and Justice Minister
Chris Ellison and Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer explain
their involvement.
A day later Faulkner told the Senate that at least three Australian
Department of Immigration compliance officers and two AFP agents,
working out of the Australian embassy in Jakarta, ran the disruption
operation. This involved joint action with the Indonesian National
Police (INP) and local operatives such as Enniss. The program
was initially organised under a specific protocol agreed between
the AFP and the INP in September 2000 and subsequently modified.
Its activities were regularly discussed on the Prime Ministers
high-level People Smuggling Task Force (PST).
Disruption beefed up
Faulkner told parliament that the PST had issued a specific
directive on October 12, 2001 for the disruption activities in
Indonesia to be beefed up. According to AFP Commissioner
Mick Keelty, beefing up was an operational call
along the lines of, The departure of the vessel is imminent;
wed better be doing everything we can possibly do.
[Emphasis added] Six days after the PSTs directive,
SIEV X set sail on its fateful journey.
Concluding his address, Faulkner asked: What activities
are acceptable; what are not? Who carries them out? Who pays for
them? What accountability and control mechanisms are in place?
Who authorised these activities? What is the effect of these activities?
What, if any, consideration was given to the questions of safety
of lives at sea? Was Enniss involved in the sabotage of vessels?
Were others involved in the sabotage of vessels? Do Australian
ministers, officials or agencies have knowledge of such activities?
Did these involve SIEV X?
In line with their contemptuous attitude toward the fate of
the SIEV X refugees from the outset, neither Howard nor his ministers
have provided answers, either inside the parliament or elsewhere.
Instead, Downer denounced Faulkners questions as disgraceful
and fulminated that anybody would know that no Australian
government would sabotage a boat. Ellison described Faulkners
speech as an outrageous slur on Australian law enforcement,
while AFP Commissioner Keelty released a statement claiming that
the organisation had never been involved in sabotaging vessels.
Interestingly enough, Keelty had previously told the Senate
inquiry that the AFP, after tasking disruption activities
to Indonesian authorities and other operatives, had little control
over what they did. The difficulty is that once we ask them
to do it, we have to largely leave it in their hands as to how
they best do it.
Keelty wants it both ways. On the one hand, he insists the
police agency was not involved in illegal activity. On the other,
he claims it had no control over, and therefore no knowledge of,
what its operatives may or may not have done.
This position, known as plausible denial, is standard
operating procedure for intelligence organisations. Formal instructions
for clandestine or illegal activities are suitably vague and generally
issued through other parties. Operatives then have the freedom
to implement them as they please. Blame, of course, cannot be
sheeted home to the actual instigators.
Throughout the period of the people smuggling disruption
program the Howard government used every opportunity to
publicly condemn people smugglers, castigating them
for plying an illegal trade and accusing them of compromising
the countrys border security. Nevertheless,
in private, it had no compunction in employing people like Enniss,
who collected a hefty $25,000 from the AFP for spying, defrauded
asylum seekers of thousands of dollars on the false promise of
safe passage to Australia and, on his own admission, organised
the successful sabotage of at least four refugee boats.
Political agenda
The SIEV X sinking took place just three weeks before last
years November 10 federal election. Facing almost certain
defeat, Howard seized upon the Bush administrations war
on terrorism along with anti-refugee rhetoric and the need
for border protection, to whip up xenophobia and claw
back electoral support.
In early September 2001, just prior to announcing the election,
the government launched Operation Relexa full-scale
naval operation, backed by aerial surveillance, aimed at intercepting
refugee boats bound for Australias Christmas Island and
other island outposts in the Indian Ocean. Confrontations between
the Royal Australian Navy and hapless refugeesmonitored
daily by Howards PSTbecame a central feature of the
election campaign.
The government staked its credibility on the success of Operation
Relex in preventing any refugees from landing on Australian territory.
Just prior to the voyage of SIEV X, a refugee boatSIEV 4had
sunk after being intercepted. Because the navy was in the immediate
vicinity, it was obliged under the International Law of the Sea,
to rescue the boats passengers, creating a crisis for the
government. It was in this context that the PST issued the directive
to its people smuggling disruption program to beef
up its disruption activities.
SIEV X set sail on October 18. The asylum seekers who were
to board the boat were transported by bus and ferry overnight
from Central Java to Sumatra and hidden all day in a hotel belonging
to the local police chief. They were then bussed to the boat and
escorted on board. Although the vessel could plausibly hold no
more than 150 passengers, more than 400 were crammed on. Armed
Indonesian police prevented those alarmed at the gross overcrowding
from getting off.
The boat sank in international waters around 80 miles south
of the Sunda Strait in an area under constant surveillance by
the RAN. Yet, despite the fact that every other refugee boat making
the journey from Indonesia to Australia since early September
had been tracked, intercepted and turned back by Operation Relex,
SIEV X was left to its fate, apparently undetected. The closest
naval ship was a few hundred kilometers away and the scheduled
overhead surveillance flights were either rerouted or allegedly
failed to detect the wreckage. After 21 hours fighting to stay
alive in the freezing ocean, the few survivors were picked up
by an Indonesian fishing boat.
The CMI inquiry established beyond any doubt whatsoever that
the Australian Federal Police and its agents, local Indonesian
operatives and key Australian government officials were fully
aware of both the planned departure of SIEV X and its unseaworthy
state. The AFP, Coastwatch, the RAN and the PST had several intelligence
briefings in the course of the vessels journey. Yet the
government has continued to argue that nothing more could have
been done to rescue SIEVs passengers.
When news of the tragedy became public, Immigration Minister
Phillip Ruddock told the media that the sinking may have
an upside... In the sense that some people may see the dangers
inherent in it [i.e. making the voyage to Australia]. The
meaning was unmistakable: the government viewed the drownings
as a convenient deterrent, an event that would send a message
to the estimated 2000 refugees waiting in Indonesia to make the
trip to Australia that they could expect to lose their lives.
Responding to questions in the Senate late last month, Federal
Police Minister Ellison boasted, Over the last 12 months
or more, we have not had a boat land on the mainland of Australia.
That has been because of our strategies, which have largely involved
cooperation with the Indonesian police. I have to tell you right
now that I do not have any trouble with that. It has advanced
the interests of this country.
The Howard governments response to last weeks tragic
events in Bali further underscores its inhuman treatment of the
SIEV X passengers.
After the drownings last year, Howard justified the governments
inaction with the (false) claim that the boat sank in Indonesian
waters. It was not our responsibility, he told the
media. But when Australian citizens sustained injuries in the
Bali bomb blasts, the government lost no time in dispatching military
aircraft to Indonesian territory to airlift them out.
While more people perished at sea than were killed in Bali,
media coverage was scant and the issue quickly buried. After the
event, Operation Relex, with all its resources, failed to conduct
any investigation into how 353 people could have drowned in an
area directly under its surveillance. Moreover, not a single government
department raised the need for an inquiry. Because the SIEV X
victims were penniless refugees, from the Middle East and Central
Asia, with coloured skin and no passports, their lives were regarded
as entirely expendablenot only by the Howard government
in pursuit of an election win, but by the entire official establishment.
The latest revelations concerning sabotage operations in Indonesia
indicate that the Australian governments culpability in
the terrible tragedy of SIEV X may yet prove to go far beyond
its failure to mount a rescue.
See Also:
The tragedy of SIEV X: Did
the Australian government deliberately allow 353 refugees to drown?
[16 August 2002]
Howard's dirty tricks campaign
committee
How the Australian election was subverted
[19 February 2002]
350 refugees drown
trying to get to Australia
[24 October 2001]
Why the Tampa
refugees should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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