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           Boat Captain Tells of Ordeal After Australian Interception

   by Associated Press

   The captain of a people-smuggling boat who says he was paid by
   Australian authorities to return the migrants to Indonesia has
   described a terrifying ordeal on the voyage back.

   The Indonesian captain, Johanes Humiang, said in an interview that his
   boat was seized by Australian authorities, who after interrogations and
   the offer of money transferred the crew and 65 migrants to two smaller
   vessels with insufficient fuel and food.

   The allegation of payments to people smugglers has strained relations
   between Indonesia and Australia, which has a policy of turning back
   migrants who arrive by boat. Migrants escaping poverty or oppression
   use Indonesia as a transit point for the perilous journey in often
   barely seaworthy vessels to Australia.

   Humiang, who is being held by Indonesian police on Rote island in
   central Indonesia, said there was an "emergency" at sea after one of
   the boats provided by Australia ran out fuel, causing panic among the
   mostly Sri Lankan migrants. The voyage continued after the crew
   transferred the people to the second boat.

   "The fuel was not enough," he said in the interview Wednesday. "We had
   to complete our journey back to Indonesia with a single boat and
   finally stranded."

   "The migrants started fighting," Humiang said. "The situation changed
   drastically and was frightening. I thought they would kill each other."

   Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has sidestepped questions about
   the May incident. He has said Australian authorities are being
   "incredibly creative" in their response to human trafficking.
   Indonesian officials say payments to people smugglers would amount to
   bribery and could encourage trafficking.

   The initial report from police said the captain and five crew members
   were paid a total of about $30,000. Steven Ivan Worotijan, a crew
   member who was also interviewed Wednesday, said the total was $31,000,
   with the captain receiving $6,000 from an Australian navy officer who
   identified himself as Agus and each of the crew $5,000.

   Humiang said the money paid to him and the crew was double what they
   would have earned if their boat wasn't intercepted.

   The migrant boat set out from a village in the Cisarua sub-district of
   West Java province and was intercepted by an Australian navy patrol
   ship after sailing for 20 days, according to Humiang. Police say the
   date of the interception was May 20, based on their interviews with the
   crew.

   Australia's hardline stance on boat people has reduced the number of
   migrants attempting to reach its shores by sea and is popular with the
   Australian public, giving the conservative ruling party a rare policy
   triumph. Australian media reports citing a government document say a
   policy of paying people smugglers to return migrants has been in place
   for four years.

   "During the interrogation, the Australian authorities offered us the
   money," Humiang said. "We were very surprised to see a pile of American
   dollars on the table in front of our eyes. They asked us to bring back
   the migrants with us and the money will be ours."

   Two of the migrants in interviews with Indonesian television have said
   they witnessed the money being handed over to the crew.
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References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/boat-captain-tells-of-ordeal-after-australian-interception/2827449.html