Space Industry and Business News  
ABOUT US
Indonesia arrests suspect in asylum deaths

by Staff Writers
Jakarta (UPI) Jan 28, 2011
Indonesian police arrested a man with dual Australian and Iranian citizenship suspected of helping organize a fateful asylum seekers' boat trip to Australia's Christmas Island.

The suspect, Haydar Khani, alias Ali Hamid, was arrested in a hotel room in Senayan, south Jakarta.

Police also arrested two men they said have connections toKhani and they continue to search residences of people known to the suspects.

Next week, as part of their investigation, the National Police's people smuggling unit will send a team to Australia to question survivors of the wrecked Siev 221, which was smashed to pieces in rough seas only yards from Christmas Island in December.

The arrests in Jakarta come days after an Australian court charged three Indonesians with people smuggling in the case of the stricken wooden-hulled Siev 221 in which around 50 of the 90 passengers died.

The men, aged 60, 32 and 22, were denied bail after the hearing in Perth, Western Australia. Each defendant, if found guilty, could be sentenced to 20 years in prison and fined around $220,000.

All three men will appear in an Australian court Feb. 15 for the start of a trial into the deaths of the asylum seekers, many of whose dramatic last moments were filmed close up as they clung to the wooden ship breaking apart against shoreline rocks in high seas.

Another alleged people smuggler is believed to have left the vessel before it entered Australian waters. It isn't known if the man who left the vessel is the Australian citizen arrested in Indonesia.

Indonesian police briefly detained Khani for questioning on the island of Flores in 2009, the head of the country's people-smuggling unit, Budi Santoso, said. ''He said he was sick with a mental illness for 10 years and was admitted to hospital," Santoso said.

Khani is suspected of being involved with helping organize six boatloads -- including the Siev 221 -- of potential asylum seekers set sail for Australia last years.

Police picked up Khani this time based on a tip from Australian Federal Police and the testimony of two Indonesians arrested earlier this year said they provided food and other logistical support for the boats.

Khani, who has been in Indonesia for a year and a half on a tourist visa, may be extradited to Australia for questioning over his involvement in the Siev 221 sinking. But no formal extradition request has been made, Australia's ambassador to Indonesia, Greg Moriarty, said.

Australian consular officials have visited Khani and confirmed that he is a dual Australian and Iranian citizen, Moriarty said. "Extraditions are a very complicated business,'' he said.

Cooperation between Indonesia and Australia over people smuggling has foundered on lack of extradition laws and also what Australians believe are lax penalties in Indonesia for transgressors.

If Khani is charged, he will be only the second person taken to an Indonesian court for organizing people smuggling to Australia, the government-owned Australian Broadcasting Corp. said.

Critics of Indonesia's record of clamping down on people smugglers point to the case in March of Abraham Lauhenapessy, a 49-year-old Indonesian.

Lauhenapessy, also known as Captain Bram, was arrested in October 2009 in Indonesian waters after the Indonesian navy intercepted his 90-foot wooden boat carrying 250 Sri Lankan would-be asylum seekers. He was discovered hiding among the asylum seekers on the vessel Jaya Lestari 5.

His trial in Jakarta ended in farce when he was freed after being fined $3,000 for not having the correct sailing documents for his ship. He was placed on probation for 18 months, six months less than prosecutors demanded. If he has a similar conviction, he will go to prison for a year.

Australia continues to battle people smugglers in an attempt to stem the flow of thousands of asylum seekers arriving in national waters and reaching land, most often Christmas Island, the isolated Australian territory 750 miles from the mainland off Australia's west coast.

Despite the efforts, around 5,000 asylum seekers reached Australia last year, putting a strain on the country's over-stretched detention facilities.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ABOUT US
Human Ability To Throw Long Distances Aided By An Illusion
Bloomington, IN (SPX) Jan 27, 2011
Can't help molding some snow into a ball and hurling it or tossing a stone as far into a lake as you can? New research from Indiana University and the University of Wyoming shows how humans, unlike any other species on Earth, readily learn to throw long distances. This research also suggests that this unique evolutionary trait is entangled with language development in a way critical to our ... read more







ABOUT US
Kindle Singles debuts pithy digital works

News Corp. to launch iPad newspaper Wednesday

China's Lenovo, NEC form PC joint venture in Japan

Touchscreens Made Of Carbon

ABOUT US
RAF Begin Training With US On Intelligence Aircraft

Joint STARS Successfully Supports JSuW JCTD

JICO Support System Receives Production Approval

Northrop Grumman Demonstrates MR-TCDL Capabilities

ABOUT US
First Delta IV Heavy Launches From Vandenberg

Beaming Rockets Into Space

Arianespace Announces Eutelsat Contract

ATM Is Readied For Its February Launch On Ariane 5

ABOUT US
Raytheon To Open GPS Collaboration Center In SoCal

Galileo Satellite Undergoes Launch Check-Up At ESTEC

Europe defends 'stupid' Galileo satellite

Galileo satnav system called 'stupid idea': US cable

ABOUT US
China refutes the J-20 uses F-117 copies

Asia budget carriers eye social media to cut costs

US, Canada defend F-35 fighter jet

Electronic devices seen as airplane threat

ABOUT US
Peripherals maker Logitech feels Asia-led sales boom

Motorola shares slide on gloomy outlook, iPhone

Toshiba returns to black for December quarter

Silicon Oxide Gets Into The Electronics Action On Computer Chips

ABOUT US
Russia Launches Meteorological Satellite

NASA's Glory Mission Will Study Key Pieces Of Climate Puzzle

St. John, US Virgin Islands

3D Model Of Ionosphere F-Region

ABOUT US
EU takes aim at Sweden's wolf hunt

Probe into illegal waste-dumping in Naples, 14 arrests

First Report On Fate Of Underwater Dispersants In Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

Big cities are not always biggest polluters


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement