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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/66326
- Title
- Introduction
- Author(s)
- Neumann, Klaus; Tavan, Gwenda
- Abstract
- On 15 April 2009, the Australian Navy intercepted a boat carrying some 50 suspected asylum-seekers near Ashmore Reef, a group of three small uninhabited islands about halfway between the Australian mainland and the Indonesian island of Roti. In accordance with the government’s policy, the boat was to be escorted to Christmas Island where the asylum-seekers were to be detained while security and health checks were carried out and their asylum claims processed. The next day, an explosion sank the boat, killed six of its passengers and badly injured dozens of others. The explosion was apparently caused when fuel that had been poured onto the deck, possibly to compel the Navy to take the boat’s passengers to Australia, was accidentally ignited. The boat was the sixth so-called suspected illegal entry vessel (SIEV) to arrive in Australian waters since the beginning of the year. [Introduction]
- Publication type
- Book chapter
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Faculty of Life and Social Sciences. Institute for Social Research
- Source
- Does history matter? Making and debating citizenship, immigration and refugee policy in Australia and New Zealand / Klaus Neumann and Gwenda Tavan (eds.), pp. 1-7
- Publication year
- 2009
- Keyword(s)
- Australia; Citizenship; Government policy; Immigration; New Zealand; Refugees
- Publisher
- ANU E-Press
- ISBN
- 9781921536946
- Publisher URL
- http://epress.anu.edu.au/immigration_citation.html
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2009 ANU E-Press. This chapter is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. The book is available to download from the ANU E-press website from the link above.
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