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Lanka Navy begins probe into asylum-seekers' ride to Australia

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Press Trust of India Colombo
Sri Lanka's Navy has launched an investigation into the incident of some 66 Sri Lankan asylum- seekers reaching Australia by boat without being detected.

The investigation is expected to reveal how the boat had reached Geraldton in Western Australia without being detected by the Navy, Naval spokesman Kosala Warnakulasuriya said.

The boat was spotted on Tuesday within the harbour limits of Geraldton in Western Australia, more than 2,000 kilometres south of Australia's Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island. It was the first asylum boat to reach the Australian mainland.

Reacting to the arrival, the Australian authorities have indicated the asylum-seekers would be sent home by air.
 

Sri Lanka's envoy in Australia Thisara Samarasinghe has said that he would welcome such action.

He was stressing that they were economic migrants and debunked the theory that people resort to the risky boat ride to reach Australia due to human rights violations in his country.

In recent months, Sri Lankan Navy had intercepted several boats within the Sri Lankan waters carrying several hundreds of would be asylum-seekers to Australia.

Faced with recurring arrivals of Sri Lankan asylum-seekers since 2010, the Australians set up an off shore processing centre last August in the Pacific island of Nauru and Christmas Islands.

Since then they have sent back over 1,000 Sri Lankans some of them voluntarily.

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First Published: Apr 11 2013 | 5:35 PM IST

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