Foreign nationals removed from Australia after illegal boat arrival in Far North Queensland
Hızlı Bakış
- A group of foreign nationals has been removed from Australia after allegedly arriving illegally by boat near Weipa, Far North Queensland.
- A Taiwanese national was arrested and charged with people smuggling, while another man was detained.
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A group of foreign nationals allegedly arrived illegally by boat in Far North Queensland and have since been removed from Australia. A Taiwanese national was charged with people smuggling.
The federal government says a group of foreign nationals has been removed from Australia after allegedly reaching Far North Queensland illegally by boat this week.
The group allegedly came ashore from a boat onto a beach at Pennefather River, a popular camping spot about 50 kilometres north of Weipa, in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
The Australian Federal Police (AFP) said a 34-year-old man was arrested in a Weipa supermarket car park later in the day.
That man, a Taiwanese national, is due to appear in court in Cairns today, charged with one count of aggravated offence of people smuggling, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years' imprisonment.
It's not been confirmed how many people reached the mainland but the charge relates to an alleged offence involving at least five people.
The AFP said another man, 30, was also spoken to and detained under the Migration Act pending further inquiries.
Weipa is one of the largest centres on Cape York Peninsula.
About 4,000 people live in the bauxite mining town about 800km north-west of Cairns.
'Operation concluded'
In a statement, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said "the operation in Weipa has now concluded".
"Every person who attempted to enter Australia without a visa has now been removed," Mr Burke said.
"Those who assisted them will face the full force of the law.
"It remains the case that no people smuggling venture has been successful for more than a decade."
Federal Labor MP Matt Smith, whose seat of Leichhardt covers all of Cape York Peninsula and the Torres Strait, said the boat occupants were "in detention for processing".
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However, he said he was not able to reveal where the boat occupants originated from.
"The message we need to send to people who try to trade in this abhorrent model of business is you are not welcome in Australian sovereign waters," he said.
"Whatever happens next after you try to get here, you will not enjoy.
"We need to make it very clear to these people that this is not on and we will find you, and get you," he said.
A Border Force operation was mounted earlier this year in response to an influx of illegal foreign fishing boats entering Far North Queensland waters.
Mr Smith said that operation focused heavily on the Torres Strait and he had spoken to Mr Burke about that operation expanding to the waters surrounding Cape York Peninsula and the Gulf of Carpentaria.
The Queensland government and federal opposition have criticised the federal government's resourcing of border protection, raising concerns the alleged illegal arrivals could have gone undetected had a group of people not been camping at Pennefather River for the school holidays.
Mr Smith said "public information is always going to be part of our border security processes".
"It's just not feasible to have a boat every 20 to 30 kilometres along the entire coastline," Mr Smith said.
"The best form of surveillance often is civilians, for lack of a better term, who are out there going about their daily business able to call in to Border Force."
Queensland Police Minister Dan Purdie said the involvement of Queensland Police was limited to arresting those who allegedly came to shore illegally.
"The Queensland Police support of the operation was to help detain those people and we did that," he said.
He was highly critical of the Federal Government for not acting on the warnings of the state MP for Cook, David Kempton, who Mr Purdie said had been warning the northern border was "porous" for some time.
He said this was evidenced by the alleged arrival of illegal fishing boats in recent months.
"There's biosecurity risks with these people coming ashore, there's all sorts of risks," Mr Purdie said.
"I would've thought a successful (ABF) operation looked like intercepting a boat before they rocked up into town."
Açık Sorular
- How many people were on the boat?
- Where did the boat occupants originate from?

