Indonesia
may boost naval patrols in the Sunda Strait as part of a collaborative
effort with Australia to stem the flow of asylum seekers to Christmas
Island.
High-level
talks in Jakarta on Monday between Foreign Minister Bob Carr and his
Indonesian counterpart Marty Natalegawa also dealt with plans to enhance
cooperation in search and rescue efforts involving asylum-seeker boats
in distress.
Speaking
after talks with Dr Natalegawa, Senator Carr welcomed comments from a
high-ranking Indonesian navy officer who said earlier in the day that
patrols in the Sunda Strait were crucial to disrupting people-smuggling
operations.
The
strait, between Java and Sumatra, has become the main thoroughfare for
boats dispatched by people smugglers, and was the route used by the
string of vessels that have prompted rescue operations in recent wee
"The
Indonesian navy is (already) having coordinated patrols with the
Australian navy," Admiral Untung Suropati told AAP on Monday.
"Co-ordinated patrols in Sunda Strait, I think, (are) very crucial in handling people smuggling."
Senator Carr said broader maritime cooperation was welcome.
"But we can't dump this problem on Indonesia," he said.
He also ramped up his attack on Opposition Leader Tony's Abbott's plan to send asylum-seeker boats back to Indonesia.
"Tony
Abbott is badly mistaken and naive if he thinks he can suddenly wave a
magic wand and say the relationship is now a thousand times more robust
and in that context I can start sending boats back," Senator Carr said.
Last
week he warned that a coalition victory at the next election would
create a diplomatic disaster in relations between Australia and
Indonesia.
Dr
Natalegawa also appeared to voice opposition to the coalition strategy,
saying the response to the asylum-seeker problem should be one that was
"mutually compatible".
"The
perpetrators behind people smuggling, they find the conditions in
Indonesia conducive to continue their operations," he said.
"But
we are doing our level best at the national level, working together
with Australia and other friendly countries to disrupt in a serious way
their operations."
Tubagus
Hasanudin, a member of the Indonesian parliamentary committee which
oversees defence and foreign affairs, also rejected the coalition
"turning back boats" strategy, saying people smuggling would be best
dealt with on a multilateral level.
"I just want to say that Indonesia should not be blamed on this issue," he told AAP.
"People smuggling has been the issue for ASEAN and Australia and there should be a common humane solution."
Senator Carr met with the committee before the talks with Dr Natalegawa. He is the first Australian foreign minister to do so.
"As Australian leaders have said, no relationship matters more to us than the one we have with Indonesia," he said later.
He
also spoke about the "sense of anticipation" in Australia about the
implications of growth in the Indonesian economy, which he said was
expected to double over the next decade.
"I think it will really multiply the links we've got," he said.
Dr
Natalegawa said it was "practically impossible" for him to exaggerate
the importance Jakarta attached to relations with Australia.
The
foreign ministers' meeting comes after discussions just two weeks ago
in Australia between Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
Source : SMH.au
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