A Certain Maritime Incident

the sinking of SIEV X

Tony Kevin

  • Winner, 2005 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, Community Relations Commission for a Multicultural NSW Award
  • Winner, 2005 ACT Book of the Year Award
  • Shortlisted, 2005 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, Gleebooks Award
  • Shortlisted, 2005 Age Non-Fiction Book of the Year Award
  • Shortlisted, 2005 Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards, Literary or Media Work Advancing Public Debate

A Certain Maritime Incident: the sinking of SIEV X provides a compelling and engaging examination of an incident whose importance in Australian political and social history should not be underestimated.’

Mark Hanna (Civil Liberty)

‘This is a powerful, startling and nationally important work of non-fiction about the migration experience. Tony Kevin's journalistic integrity and exhaustive research are impeccable in his account of the sinking of the SIEV X in the seas between Australian and Indonesia in 2001 ... This is a book of national significance, and goes to the heart of our country's ability to show compassion and to be truthful; it also breathtaking to read.’

Judges comments, 2005 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards

'a careful and well-researched argument . . . [Kevin's] resolute and single-minded determination to uncover the truth deserves considerable respect and public admiration. At great personal cost, Kevin has upheld the finest traditions of public service, in the process exposing the politicisation of the federal bureaucracy and the lack of accountability in Australian government today.'

Scott Burchill (The Age)

In October 2001, over 400 asylum-seekers departed from Indonesia in a grossly overcrowded, unseaworthy boat bound for Australia. Somewhere between the two countries the boat sank, with a terrible loss of life 353 of the asylum-seekers drowned.

The Australian government claimed it had no prior knowledge of the unfolding tragedy. Yet ministers and senior officials from the beginning tried to mislead the Australian Senate and the community over important questions. What did the government and its agencies know about the boat and its fate, and when? Did we have any responsibility for the tragedy? Did we have a duty of care to save the survivors that we shirked?

A Certain Maritime Incident joins the dots for the first time to reveal a disquieting record of government misconduct, including Australian Federal Police involvement in a people-smuggling ‘disruption program’, and an extraordinary combination of stonewalling and professed ignorance by a government dedicated to micromanaging the deterrence of asylum-seeker voyages.

The victims of this maritime disaster were mostly women and children, and many of their male family members are living in the Australian community on temporary protection visas. This book is dedicated to the grieving kin. It is also for the rest of us because, Tony Kevin argues, nothing less than a comprehensive judicial inquiry into the sinking of SIEV X will suffice if Australia is to regain its national honour.

'a passionate, heartfelt and very detailed account of the tragic sinking of a vessel — which later became known as SIEV X (suspected illegal entry vessel X) — on October 19, 2001, with the deaths of 353 asylum seekers.'

Louise Dodson (Sydney Morning Herald)

‘Was the Australian Government involved in the deliberate sinking of the SIEV X and the deaths of 353 people? Kevin, by his own admission, raises more questions than he can answer. Reading A Certain Maritime Incident, however, it becomes difficult to believe that the answer to this final, crucial question could be ‘No’.’

Jess Whyte (overland)

A Certain Maritime Incident is a remarkable achievement ... It is a meticulous presentation of the facts, piecing together in remarkable detail the story of the SIEV X ... The book is an essential read for all those involved in the campaign for a more humane refugee policy. It also has an important audience among those concerned with the potential for government lies and deception on a scale far more sinister than the “children overboard” incident.’

Sarah Stephen (Green Left Weekly)

‘a carefully researched book’

Helen Pausacker (Inside Indonesia)

‘The book is a read of serious consequence.’

Alexander Symonds (Pulse, Vibewire.net)

A Certain Maritime Incident: the sinking of SIEV X is an arresting account and painstaking reconstruction of what happened to the SIEV X and its passengers after it capsized in 2001 ... Convincingly argued and meticulously researched, Kevin's book includes new and startling allegations about possible Australian involvement in the boat's sabotage, reveals glaring discrepancies in official accounts of the voyage and, importantly, brings forward the rarely heard voices of survivors, many of whom are now living in Australia. Kevin's determination to seek the truth, despite the personal cost, results in a courageous and impressive work of investigative writing that raises important questions and reaches disturbing conclusions about the extent and consequences of the Government's border protection operations ... Until such time as a judicial inquiry allows further evidence to be presented, this rigorous account is a vital public record of what happened to SIEV X.’

Judges comments, 2005 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards

‘Disagree or agree with the assertions and inferences made in this book, it is undoubtedly one of the best current affairs books released this year.’

Sukrit Sabhlok (Pulse, Vibewire.net)

‘This is a brave and important book, illustrating the power of non-fiction writing to intervene in current political crises in the face of journalistic amnesia and government obfuscation.’

Age Book of the Year, judges comments

‘timely and excellent’

Robin Osborne (The Northern Rivers Echo)

‘You will be deeply moved by this book, from sorrow to anger, as the counts of government misconduct and cover up grow with each passing page. Behaviour we would expect more from a proud Latin-American Junta than a western democracy. An essential book for those interested in uncovering the "hidden history" that has become part and parcel of modern Australian government. My vote for non-fiction of the year.’

Dean Merlino (Readings August Newsletter)

‘Treatment of refugees is one of the great scandals of the modern age… With impressive courage and determination, Tony Kevin has unearthed the grim and deeply moving story he recounts in this remarkable book — an "always powerfully contested story," and one of "durable national significance" that has "crept into the hearts and consciences of many Australians" and must find its way to the hearts and consciences of many others if these persistent and shocking crimes are to be brought to end.’

Noam Chomsky

‘This 306-page investigative tour de force uncovers many nuggets of information that leave the reader distinctly uncomfortable. Not dissimilar to former intelligence officer Andrew Wilkie's Axis Of Deceit (Black Inc), Kevin fears "there are no longer meaningful checks and balances if a prime minister, the national security ministers and their senior advisers are prepared to manipulate information to cover up politically inconvenient truths". Our very democracy is in a parlous state, Kevin passionately articulates, and yet both major parties and big media appear content to continue diminishing its checks and balances through outright collusion.’

(The Sun-Herald)

‘Overall, this book provides a well-researched and insightful examination of the SIEV X incident. Kevin is to be highly commended for bringing the tragedy and the serious questions that remain unanswered to our attention.’

Paul Bellamy (New Zealand International Review)

‘Kevin has put his professional skills of analysis at the service of the truth, exposing the flim-flam, evasions and lies for what they are. It requires a special grace to stick at this sort of work, knowing that it may bring you derision or worse at the hands of powerful people.’

Father Edmund Campion (Online Catholics)

‘I believe we should judge a nation not on its wealth, prestige or strength but on how it treats the weak, the vulnerable and the marginalised. It is for these reasons that I admire Tony Kevin and commend his advocacy on behalf of people many would prefer to forget.’

Dr Tom Frame (Defender)

'In his outstanding investigation of the national shame and disgrace shrouding this incident, former Australian Diplomat, Tony Kevin, questions how this tragic event was allowed to occur . . . A Certain Maritime Incident is a critical examination of the moral, ethical and legal flotsam and jetsam precariously floating around the story of this doomed boat.'

Chelsea Rodd (JAS Review of Books)

Tony Kevin

Tony_kevin

Author photo
Peter Hislop

Tony Kevin holds degrees in civil engineering, and in economics and political science. He retired from the Australian foreign service in 1998, after a 30-year career during which he served in the Foreign Affairs and Prime Minister’s departments, and was Australia’s ambassador to Poland and Cambodia. He is currently an honorary visiting fellow at the Australian National University’s Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies in Canberra.

He has written extensively on Australian foreign, national security, and refugee policies in Australia’s national print media, and is the author of the award-winning books A Certain Maritime Incident: the sinking of SIEV X, and Walking the Camino: a modern pilgrimage to Santiago. His most recent book is Crunch Time: using and abusing Keynes to fight the twin crises of our era.

Cmi Buy from Readings
Format: Pb
Extent: 320pp
Size: 234mm x 153mm
ISBN (10): 1920769 218
ISBN (13): 9781920769215
RRP: $32.95
Pub date: August 2004