The
Skyluck left
Singapore on 12 January 1979, under the command of a Taiwanese captain and a mixed crew of Taiwanese, Indonesian, and Chinese seamen. Sometime between 19 and 21 January, the ship entered Vietnamese territorial waters off the
Mekong Delta and loading of migrants began. From the coastal city of
Bến Tre, refugees boarded small vessels and were shuttled to larger wooden vessels offshore or in rural coastal areas, and then out to the
Skyluck. By the time the boarding was finished, there were 3,200 migrants on the freighter. The price of passage for each refugee was between 10 and 15
taels of gold (one tael = 1.2
troy ounces), with the cost of gold at the start of 1979 being around US$230. On 24 January, the ship departed Vietnamese waters; on the evening of 31 January it arrived off
Palawan,
Philippines, and overnight approximately 600 refugees were offloaded to shore. The operation was discovered by Philippine naval authorities, who drove the
Skyluck out of Philippine waters. There are multiple accounts from passengers that, on 1 February, another large vessel came alongside the
Skyluck, and the collected gold payment of the passengers was transferred under armed guard. Only 10 days earlier, Hong Kong authorities had found and confiscated close to 4,000 troy ounces of gold payment (then worth US$1 million) aboard the refugee smuggling ship
Huey Fong after it anchored in Hong Kong harbour with 3,300 refugees aboard. In the early hours of 7 February, the
Skyluck arrived in Hong Kong waters unannounced, with 2,651 remaining refugees aboard. The Hong Kong Marine Police did not detect the ship as it entered the territorial waters, until it anchored in the middle of
Victoria Harbour. The ship was surrounded by police launches and boarded in the morning hours. Authorities escorted the ship and ordered it to anchor in the West Lamma Channel, between Lamma and Cheung Chau Islands. The engine's fuel pumps were removed to immobilize the ship. When questioned by police, the Taiwanese captain claimed that on his way from Singapore, in the course of legitimate shipping activity, he and the crew had rescued the refugees in the
South China Sea sometime between 18 and 21 January. Refugees were confined to the ship for more than four months in squalid conditions, with the Hong Kong government providing basic necessities such as food, water, and limited access to mail. On 11 March, a group of about 100 refugees jumped overboard and started to swim the mile to shore. About fifty made it to Lamma Island, where they were promptly rounded up by police. Two were admitted to hospital and treated for exhaustion. While in custody, a group of young men unfurled a banner which read in English "Please Help Us", and tossed a message to the press through the wire fencing, which asked that the refugees be allowed to land. Those who did not make it to shore were picked up by launches and returned to the freighter. Those reaching shore were also returned to the ship. A hunger strike was commenced on 12 June, in order to force authorities to allow the refugees to come ashore. When this failed, and a storm and favourable wind direction arrived on 29 June, the anchor chain was cut, and the ship drifted aground on Lamma Island. The port side was damaged and water poured in, leaving the ship partially sunk at the shore. Refugees immediately climbed to shore on cargo nets and rope ladders thrown off the side of the ship. Some exited on the "sea side" to a pontoon that had been lashed to the ship to allow food and water delivery. However, the rope ladder was too short and passengers had to jump the remaining 3.5 metres. All of the
Skyluck refugees were transported to
Chi Ma Wan detention centre on
Lantau Island. Within a few weeks, refugees were moved to UNHCR refugee camps, such as the Jubilee Transit Centre in Sham Shui Po. Many ended up immigrating to the United States, Australia, Canada, United Kingdom or Germany, but had lengthy waits before being accepted. ==Criminal proceedings==