EU complicit in Libya migrant torture and abuse – Amnesty
14/12/17
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Migrants on board a smugglers’ vessel off Libya
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Not only are European
governments aware of the “systematic abuse” and “appalling conditions” that
migrants are exposed to by Libyan authorities, they are also involved in these
crimes, Amnesty International has claimed in a recent report.
In an attempt to contain
the influx of sea-borne migrants and refugees, the EU member states “actively” contribute to “a
sophisticated system of abuse and exploitation of refugees and migrants by the Libyan Coast
Guard, detention authorities and smugglers”, Amnesty
International said on Tuesday.
“Hundreds of thousands of
refugees and migrants trapped in Libya are at the mercy of Libyan authorities,
militias, armed groups and smugglers, often working seamlessly together for
financial gain,” said Amnesty’s Europe
Director, John Dalhuisen. An estimated 20,000 people are currently kept in “these
overcrowded, unsanitary detention centers,” where“torture is rife,” the
group reports.
Held in detention for three months, a man from Gambia told
Amnesty about the suffering he endured: “In the center they don’t give food. They beat me
with a rubber hose, because they want money to release me. They call the family
while beating [you] so the family send money”.
Another man, from Nigeria, named “Victor”, described the fear he
felt before setting off from Libya. “I
had heard stories of Libyans arresting people at sea and taking them to prison,
and from there asking them to call their families to make them send money; and
stories of people who had died in the sea. But I feared Libya more; in Libya they treat anyone with a dark
skin as an animal…”.
The EU is “complicit
in these abuses”, Amnesty claims, singling out Italy. The EU
governments provide support to Libya, train and equip the country’s coastguard
with boats and other assistance, and clamp down on rescue efforts by the NGOs,
Amnesty reports, in ‘Libya’s Dark Web of Collusion’.
“By supporting Libyan
authorities in trapping people in Libya, without requiring the Libyan
authorities to tackle the endemic abuse of refugees and migrants or to even
recognize that refugees exist, European governments have shown where their true
priorities lie: namely, the closure of the central Mediterranean route, with
scant regard to the suffering caused”, Dalhuisen charged.
The European policies have proved efficient, resulting in a significant
drop of sea crossings compared to last year’s figures and even to the first six
months of 2017, Amnesty reports. While nearly 84,000 migrants arrived in Italy by sea in
the first half of the year, some 33,288 disembarked there between July and November.
Meanwhile, 3,091 didn’t
make it to the shore, the International Organization for Migration (IOM)
statistics estimate.
Amnesty has urged the EU
to “realize the horrific consequences of their policies
of containment, recognize their unlawful nature, and reset their co-operation
with Libya”, as well as to “enable
people to get to Europe through legal
pathways”.
The North African nation, ravaged by civil war, has turned into
a launch pad for those fleeing persecution, war and poverty and making a
perilous journey to Europe. The IOM identified
more than 400,000 refugees in Libya,
Amnesty says.
All comments [ 6 ]
European governments have not just been fully aware of these abuses
Last year at least 3,800 people died trying to make the sea crossing from Africa to Europe
Most have sold everything they own to finance the journey through Libya to the coast and the gateway to the Mediterranean
the smugglers become masters, the migrants and refugees become slaves
The EU must help migrants and refugees, they really need help to survive
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