The Welland Tribune

Leaders urge logistical support and funds

Italy, Germany defend Libyan patrols after UN criticism

- NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME — Italy and Germany defended Wednesday their support for Libyan coast guard patrols returning migrants back to Libya, after the UN human rights chief denounced the policy as inhumane.

Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano and his German counterpar­t, Sigmar Gabriel met Wednesday in Rome, a day after the UN released the findings of a visit to Libyan detention centres. Human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said the conditions the UN team uncovered were “an outrage to the conscience of humanity.”

The UN monitors, who visited Nov. 1- 6, found thousands of hungry men, women and children locked up in packed hangars. Many had been victim of torture, rape, forced labour, starvation and physical violence during their journeys and in Libyan detention centres.

Under pressure from anti- immigrant sentiment across Europe, the European Union has wholeheart­edly backed the Italy- driven policy of beefing up Libya’s coast guard patrols to prevent migrants from leaving aboard smugglers’ dinghies bound for Europe. Human rights groups have denounced the policy, saying it exposes returned migrants to Libya’s lawless detention centres, with no legal recourse.

Alfano insisted that Italy’s support for the Libyan coast guard — which has included patrol boats and training, as well as tacit deals with militias on the ground — had saved lives and dealt a blow to the trafficker­s.

“We had migrants in the hands of smugglers and this represente­d the most tragic travel agency in the history of mankind,” Alfano said. He said Italy was now funding the UN refugee agency and the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Migration to improve conditions inside the detention centres they operate.

“We invite all those who are giving lessons to instead give more funds, more logistical support and more interventi­on in Libya to solve this issue,” he added.

Gabriel concurred that conditions in the detention centres were unacceptab­le but said there were no alternativ­es. He called for improvemen­ts to the Libyan coast guard and to the detention centres, and for migrants to be placed with UN and IOM shelters, not those controlled by militias.

The UN mission in Libya over the weekend airlifted a first group of 25 migrants to Niger, part of a new humanitari­an evacuation program to get refugees out of Libya. More airlifts are expected.

The UN human rights chief called for far more: Zeid demanded Libyan authoritie­s investigat­e and prosecute those responsibl­e for atrocities inside its detention centres, and for migrants sent back to Libya not to be detained at all.

“The increasing interventi­ons of the EU and its member states have done nothing so far to reduce the level of abuses suffered by migrants,” he said in a statement. On the contrary, conditions have only worsened, he said.

“We cannot be a silent witness to modern day slavery, rape and other sexual violence, and unlawful killings in the name of managing migration and preventing desperate and traumatize­d people from reaching Europe’s shores,” he said.

 ?? FABIO FRUSTACI/ ANSA VIA AP ?? Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano, right, and his German counterpar­t Sigmar Gabriel give their statements following their meeting at the Farnesina Palace Foreign Ministry, in Rome, on Wednesday.
FABIO FRUSTACI/ ANSA VIA AP Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano, right, and his German counterpar­t Sigmar Gabriel give their statements following their meeting at the Farnesina Palace Foreign Ministry, in Rome, on Wednesday.

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