The Borneo Post

EU working without ‘letup’ to help migrants in Libya

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BRUSSELS: The EU said Thursday it is working without ‘ letup’ for a durable solution to the plight of migrants in Libya, adding it shared French President Emmanuel Macron’s anger over slave markets there.

The US network CNN triggered a wave of condemnati­on when it aired footage last week of an apparent auction where black men were presented to North African buyers as potential farmhands and sold.

“I fully share the French president’s indignatio­n,” European Union migration commission­er Dimitris Avramopoul­os told AFP after Macron called the slave auctions a ‘crime against humanity.’

“We are all conscious of the appalling and degrading conditions in which some migrants are held in Libya.

“This cannot last,” Avramopoul­os said in an email exchange with AFP.

“It is exactly for this reason that the European Union is working without letup, on all fronts, with its internatio­nal partners to find durable solutions,” he added.

Such solutions, he said, must comply with founding EU values of solidarity and respect for human rights.

But the European Union — where Macron is trying to carve out his influence — has also been criticised for cooperatin­g with the Libyan coastguard in seeking to block migrants from leaving.

The UN this month deplored an EU policy of helping the Libyan authoritie­s intercept migrants trying to cross the Mediterran­ean and return them to ‘horrific’prisons in Libya.

Guinean president Conde on Wednesday also criticised Europe’s cooperatio­n with the Libyans.

“The refugees are living in extremely bad conditions,” he said.

“Our European friends were not right to ask Libya to keep immigrants (in detention).”

The AU leader said he was ‘in contact with all leaders’, adding: “We are trying to find a solution, even if it means bringing all of our citizens home.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters, some from Sub-Saharan African nations, shout slogans during a demonstrai­on against ‘Slavery in Libya’ outside the Libyan embassy in the Moroccan capital Rabat. — AFP photo
Protesters, some from Sub-Saharan African nations, shout slogans during a demonstrai­on against ‘Slavery in Libya’ outside the Libyan embassy in the Moroccan capital Rabat. — AFP photo

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