The Star Malaysia

FB slammed over videos

Rights groups outraged over upload of human traffickin­g posts

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LONDON: People smugglers are using Facebook to broadcast the abuse and torture of migrants in order to extort ransom money from their families, the UN migration agency said.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) lambasted the tech giant for failing to police the platform and help crack down on trafficker­s.

One video hosted on the site since June shows Libyan gang masters threatenin­g emaciated and abused migrants – mostly Somalis and Ethiopians – huddled in a concrete room.

IOM said the trafficker­s had sent clips to the captives’ families via the encrypted messaging service WhatsApp –a Facebook-owned applicatio­n – along with threats that their loved ones would be killed unless ransoms of up to US$10,000 (RM41,950) were paid.

One young Somali man is seen lying face down with a concrete block on his back.

“I was asked for US$8,000 (RM33,560),” he says, according to the IOM.

“They broke my teeth. They broke my hand. I have been here 11 months. They put this stone on me for the last three days. It’s really painful.”

British newspaper The Times, which ran the story on its front page on Friday, also quoted a young Ethiopian who had been held for 15 months.

“They beat me with iron bars. They ordered me to pay US$8,300 (RM34,818) and my family cannot afford to pay that amount,” he said.

Hundreds of thousands of refu- gees and migrants have crossed the Mediterran­ean from North Africa to Europe since 2014, and thousands have died trying.

Facebook, which has also been criticised for failing to stop trafficker­s using the platform to advertise their services, said posts by smuggling groups would be removed if reported.

“We encourage people to keep using our reporting tools to flag this kind of behaviour so it can be reviewed and removed by our global team of experts, who work with law enforcemen­t agencies around the world,” a spokesman said.

But Facebook said it had not removed the June video as it had been posted by a Somali journalist and was important for raising awareness of the problem.

However, IOM spokesman Leonard Doyle accused Facebook of complete “nonsense”, adding that the smugglers had used the journalist to publicise their demands.

He said it was totally inappropri­ate for Facebook to host a video showing the faces of vulnerable people being abused.

“Don’t let Facebook off the hook here. It’s an absolutely nonsensica­l argument that it’s up to the public to notify Facebook of stuff that’s happening on Facebook.

“They should invest heavily in policing their platforms to stop vulnerable migrants being exploited, extorted and murdered.”

“It’s not good enough to say, ‘we are a technology platform, it’s got nothing to do with us’.”

Doyle said the IOM had tried to find the people in the video, but they had disappeare­d. — Reuters

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