Irish naval ship rescues 712 people near Libya
EU effort to halt migrants founders in Libya’s chaos
DUBLIN/TRIPOLI: An Irish naval ship rescued more than 700 people off the coast of Tripoli, while Libya’s coast guard lament lack of resources to deal with the situation.
Ireland’s Defense Forces said on Monday that its naval ship rescued 712 people including pregnant women and infants off the coast of the Libyan capital as part of an international migrant rescue effort.
The LÉ Eithne ship led the rescue of multiple vessels in distress 40 km northwest of Tripoli throughout Sunday. Six migrants, including one baby, were revived from states of unconsciousness.
The ship will transport the people, including 14 pregnant women and four infants below the age of four months, to a designated “port of safety” to be handed over to Italian authorities.
“I’m very proud to say all lives were saved, no lives were lost. It was a complex operation where lives were at stake at every turn over a full eight-hour period,” Commander Brian Fitzgerald told national broadcaster RTE from the ship.
“Overall, they were really in a wretched condition but in all cases healthy enough to undertake the journey to a port of safety.”
Indifferent West Meanwhile, Libya’s coast guard received the first of a long-awaited batch of patrol boats from Italy last month, but two of the four vessels were found to have mechanical problems and one broke down on the way to Tripoli.
As Italy’s interior minister later flew in to present the boats officially at a naval base in the Libyan capital, coast guards grumbled that the vessels were old and had little deck space for rescued migrants.
“They want us to be Europe’s policeman. At the same time, that policeman needs resources,” said naval coast guard spokesman Ayoub Qassem. “I challenge anyone to work in these conditions.”
Half-a-million people have crossed the Mediterranean from Libya to Italy over the past four years, mainly sub-Saharan Africans who pay smugglers to shepherd them across the desert to Libya and onward to Europe in unseaworthy dinghies. An estimated 13,000 of them have drowned.
European governments want to stop the migrants and break the grip of the smugglers. But more than four months after Italy and the EU launched a new push to tackle the crisis, accounts by migrants, aid workers and officials show that effort is all but failing to make a difference.
When Libyan authorities do catch migrants, they take them to detention centers nominally under the control of the government, which already house about 8,000 people. Though Europeans have pledged funding to improve the camps, some are still so cramped that migrants have to sleep sitting up.
At Tripoli’s Tariq Al-Siqqa migrant center, where visiting dignitaries are brought, flowers have been planted in the courtyard and washbasins installed. But behind a padlocked metal gate hundreds of migrants still languish, crammed side to side on mattresses in a single unventilated room.
“They shut us up, they imprison us, they ask us for money,” said one 22-year-old from Guinea, who has been in the center since March, when he was intercepted by the Libyan coast guard with about 120 other migrants shortly after they set off for Italy. “They hit people. They don’t like black skin.”
No Turkey deal
The sea route from the Libyan coast is one of two main routes in the biggest flow of migrants to Europe since World War II. The other, by sea from Turkey to Greece, was largely shut down last year after an agreement between the EU and Ankara, but the flow from Libya has only increased.
This year has already seen 70,000 people make the journey, with the summer peak season for the voyage only just beginning. An estimated 2,000 have died so far this year.
Unlike Turkey, Libya is still seen as too dangerous for Europeans to send migrants back, so those who make it into international waters usually end up in Italy.