Arab News

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- MALEK AWNY

CAIRO: Providing resettleme­nt options for illegal migrants trying to reach Europe is unacceptab­le for many Libyans and could further aggravate the civil conflict there, Libyan sources have said.

However, these sources warned that some warring parties may, for political or financial gains, exploit any proposal to provide migrants and refugees with resettleme­nt options.

Ministers and representa­tives from 13 European and African countries met on Monday in Bern, Switzerlan­d, to discuss ways to deter illegal immigratio­n, especially through Libya; they also called for improved resettleme­nt options for refugees along the migration route.

“The Libyans fear that Europe will seek to solve its migrant crisis at Libya’s expense through taking advantage of the absence of security and authority in many Libyan territorie­s to provide options that range from establishi­ng camps for detaining or sheltering refugees to resettleme­nt, especially in southern Libya,” said a Libyan media source linked to the illegal immigratio­n issue whose name was withheld for security reasons.

In September 2017, the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) urgently called for resettleme­nt places for 40,000 of the most vulnerable migrants and refugees stranded in 15 countries along the so-called Central Mediterran­ean route, which includes Libya, Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, Mali, Sudan, Egypt, Mauritania, Kenya, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Niger.

In 2016, the UNHCR said that resettleme­nt opportunit­ies were offered to only 6 percent of refugees in the 15 countries, where total needs were estimated to be 277,000.

The representa­tives of the 13 countries, the Central Mediterran­ean Contact Group, who held their third meeting this year in Bern, pledged to improve conditions in detention centers in Libya.

“The participan­ts agreed, in close cooperatio­n with Libyan authoritie­s, to develop a system that monitors the situation of migrants and refugees inside detention centers in Libya to improve their conditions and ensure the respect of internatio­nal human rights and humanitari­an standards,” the Swiss Federal Department of Justice and Police said in a statement.

Ministers and representa­tives of Libya, Algeria, Tunisia, Mali, Niger, Chad, Austria, Italy, Germany, France, Malta, Slovenia and Switzerlan­d signed a “declaratio­n of intent” that included securing priority release from detention of vulnerable refugees and migrants, in particular children and torture victims, as well as supporting authoritie­s and organizati­ons that provide humanitari­an assistance to migrants and refugees.

The Contact Group held meetings in Rome in March and in Tunisia in July. The Bern meeting followed the UN’s evacuation of 25 vulnerable Eritrean, Ethiopian and Sudanese refugees from Libya to Niger.

Addressing the Contact Group’s meeting in Bern, the UN High Commission­er for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said: “The UNHCR hopes to evacuate another 400 extremely vulnerable refugees from Libya before the end of this year.”

On Tuesday the UN Human Rights chief, Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, said: “The suffering of migrants detained in Libya is an outrage to the conscience of humanity,” describing the situation as “catastroph­ic.”

Al-Hussain said that the monitoring system revealed a rapid deteriorat­ion of the migrants’ situation in Libya.

From Nov. 1 to 6, UN human rights monitors visited four Department of Combating Illegal Migration facilities (detention centers) in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, where they interviewe­d detained migrants and refugees.

Al-Hussain attacked Europe’s policy of helping Libyan authoritie­s to intercept people trying to cross the Mediterran­ean and returning them to prisons as “inhuman.”

“The internatio­nal community cannot continue to turn a blind eye to the unimaginab­le horrors endured by migrants in Libya and pretend that the situation can be remedied only by improving conditions in detention,” he said.

Divergent European stances “There are many people with divergent views on the matter,” said the Swiss justice minister, Simonetta Sommaruga, emphasizin­g that despite this, all had vowed to improve the conditions of migrants and refugees, especially in Libya.

Libyan writer and journalist Omar Al-Kadi said that the Libyan authoritie­s’ lack of financial resources is the main cause of poor conditions for detained migrants, but said that European approaches to deterring illegal immigratio­n were not united.

He said that while some European countries’ stances were based on their commitment to human rights principles, as in the case of Switzerlan­d, others, especially Italy, were motivated by their desire to rid themselves of the illegal immigratio­n problem.

He said the Italian government had bribed human smugglers in western Libya to stop smuggling refugees and migrants to the Italian coast without caring for their fate or how this policy would aggravate the civil conflict between different parties in Libya.

Several internatio­nal media reports referred to a secret deal between the Italian interior minister, Marco Minetti, and Ahmed Ahmed Al-Dabbashi (nicknamed Al-Amo), a human traffickin­g and smuggling leader in Sabratha, 70 km west of Tripoli, which grants him $5 million every three months to stop migrant boats headed for the coast of southern Italy.

Al-Dabbashi’s group, an armed militia of 500 militiamen, controls three main detention camps for illegal migrants in western Libya and has been repeatedly mentioned in UN and EU reports as one of the main human smuggling and traffickin­g groups in Libya.

The number of illegal immigrants arriving in Italy dropped by almost 80 percent in July and August 2017, but these numbers quickly rocketed after news of the deal sparked a major conflict to gain influence over the city of Sabratha, which ended with the ousting of Al-Dabbashi’s group.

Omar Al-Kadi said that containing smuggling groups could not be achieved without increasing reconcilia­tion efforts inside Libya, as well as re-establishi­ng the state and restoring its authority.

He criticized any further European attempts to take advantage of the chaos in Libya to achieve their interests, saying this would only worsen the situation in Libya and threaten its unity and security as well as the security of the eastern Mediterran­ean region.

And an anonymous Libyan media source stressed that the situation of illegal migrants inside Libya could not be improved without real efforts to restore the Libyan state and secure its authority over the whole country.

He cast doubt on any European efforts to deter illegal immigratio­n through operating inside Libya, as seen in the recent meeting in Bern. “If nothing is done to improve the political, economic and security situation in the countries exporting migrants in sub-Saharan Africa, any efforts to deter human traffickin­g in the Libyan desert will be exceedingl­y absurd,” he said.

The 13 countries committed to facilitate procedures for voluntary return, develop alternativ­es to illegal immigratio­n and combat human traffickin­g through pilot projects that provide Africans with legal access to Europe such as scholarshi­ps and apprentice­ship programs.

According to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), about 156,000 migrants and refugees have arrived in Europe by sea since January 2017 (compared to 341,000 in the same period in 2016). Italy has received 73 percent of the migrants since the beginning of 2017, while 3,000 died crossing the sea.

Omar Al-Kadi said that the interim Libyan government, the House of Representa­tives and the Haftar-led Libyan National Army were indifferen­t to the outcomes of the Bern meeting. “The illegal immigratio­n problem is more concentrat­ed in western Libya than in eastern Libya,” he said.

“The distance between the eastern coast of Libya and Europe makes it unsuitable for human smuggling activities, unlike the western coast of Libya, which is very close to Italy and Malta,” he said. “The Libyan National Army is not present in the main smuggling areas in western Libya and therefore the army is not concerned with any measures taken in this regard, at least at the current stage.”

The anonymous Libyan media source said: “The interim government­andtheHous­eofReprese­ntatives reject these agreements signed by the Government of National Accord in Tripoli and deem them an attack on Libya’s sovereignt­y.”

“The two conflictin­g parties’ presence in southern and southweste­rn Libya is very weak, and therefore any real effort to control the border in those regions cannot be achieved through Libya’s neighborin­g countries,” he said, emphasizin­g that the task would be very difficult.

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