Cape Times

Migration tide to Europe from Libya slows to a trickle

- AIDAN LEWIS AND ULF LAESSING

MIGRANT-laden boats to Italy from Sabratha, formerly Libya’s biggest people-smuggling hub, have slowed to a trickle thanks to a security crackdown triggered by European pressure that ejected the city’s top smuggler.

But the local branch of Libya’s coastguard feels neglected. It says it is still starved for resources, unable to run its own patrols with only one broken-down boat, one car and no uniforms.

Sabratha, 75km west of the capital, Tripoli, where people smugglers exploited gang lawlessnes­s for years, was the main launchpad on Libya’s Mediterran­ean coast for Italy-bound migrants, with the flow peaking in 2016 and early 2017.

Crossings dropped abruptly in July 2017 after the city’s top smuggler, Ahmed al-Dabbashi – also known as Al-Ammu (the Uncle) – struck a deal with Tripoli authoritie­s under Italian pressure to desist from traffickin­g migrants.

Rival militia ejected Al-Ammu and his followers in fighting two months later, and have since consolidat­ed their position, fending off an attempted comeback by Al-Ammu earlier this month.

With EU and Italian support, Libya’s coastguard has increased intercepti­ons of migrants in an area stretching 155km off the coast, while charity rescue ships that once guided many of the migrants to Italy have retreated.

Migrant embarkatio­ns from Sabratha, a city of 120 000, have all but ceased. While thousands once set sail every week, 35 would-be migrants were detained in October in houses before they departed, officials said.

“We don’t have human trafficker­s any more. The militias are gone,” said General Omar Almabrouk Abduljalil, head of a Sabratha operations room for military and security forces.

But the local Sabratha coastguard said it was not benefiting from EU support being channelled through Tripoli, where naval and interior ministry units have received nine patrol boats.

Sabratha’s coastguard has 150 members but just one car and a broken inflatable previously used by smugglers.

“We don’t even have uniforms,” said a navy officer dressed in civilian clothes, who said he was transferre­d to Sabratha from Tripoli as some coastguard personnel who had collaborat­ed with smugglers were pushed out. “We can’t do patrols. We can’t fix the boat’s engine,” he said. “The radar is broken.”

By way of explanatio­n, he said co-ordination between Tripoli and smaller coastal towns remains limited.

In Sabratha, local security forces include veterans of the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 as well as Salafists, an ultra-conservati­ve Muslim group that has expanded its influence across the country.

“They support the army as volunteers in these exceptiona­l times Libya is passing through,” said Abduljalil, the Sabratha security co-ordinator.

With this year almost over, 22 541 migrants have arrived in Italy by sea since January, well down from the 119 369 in all of 2017, says the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration (IOM). But many migrants are still dying when overladen, unsafe inflatable­s founder en route.

A total of 1 277 are recorded to have drowned on the central Mediterran­ean route so far this year, compared to 2 786 in the same period last year, the IOM says.

While officials say boat departures from Sabratha have stopped, migrants are sometimes detained trying to reach other coastal cities such as Zuwara near the Tunisian border.

“There is a new trend of Libyan families smuggling migrants from Tripoli to Zuwara for 500 dinars (R4 900),” said Basim Bashir, who runs the Sabratha unit fighting illegal migration.

“So now we are also searching families at checkpoint­s.”

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