Daily Dispatch

Evacuation­s after Libya slave uproar

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A SUMMIT gathering European and African leaders from more than 80 countries drew to a close yesterday with plans for the immediate evacuation of some 3 800 African migrants stranded in Libya.

Wrapping up the summit in the Ivorian capital Abidjan, a top African Union official said there could be as many as 700 000 Africans trapped in Libya, where many have suffered atrocities and even been sold into slavery.

The two-day summit of the African Union (AU) and European Union (EU) was showcased as a project to boost developmen­t in Africa. But it was overshadow­ed by shock TV footage of black Africans being sold as slaves in Libya, prompting protests in many countries and demands for action.

In a final address, AU commission chief Moussa Faki Mahamat said those stranded in Libya wanted to get out “as swiftly as possible” and warned there were between “400 000 and 700 000” people there in at least 42 migrant camps.

“We must urgently save those who are in this situation, and then together – Libya, the EU, AU and UN – we must think about devising longer-term solutions for the migration issue.”

Hosting the summit, Ivorian President Alassan Outtara agreed on the urgent need for action. “The inhumane treatment of migrants challenges us, requiring responses which match our condemnati­on,” he said. He called on humanitari­an aid to go in hand with action to root out human traffickin­g, and solutions for the poverty that prompted so many young Africans to take the risk of trekking to Europe in search of a better life.

In a meeting late on Wednesday, the leaders of Libya, France, Germany, Chad, Niger and four other countries agreed on a plan to allow migrants facing abuse in Libyan camps to be evacuated within days or weeks, mostly to their home countries. They agreed on “an extreme emergency operation” to evacuate from Libya those who wanted to go, French President Emmanuel Macron said.

“Libya restated its agreement to identify the camps where scenes of barbarism have been identified ... President [Fayez] al-Sarraj has given his agreement for ensuring access,” Macron said, referring to the embattled head of the unity government in Libya.

They offered increased support for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Migration (IOM) to help with the return of Africans who want to go home, said the French leader who called the emergency meeting. “This work will be carried out in the next few days, in line with the countries of origin,” he said, adding in some cases they could be given asylum in Europe.

EU sources earlier said UN humanitari­an agencies like the IOM had arranged for some 13 000 migrants to return voluntaril­y to their home countries, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa, in the last year after a deal with Libya.

The group also decided to work with a task force, involving the sharing of police and intelligen­ce services, to “dismantle the networks and their financing and detain trafficker­s,” Macron said.

The AU, EU and UN pledged to freeze the assets of identified trafficker­s while the AU will set up an investigat­ive panel and the UN could take cases before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, he added.

The uproar over slavery came after US network CNN aired footage from Libya of black Africans being sold.

The AU and other critics have accused the EU of creating conditions for the slave trade as well as rape and torture of migrants by encouragin­g Libya’s UNbacked government of national accord (GNA) to detain migrants and stop them from coming to Europe.

The EU has been desperate to ease the worst migration crisis since World War II, with more than 1.5 million migrants entering the bloc since 2015.

In his speech to the summit on Wednesday, European Council President Donald Tusk acknowledg­ed the “horrifying” treatment of young Africans.

But he also warned against starting “a blame game” and called for cooperatio­n to fight criminals.

An EU source told reporters on condition of anonymity that it was European pressure that forced Libya to open up and make it easier for journalist­s to film slave auctions that migrants had in fact reported were going on well before EULibyan cooperatio­n began.

The summit was expected to issue a statement on economic growth for a continent likely to have 2.4 billion people by 2050, more than double what it is now.

Education for girls and long-term investment were key to the plan. — AFP

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