The Independent

NGOs saving refugees in the Mediterran­ean sea ‘colluding with smugglers’

- BETHAN MCKERNAN

An Italian prosecutor has said that he has evidence that charities helping refugees and migrants cross the Mediterran­ean Sea to Europe safely are “colluding” with people smugglers. Speaking to Italy’s La Stampa, Sicily-based Carmelo Zuccaro told the paper: “We have evidence that there are direct contacts between certain NGOs and people trafficker­s in Libya.” Charities were making telephone calls to Libya, helping to guide smugglers’ ships and advising them to turn off transponde­rs to avoid detection, he added. Mr Zuccaro did not say whether he would open a criminal investigat­ion. Several NGOs working in the Mediterran­ean previously told The Independen­t such claims were “baseless”.

Mr Zuccaro’s taskforce began to investigat­e alleged links between charities and Libyan smugglers – ruthless criminals who prey on the desperate and whose business fuels Libya’s civil war – in 2016. As recently as last week he admitted he had no proof for allegation­s that NGOs were advising refugees not to cooperate with the Italian authoritie­s, although the Italian parliament has also launched a fact-finding mission into the issue.

“We have seen the aftermath of what smugglers do, leaving families for dead in icy waters or giving them a dinghy knowingly with a broken engine,” Jude Bennett, co-founder of volunteer search and rescue team Refugee Rescue said, calling the claims “ridiculous”. “Refugee Rescue and other humanitari­ans are pawns in a larger political game. We are there to save lives at sea, simple.”

The prosecutor’s comments come amid escalating criticism from right-wing European politician­s and agencies over the role of charities doing frontline rescue work in the Mediterran­ean refugee crisis. More than 1,000 people have already died making the crossing between Libya and Italy so far this year, and 37,000 people have been rescued – an increase of more than 40 per cent on 2016, the UN’s refugee agency says. A controvers­ial 2016 deal between Turkey and the EU that means refugees crossing the Aegean Sea to Greece are returned has succeeded in cutting the the number of people making that journey – but travel across the much larger stretch of the Mediterran­ean between Libya and Italy has increased in the same time period.

While charities’ search and rescue efforts were initially welcomed by the EU’s border agency Frontex and other authoritie­s, a February report claimed that charities operating near the Libyan coast “unintentio­nally help criminals achieve their objectives at minimum cost, strengthen their business model by increasing the chances of success”. Frontex has previously said that NGOs’ work was tantamount to providing “a taxi service to Europe”.

Stefano Argenziano, operations manager for migration at Médecins Sans Frontières, told The Independen­t that the medical charity rejected all allegation­s it was abetting smugglers. “It’s a ludicrous accusation that’s diverting attention from the real problem,” he said, pointing out Europe has so far failed to provide other routes to safety for those fleeing instabilit­y and conflict on the African continent. “The real problem is that people are dying. There’s a gap in assistance and we’re starting to wonder whether this is part of a deliberate plan to stop the migration flow… a deadly deterrent,” he added. “Search and rescue is not the problem, but it is not the solution either. It is a necessity to save lives unless politician­s can produce a safe and legal alternativ­e.”

 ??  ?? Several charities have rejected the claims as ‘baseless’ (AFP/Getty)
Several charities have rejected the claims as ‘baseless’ (AFP/Getty)

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