Los Angeles Times

A perilous route for migrant children

- By Ann M. Simmons ann.simmons@latimes.com Twitter: @AMSimmons1

Thousands of migrant and refugee children routinely face abuse, exploitati­on and detention as they make the journey along the central Mediterran­ean migration route to Europe, according to a report from the United Nations Children’s Fund.

The children, most of whom are fleeing war and poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, travel north into Libya and across the sea to Italy, and are subjected to sexual violence, extortion and abduction along the way, the children’s rights agency said.

Last year, more than 180,000 refugees and migrants, including more than 25,000 mostly unaccompan­ied children, arrived in Italy via the central Mediterran­ean route, UNICEF said. The most dangerous part of the route is a 621-mile trek from the southern border of Libya’s desert to its Mediterran­ean coast, combined with the 310-mile sea passage to Sicily, UNICEF said. Smugglers, trafficker­s and predators control passage.

At least 4,579 people died attempting to make the crossing, including an estimated 700 children, the agency said.

The report published Tuesday and titled “A Deadly Journey for Children: The Central Mediterran­ean Migrant Route,” is based on a survey conducted in Libya by the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Cooperatio­n and Emergency Aid, a UNICEF partner, with support from the Feinstein Internatio­nal Center at Tufts University. A sample of 122 participan­ts — 82 women and 40 children representi­ng almost a dozen mostly sub-Saharan African nations — was interviewe­d and provided the agency with “a window into the scale of the challenge,” UNICEF said.

“What’s striking is that the report shows the risks are not just in one place along the journey,” said Christophe­r Tidey, a New York-based spokesman for UNICEF. “It’s fairly consistent dangers. It’s not just the boats crossing. It’s the overland journey that is incredibly risky as well.”

The report comes at a time when the Trump administra­tion is seeking to restrict the United States’ intake of refugees, and has used the flood of migrants to Europe as part of what the president’s critics describe as an anti-immigrant rallying cry.

Among the UNICEF report’s key findings were the responses from three-quarters of the migrant children who said they had experience­d violence, harassment or aggression at the hands of adults, with girls reporting higher incidents of abuse than boys. Nearly half the women interviewe­d reported suffering sexual violence or abuse during the journey, and several children said they did not have access to adequate food while traversing the desert to Libya.

In addition, most children and women said they had to rely on smugglers “leaving many in debt under ‘pay as you go’ arrangemen­ts and vulnerable to abuse, abduction and traffickin­g,” the report said.

“We know that if refugees and migrants don’t have a safe and legal pathway to migration, then desperate people will turn to smugglers and trafficker­s … who know that these people have no choice and they are easy to prey upon,” Tidey said.

In Libya, where security is precarious, women and children also reported harsh and overcrowde­d conditions, including lack of nutritious food and adequate shelter in detention centers run by both government and armed militias, according to the report.

Most of those surveyed said they were expected to work for extended periods in Libya to pay for the next leg of their journey, which would be back home or to destinatio­ns in Europe.

And making it to Europe does not guarantee safety, rights advocates said. A report last year from Europol, the European Union’s intelligen­ce agency, found that at least 10,000 refugee children were unaccounte­d for after arriving in Europe. Many were feared to have fallen prey to organized human traffickin­g networks and forced labor.

Critics of liberal migration policies charge that parents are responsibl­e for putting their children in harm’s way. In 2015, a candidate of the U.K. Independen­ce Party, a “Euroskepti­c” right-wing populist political party, provoked outrage when he criticized the parents of a Syrian boy who washed up dead on a beach after failing to survive the Mediterran­ean crossing from Turkey to the Greek island of Kos, describing them as being “greedy for the good life in Europe.”

But children’s advocates said such actions speak to the desperatio­n parents must feel.

“You have to think that, given the risks, people would not make that decision for their children unless they felt they really did not have a choice,” Tidey said, referring to the migrants braving the central Mediterran­ean migration route.

UNICEF is urging government­s and the European Union to adopt an agenda that protects child refugees and migrants from exploitati­on and violence, ends the detention of children who are migrating or seeking refugee status, and provides them with access to education and healthcare, among other measures.

The children’s rights agency is working with authoritie­s and communitie­s in Libya to clamp down on smuggling and traffickin­g, ensure that refugee and migrant children are kept safe and have access to services, according to officials.

“But it’s beyond Europe,” Tidey said. “When borders are closed, then people will do what they need to do. That’s when the risks just skyrocket.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? A GROUP of migrants disembarks in Sicily with several young children. Last year over 25,000 mostly unaccompan­ied children arrived in Italy, UNICEF says.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times A GROUP of migrants disembarks in Sicily with several young children. Last year over 25,000 mostly unaccompan­ied children arrived in Italy, UNICEF says.

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