EU naval force failing to stop migrants
BRITAIN: The European Union’s Mediterranean naval force has failed to stop migrants from making the perilous sea journey to Europe and should not continue operating in its current form, British lawmakers said yesterday.
The EU force, known as Operation Sophia, was set up in 2015 to combat people smuggling in the south-central Mediterranean, but it cannot enter Libyan waters without an invitation from the government, of which there are two vying for power in Tripoli and Benghazi.
Libya is a major departure point for mainly sub-saharan African migrants trying to reach Europe through crossings arranged by people smugglers, often in flimsy boats.
The flow of migrants has increased amid the turmoil that followed the 2011 uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi.
Lawmakers from a parliamentary committee focused on European Union affairs, which released the report after an inquiry into the naval operation, said Sophia was costly and has not deterred migrants from risking their lives at sea.
‘‘People smuggling begins onshore, so a naval mission is the wrong tool for tackling this dangerous, inhumane and unscrupulous business,’’ said Conservative lawmaker Sandip Verma, chair of the committee that scrutinises EU documents and policies. ‘‘Once the boats have set sail, it is too late.
’’The key is to look at the economic difficulties of these countries and why (migrants) are leaving in the first instance, and how we can prevent people from wanting to make that treacherous journey,’’ Verma said.
The report said the EU should continue its humanitarian sea rescues with non-military vessels, but it would not be able to disrupt the migrant smuggling business without a stable Libyan government to co-operate with.
Since its deployment, the EU naval force said it has arrested 110 suspected smugglers, prevented 463 boats from being re-used by traffickers, and rescued more than 38,000 people at sea.
As the Mediterranean experiences calm summer weather, Europe’s governments are keen to avoid migrant drownings and to deter smugglers finding new routes after a deal between the EU and Turkey in 2016 cut trafficking across the Aegean Sea.
Some 100,000 people have arrived in Europe in unseaworthy boats so far this year, according to the United Nation’s International Organisation for Migration.
As of July 6, almost 2300 people died or disappeared during the crossing. This makes the Central Mediterranean the world’s most dangerous border for migrants.
– Thomson Reuters Foundation