The Mercury

EU seeks approval for plan to destroy migrants’ boats

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LONDON: Their deaths have appalled the world. In record numbers, would-be migrants have died at sea trying to escape the chaos of their homelands for the safety of Europe. As the crisis has grown, so have calls for action.

This week, the EU will unveil its response: gunboat diplomacy. The EU will seek the UN’s backing for a plan to seek and destroy the boats used by people trafficker­s to ferry migrants from the Libyan coast to the shores of Europe.

The plan is likely to face tricky questions over its mandate in Libyan waters, while aid agencies say it will do nothing to stop the crisis.

The proposal to send gunships into Libya’s territoria­l waters was to be presented to the UN Security Council in New York by EU foreign policy supremo Federica Mogherini.

France, Britain, Spain and Lithuania (the EU members on the 15-nation Security Council) have drafted a resolution seeking authority for the use of force.

The draft calls for the “use of all means to destroy the business model of the trafficker­s”, in internatio­nal high seas.

The text rules out the destructio­n of boats while they are in Libya’s territoria­l waters or of vessels sailing under internatio­nal flags, but it does seek permission to seize vessels in high seas, as well as Libyan territoria­l waters and the Libyan coast before they embark with migrants.

The plan says vessels such as the Royal Navy flagship HMS Bulwark would be stationed in Libyan waters, while helicopter gunships would be sent to “neutralise” the ships used by trafficker­s.

Italy, the main landing point for the migrants, would take operationa­l command of the mission, which has already secured commitment­s from 10 EU member states, including Britain, France and Spain.

Libya is now the main launching point for sea crossings to Europe: the country’s descent into factional fighting has effectivel­y left it lawless, with a vacuum of authority.

Last month, as many as 950 people died in a single incident when their boat capsized off Italy.

However, UN approval for the EU plan is far from certain. Mogherini, who visited Beijing last week, is confident that China will not wield its veto.

But although her entourage and the Italian government say Russia is ready to co-operate, there are doubts whether Moscow – still embroiled in a tense diplomatic stand-off with the EU over Ukraine – can be won over.

Libya’s UN ambassador, Ibrahim Dabbashi, opposes the EU mission.

He says the best deal for Europe to address the crisis is to give his Western-backed government arms to help fight the rival government backed by Islamist militias.

Meanwhile, the militia that controls Libya’s coastal capital, Tripoli, has promised to “confront” any EU moves. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has added to the criticism, saying there could be “no military solution” to the migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean.

Aid agencies have warned that the plans would do nothing to stop the underlying refugee crisis.

“We must find a more comprehens­ive solution than just bombing bases and these little boats,” said Francesco Rocca, who heads the Red Cross in Italy.

EU leaders agreed to action last month to “identify, capture and destroy vessels before they are used by trafficker­s”.

Many refugees are fleeing violence in Syria and Libya, but others have come from conflict-ridden countries as far away as Somalia, Nigeria and Congo. The military plans will also be discussed by EU foreign ministers meeting this week, and then by EU leaders at a summit next month.

They will be complement­ed by a broad European Agenda on Migration, which the European Commission is set to adopt tomorrow.

The five-year programme aims to address asylum, traffickin­g, irregular migration, external borders and legal migration in a single package.

While the naval mission will grab the headlines, the commission says its initiative deals with some of the more thorny issues about immigratio­n that many member states have skated over.

These include the underlying questions about why migrants come to Europe; how many are needed to keep the economy ticking; how many will public opinion accept; and what measures would be needed to control the flow, other than destroying the boats.

The aim is a quota system to spread migrants more evenly across the EU.

This would both ease the burden on Italy and other member states in the south, but also help countries such as Germany and Sweden, which between them end up with almost half of the EU’s asylumseek­ers.

Nearly 63 500 migrants have arrived in Europe this year. Nearly 2 000 are known to have died in sea crossings, almost 10 times the number of deaths from the same period last year. – The Independen­t

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