Bangkok Post

Libya rejects EU asylum centres plan

PM won’t take ‘any more illegal migrants’

-

BERLIN: Libya’s prime minister said yesterday he would not allow the EU to set up asylum processing centres in his country, in a new setback for European leaders seeking to curb new migrant arrivals.

“We are strictly against Europe officially placing illegal migrants who are no longer wanted in the EU in our country,” Fayez al-Sarraj said in an interview with German daily Bild.

“We also won’t agree on any deals with EU money about taking in more illegal migrants,” he vowed, adding that European leaders should instead put pressure on migrants’ origin countries to stop them embarking on their journey in the first place.

During a fractious summit in June, EU leaders agreed to set up “disembarka­tion platforms” outside the bloc to process migrants.

Such centres would operate in cooperatio­n with the UN refugee agency and the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration.

But no country has so far offered to host a reception centre, where authoritie­s would distinguis­h between irregular migrants and asylum seekers admissible into the EU.

Morocco has already given a flat no to the plan, while Tunisia previously rejected it.

Albania has also ruled itself out with Prime Minister Edi Rama saying that such centres mean “dumping desperate people somewhere like toxic waste that no one wants”.

Meanwhile, Mr Sarraj also threw out claims from Spanish rescue group Proactiva Open Arms that the Libyan coastguard saved other migrants on board a dinghy but not two women and a little boy.

The child and one of the women were found dead when Spanish rescuers arrived, but the other woman has been saved.

“These are outrageous accusation­s, and they are not true. Our coastguard­s have already clarified this,” said Mr Sarraj, who heads the UN-backed unity government in Tripoli.

“Every day, we save hundreds of people on the coast of Libya. Our ships are active non-stop,” he said, stressing that Tripoli needs more technical and financial aid to improve its rescue missions.

Under a controvers­ial deal with the EU, Libyan coastguard­s intercept migrants trying to cross the Mediterran­ean. But the UN has slammed the policy as “inhuman”, noting that the migrants are simply brought back to “horrific” detention centres in Libya.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj leaves after an internatio­nal conference on Libya at the Elysee Palace in Paris in May.
REUTERS Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj leaves after an internatio­nal conference on Libya at the Elysee Palace in Paris in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand