2009 - EU Turns Blind Eye to 'Inhuman' Italy-Libya Pact - Watchdog Says

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    EU turns blind eye to 'inhuman' Italy-

    Libya pact, watchdog says

    More than 75 percent of the boat migrants arriving in Italy last year were asylum seekers.(Photo: nobordernetwork)

    VALENTINA POP

    21.09.2009 @ 12:36 CET

    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS The EU remains keen on enhancing ties with Libya despite

    its poor treatment of the scores of African migrants intercepted and sent back by Italy, a

    report by Human Rights Watch reads.

    A 92-page Human Rights Watch report, released on Monday (21 September) as EU justiceministers were gathering in Brussels for their monthly meeting, with immigration high on the

    agenda, examines what it describes as the "brutal" treatment of migrants, asylum seekers and

    refugees in Libya through the eyes of those who have managed to leave and are currently in

    Italy and Malta.

    "Conditions ... generally qualify as inhuman and degrading," the report says.

    "One member state is going out and openly violating international law by intercepting

    migrants and maybe many refugees, sending them off to undergo degrading treatment, giving

    them no opportunity to seek asylum," Bill Frelick, author of the report, told EUobserver.

    "Can Europe wash its hands of this?" he asked.

    The report documents conditions in so-called reception centres in Libya to which migrants

    are sent by the Italian coast guard - a policy that is the product of a bilateral agreement with

    Tripoli.

    In January, the Italian island of Lampedusa was full of migrants sleeping on the floors of the

    reception centre, but by May, after the Italians inaugurated the return policy, the centre was

    almost empty, Mr Frelick recalled.

    "Italians are very happy that the policy is working," he said.

    But last year, 75 percent of the people coming to Lampedusa were asylum seekers, he

    stressed, and half of them had a right to international protection, because they were refugees

    coming from conflict zones such as Somalia or Darfur.

    As Italy rejects every boat, without assessing the needs or legitimate claims of the people on

    it, it is basically forcefully sending them back to places where their lives are endangered, Mr

    Frelick pointed out.

    Libyan police connected to traffickers

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    Refugees interviewed by the Washington-based human rights watchdog said the line between

    police and migrant-trafficking ringleaders in Libya was blurred. Moreover, people are kept in

    cells, often not knowing if the building was a prison or a trafficker's house, and released only

    after their families paid more money - and it is never clear whether the money is for bail or

    ransom.

    Some migrants even spoke of people being driven out and left in the desert when families

    failed to pay.

    An Eritrean, Iggi, paid smugglers some 500 to take him from Khartoum to Tripoli. Instead,

    they took him only as far as Kufra, a prison for irregular immigrants within Libyan territory,

    where they held him and 78 other people in a closed 10 metre by 20 metre room without

    windows for ten days and then demanded more money.

    "A Somali man died in that room. I don't know his name. We couldn't communicate with

    him, but we did everything we could to save him. During our 13 days travel in the desert the

    transporters had mixed benzene with our water so we would drink less, and he got sick. Theguards knew he was sick, but they wouldn't take him to the hospital or do anything to help

    him," Iggi told HRW.

    Libya has not ratified the international convention on refugees and treats all returned people

    as illegal immigrants, regardless of their country of origin or need for assistance.

    "There are no refugees in Libya," Brigadier General Mohamed Bashir Al Shabbani, director

    of the Office of Immigration at the General People's Committee for Public Security, told

    Human Rights Watch. "They are people who sneak into the country illegally and they cannot

    be described as refugees." He said that anyone who enters the country without formal

    documents and permission is arrested.

    EU keen on better relations with Libya

    Despite Libya's rough immigration practices, the European Commission is going ahead with

    negotiations on a general framework agreement for enhanced ties. A key part of the deal is a

    re-admission agreement with Tripoli that would create a formal return mechanism.

    HRW urges the EU to ensure that the human rights clause in the framework agreement

    contains "explicit reference to the rights of asylum seekers and migrants as a prerequisite for

    any co-operation on migration-control schemes."

    It also calls on EU institutions and member states to refrain from "encouraging Libya to

    establish any reception regime that falls below the European reception condition standards."

    Referring to Italy, the human rights watchdog says it should immediately stop the return of

    boat migrants to Libya. Rome should also investigate allegations that Italian naval personnel

    beat and used electric shocks to force boat migrants onto Libyan vessels.

    Italy should also stop funding the Libyan coast guard and support the UN instead to ensure

    that fundamental human rights standards of refugees are respected, the HRW report urges.

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    Report

    Pushed back, pushed around

    http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2009/09/21/pushed-back-pushed-around-0http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2009/09/21/pushed-back-pushed-around-0