Rights groups urge EU to protect life on sea route from Libya

  • 6/16/2021
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Estimated 20,000 people have died or disappeared in central Mediterranean in last decade Human Rights Watch: ‘People are drowning while European leaders squabble’ LONDON: Leading rights groups have called on the EU to protect lives on the main Mediterranean route between Libya and Europe. Human Rights Watch (HRW), Amnesty International and the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) on Wednesday published an action plan to promote safe pathways on the precarious route from North Africa. The 20-point plan gives guidance on how the EU could ensure safe and predictable disembarking opportunities and relocation responses for people rescued. “It is shameful and tragic that EU countries can’t agree on something as fundamental as saving lives at sea,” said Judith Sunderland, HRW’s associate Europe and Central Asia director. “People are drowning while European leaders squabble.” An estimated 20,000 people have died or disappeared in the central Mediterranean in the last decade. According to the UN, some 664 people have died or gone missing so far this year. HRW accused the EU of “withdrawing responsibility,” noting that the bloc has since March 2019 been withdrawing its ships from areas where unseaworthy boats carrying migrants and refugees are most likely to be. Libya’s Coast Guard has intercepted and returned to the country more than 11,700 people this year, with up to 1,000 migrants returned on June 12 alone. People recovered and returned to Libya face being detained in “nightmarish detention centers and experiencing abysmal conditions, violence, and forced labor,” HRW said. It added that the EU should abandon its policy of assisting the return of migrants and refugees to Libya, and urgently adopt one that ensures migrants are relocated to a safe place. HRW called for new relocation arrangements so EU member states can share the responsibility of migration from Libya more equally. EU heads of state are expected to discuss migration policy at the next European Council meeting on June 24-25 in Brussels.

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