Migrants and refugees being sold into slavery in
Libya is not really new information. In April 2017, the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that along the North African migrant routes
its staff discovered "slave markets" where hundreds of African young
men are being tormented.
But following CNN's release of footage showing men being
sold by an auctioneer for the equivalent of $800, there was finally
international outrage. There were demonstrations in Paris, Stockholm
and New York with slogans such as "Free our brothers!" and
"Black people are not slaves!" The chairman of the African
Union, Guinean President Alpha Conde, demanded prosecutions for these
crimesand Libya announced it was reportedly launching an investigation into the
matter.
But while the outrage has focused on the Libyan authorities,
it has very much ignored the role the European
Union has played in enabling such despicable abuse.
The EU has pushed to curb migration and tighten its borders,
but it has not provided alternative safe and legal paths for migrants and
refugees. This has inevitably led to more dangerous conditions for people
already in transit countries such as Libya. Slavery, unfortunately, has been a
direct consequence of that.
In response to the CNN video, the Malta Independent declared in an editorial: "it should make us Europeans
ashamed of the deal our leaders struck on our behalf when they convened in
Malta last February to address the mounting deaths at sea in the Mediterranean
but which, in actual fact, was merely a facade hiding their real purpose - to
reinforce Fortress Europe."
What the Maltese newspaper is referring to is what is
euphemistically called the "externalisation of migration control".
The EU is "outsourcing responsibility" to authorities in such
countries as Libya and Niger, despite warnings by humanitarian organisations
and the UN that neither of the two has the infrastructure or training to abide
by international law and treat migrants humanely.
In April, the EU also pledged 90 million euro ($107m) for
"improved migration management" in Libya.
The EU has given tens of millions of euros to enforce
border control and boost the Nigerien police which was tasked with stopping
migrants trying to cross into Libya. In April, the EU also pledged 90 million euro ($107m) for "improved
migration management" in Libya.
The Italian government gave the Libyan Coast Guard new boats
and millions of euros to support their operations. It has done so disregarding
accusations that its forces are rounding up migrants and refugees and
sending them to prisons, with widespread abuses at all stages.
One Libyan coast guard commander even told Human Rights
Watch in April that the use of force against migrants was "necessary
to control the situation as you cannot communicate with them". In May
2017, volunteer rescuers reported that the Libyan Coast Guard opened
fire during a refugee "rescue" operation in international
waters.
The support for the Libyan Coastal Guard and its violent
ways has somewhat curbed the number of boats attempting the trip across the
Mediterranean. But that has meant that there are more people now in Libya who
are at risk of exploitation, torture and slavery at the hands of smugglers or
armed groups.
The United Nations has condemned the EU helping the Libyan
authorities detain migrants and has described its actions as "inhuman".
UN monitors visited some of the detention centres in Libya and were
"shocked" by what they saw. They found "thousands of emaciated
and traumatized men, women and children piled on top of each other, locked up
in hangars with no access to the most basic necessities, and stripped of their
human dignity"; they found out that beatings and rape were commonplace.
At the same time, NGOs are being forced to abandon what they
view as their moral obligations, with devastating consequences. The Italian
government made NGOs involved in search and rescue operations sign a "code of conduct" not
to enter Libyan territorial waters and not to obstruct Libyan Coast Guard's
operations. The EU has engaged in smear campaigns against NGOs conducting
search and rescue operations, accusing them of "unintentionally
helping" smugglers while providing no evidence for that claim.
As the EU continues to pour millions of its taxpayers' money
into security policies violating human rights transit countries, the death rate
of migrants and refugees crossing the Mediterranean continues to increase.
Between January and July of this year alone, approximately 2,000
people drowned at sea.
We are often told that tragedies can influence policy. We
were told, for example, that the world was appalled by the image of
three-year-old Alan Kurdi lying dead on a beach in Turkey. But since he drowned
at sea not too far from Fortress Europe's border, hundreds of children have
shared the same fate. Between January and September 2016, 600 children drowned. In the three months between December
2016 and February 2017, 190 drowned.
Instead of seeing a change towards something more rational
and human in the policies of the EU, as the more optimistic among us hoped in
2015, we saw a worsening of an easily solvable problem. Now that 2017 has
brought us evidence of slavery at Fortress Europe's borders, what can we expect
in 2018?
The views expressed in this article are the author's
own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Source and Copyright: Al-jazeera
No comments: