Sunday, July 2, 2017

EU 'has no info on' Libyan coast guard shooting at migrants

But calls for respect of human rights

ANSAmed

24 May 2017


(ANSAmed) - BRUSSELS, MAY 24 - Foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said Wednesday that the EU had no direct information on reports that the Libyan Coast Guard had shot at boats carrying migrants earlier in the day.

The claim had been made by the German NGO Jugend Rettet, which works in migrant rescue operations in the central Mediterranean. A post from yesterday on the Facebook page of Jugend Rettet said rescue crews from three ships "whilst rescuing people from at least 11 boats with approximately 1000 persons onboard, witnessed multiple (gun) shots".

However, as always, Mogherini said, the EU calls upon the Libyan Coast Guard to respect human rights. The work that the EU is involved in alongside the Libyan Coast Guard through the EU Naval Force Mediterranean (EUNAVFOR Med), also known as Operation Sophia in collaboration with the UN and NGOs, she said, ''includes a strong human rights component and especially as concerns women, respect for whom is important not only at sea but also on the ground'', in the lengthy sections that they travel to get to the Libyan coast. (ANSAmed)

Source: http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/politics/2017/05/24/eu-has-no-info-on-libyan-coast-guard-shooting-at-migrants_f639f9ad-631e-4dd2-bd50-1acaf67f7cd3.html

Libyan Coast Guard rails against NGO, 'prove accusations'

'Instead of waging war, collaborate with us'

ANSAmed

24 May 2017


(ANSAmed) - CAIRO, MAY 24 - The spokesman of the Libyan Navy, Admiral Ayob Amr Ghasem, has challenged the German NGO Jugend Rettet to produce ''incontrovertible'' evidence of the accusations that he called ''illogical'' that the Libyan Coast Guard had shot at boats carrying migrants. In statements to ANSA, the spokesman said that if the NGO really wanted to advance ''the interest of migrants'', they should ''cooperate with us'' and not ''wage war'' on the Libyan Coast Guard. ''Why would we have shot at boats if we are the ones that always save them?'' the admiral asked, saying that a rescue had been carried out on Tuesday. ''Why do they declare war on us?'', Ghasem asked, adding that ''they should instead cooperate with us if they actually want to work in the interest of the migrants.'' Some ''biased organizations'', the spokesman claimed without giving names, instead help human traffickers create a ''dream of emigrating'' to Europe to profit from it. (ANSAmed).

Source: http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/generalnews/2017/05/24/libyan-coast-guard-rails-against-ngo-prove-accusations_01d8cc52-634c-4b8a-962b-80a3740a27fc.html

Coastguard rescues 300 migrants, mainly North Africans, off Sabratha; get into spat with Sea-Watch


Al Arabiya - English

10 May 2017

By Libya Herald reporter



(Tripoli) In a new development, the coastguard today rescued some 300 migrants off Sabratha, most of them from North African countries.

“Our coastguards rescued 300 illegal migrants of board a wooden boat,” said Commodore Ayoub Qasim, the Libya naval forces spokesman.

In a remarkable change from the usual boatloads of sub-Saharans, the migrants, who were taken to Tripoli naval port, were almost all young men mostly from Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco, although there were some sub-Saharan Africans on board.

In a further development, Qasim claimed that German rescuers Sea-Watch had tried to interfere in the rescue operation. “It tried to take them from the coastguard although the boat was in Libyan waters”, he said.

For its part, an angry Sea Watch has accused the coastguard of interfering in its operation and in the process endangering the lives of its crew as well as of the migrants. It has claimed that the coastguard action, in taking the migrants back to Libya, was illegal in international and maritime law, and that it took place in international waters.

Given that the EU was helping the Libyan navy prevent migration to Europe, it also demanded that the EU change the policy “immediately” and that there be an independent investigation “into whether European authorities were involved with this return operation”. Returning migrants to Libya was illegal under interational law, it claimed.

Meanwhile there is still no news on the remaining missing 150 migrants feared to have drowned when their boat sank off Zawia on Friday. Some 170 had departed the same day from Maya, west of Janzour. On Saturday, eight survivors were found clinging to wreckage off Zawia. On Monday, the bodies of 11 others, ten of them women and the other a young girl were found on the shore at Al-Mutrad, west of Zawia.

In a separate move, the new head of the coastguard committed himself and his team at a press conference in Tripoli today to try to stop the flow.

“We will try to cooperate with the government and tackle the phenomenon”, said Colonel Mohamed Bishr.

Managing to do so, however, may not be that simple. He has had to base himself at coastguard’s office in the capital’s Railway Road, near the prime ministry building. In depressingly familiar circumstances, his predecessor is refusing to leave the main headquarters on the Airport Road, near the interior ministry.


Source: https://www.libyaherald.com/2017/05/10/coastguard-rescues-300-migrants-mainly-north-africans-off-sabratha/

Libya intercepts almost 500 migrants following sea duel


Al Arabiya - English

11 May 2017



(AFP, Tripoli) Libya’s coastguard on Wednesday intercepted a wooden boat packed with almost 500 migrants after duelling with a German rescue ship and coming under fire from traffickers, the navy said. The migrants, who were bound for Italy, were picked up off the western city of Sabratha, said navy spokesman Ayoub Qassem.

The German non-governmental organization “Sea-Watch tried to disrupt the coastguard operation... inside Libyan waters and wanted to take the migrants, on the pretext that Libya wasn’t safe,” Qassem told AFP. Sea-Watch posted a video on Twitter of what it said was a Libyan coastguard vessel narrowly cutting across the bow of its ship.

“This EU-funded Libyan patrol vessel almost crashed (into) our civil rescue ship,” read the caption. Qassem also said the coastguard had come under fire from people traffickers, without reporting any casualties.

Several nationalities

The 493 migrants included 277 from Morocco and many from Bangladesh, said Qassem, and 20 women and a child were aboard the boat. All were taken to a naval base in Tripoli. There were also migrants from Syria, Tunisia, Egypt, Sudan, Pakistan, Chad, Mali and Nigeria, he added.

According to international organizations, between 800,000 and one million people, mostly from sub Saharan Africa, are currently in Libya hoping to make the perilous Mediterranean crossing to Europe.

Between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants are being held in Libyan detention centers after entering the country illegally, an immigration official said on Tuesday.


Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/north-africa/2017/05/11/Libya-intercepts-almost-500-migrants-after-sea-duel-.html

Libyan Navy claims German NGO hindered migrant rescue

Almost collided during operation

ANSAmed

11 May 2017


(ANSAmed) - CAIRO, MAY 11 - The Libyan navy on Thursday said that the German charity Sea Watch had hindered one of its rescue operations off Libya.

General Ayob Amr Ghasem, Libyan Navy spokesman, said that one of the NGO's boats had sought to stop the rescue operation underway by a Libyan motorboat by threatening to ram into it, according to a document sent to ANSA by the spokesman. The incident occurred on Wednesday morning. The migrant vessel made of wood and carrying almost 500 migrants was intercepted ''19 nautical miles north of Sabratha'', the spokesman said. When the 'Kifah' motorboat came close to the migrant vessel, the Sea Watch boat allegedly ''changed direction in such a way to collide with'' the Libyan Coast Guard said.

At the same time, the document added, the NGO boat sent a dinghy rapidly towards the boat. Given the ''persistence of the Coast Guard vessel'' in keeping to its route, the Sea Watch one ''changed direction at the last minute to avoid colliding'', Ghasem said. On the basis of contact with the NGO boat, the spokesman said that there was a ''German media team'' onboard - Spiegel TV, according to Al Wasat - and ''the organization protested'', by saying that Libya ''isn't safe for migrants''.

They have reportedly been taken to a base in Tripoli.

Source: http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/generalnews/2017/05/11/libyan-navy-claims-german-ngo-hindered-migrant-rescue_e3c044e4-6eea-441a-9b98-d8916235ef39.html?idPhoto=1

German NGO Sea-Watch.e.V. obstructing Libyan Coast Guard and claiming illegal push-back


10 May 2017


German NGO Sea-Watch.e.V. obstructing Libyan Coast Guard and claiming illegal push-back of ca. 500 migrants. It is interesting to note that the country with the most aid agencies operating in the central Mediterranean is Germany, with five organizations and six vessels - one costing 416,954 Euro per month to keep at sea — over 4 765 000 million Euro a year

See video: https://youtu.be/ONWduazMDpo

EU border force flags concerns over charities’ interaction with migrant smugglers


Financial Times

15 December 2016

by: Duncan Robinson in Brussels


Frontex briefings open up long-simmering dispute with NGOs over how to solve the crisis

The points outlined by Frontex bring to the fore a long-simmering dispute between EU officials and non-governmental organisations over how to resolve a migration crisis that has caused the deaths of 4,700 people this year alone.

Frontex put its concerns in a confidential report last month, raising the idea that migrants had been given “clear indications before departure on the precise direction to be followed in order to reach the NGOs’ boats”.

The agency also raised concerns in another report last week, which stated: “First reported case where the criminal networks were smuggling migrants directly on an NGO vessel.”

NGOs operating in the region emphatically denied working with people smugglers.

Elsewhere in the reports, which were shared among EU officials and diplomats, Frontex said people rescued by NGO vessels were often “not willing to co-operate with debriefing experts at all” with some claiming “that they were warned not to co-operate with Italian law enforcement or Frontex”.

The number of rescues triggered by a distress signal fell from roughly two-thirds of all incidents this summer to barely one in 10 in October, according to Frontex figures. This drop-off coincided with a jump in the number of rescues carried out by NGOs in the central Mediterranean. They responded to more than 40 per cent of rescues in October, compared with just 5 per cent at the start of the year.
   
"It is no wonder that these accusations come now. We have a worsening situation in the central Med and a lot of efforts taken by the EU to shutdown migration. They are trying to shut this down by all means necessary - Ruben Neugebauer, Sea Watch"

Charities operating in the region reacted angrily to the accusations. They say a drop in distress calls from boats carrying migrants has been due to increased rescue efforts, meaning that people were picked up before their situation worsened.

Aurelie Ponthieu, a humanitarian adviser with Médecins Sans Frontières, which operates two rescue boats, said: “We are actively searching for boats in distress. We spot them earlier. This is a response to the needs that we see at sea.”

So far this year more than 170,000 people have attempted to cross the Mediterranean from Libya to Italy, about 15 per cent more than last year, according to UNHCR, the UN refugee agency. The number of deaths has jumped by a quarter after 3,800 last year.

NGO workers blamed the increased numbers of deaths on smugglers changing tactics and sending people out on increasingly unseaworthy vessels — a trend that they blamed on a crackdown on people smugglers by EU authorities. Ms Ponthieu said the agency’s focus was misconceived. She said the issue was “why so many people die, which is what Frontex should be focusing on. They should be looking at their own actions.”

MSF this year said it would refuse EU funding in protest at the bloc’s handling of the refugee crisis.

Frontex also criticised charities for failing to help with investigations into people smuggling by refusing to collect leftover evidence from rescued boats. “We have an obligation to help save their lives, not perform the duties of security agencies,” said Save the Children, which has rescued 2,400 people in October and November.

The European Commission is examining whether stricter control of non-governmental rescue missions is needed, although officials stressed that legislation was unlikely.

NGOs have played a crucial role in saving thousands of lives in the central Mediterranean, according to the commission, and have “mostly acted in support [of] and close co-ordination” with governments.

Ruben Neugebauer, of Sea Watch, a German charity that runs rescue operations, said the EU was attempting to criminalise the efforts of NGOs in the Mediterranean. “It is no wonder that these accusations come now. We have a worsening situation in the central Med and a lot of efforts taken by the EU to shut down migration. They are trying to shut this down by all means necessary.”

This article has been revised since original publication to correct inaccuracy and because comments by Aurelie Ponthieu of MSF were initially wrongly attributed


Source: https://www.ft.com/content/3e6b6450-c1f7-11e6-9bca-2b93a6856354