Sunday, July 2, 2017

NGOs trafficking migrants into slavery

 

In Sicily, sex slavery takes hold on the edges of an African exodus



The Globe and Mail

By Eric Reguly

18 May 2017



Taken to Italy with promises of work and kept as slave labour with threats of deportation, Nigerian women and girls are being exploited by organized crime in increasing numbers. In Palermo, Eric Reguly meets the women ensnared by trafficking, and the priest and nun trying to help them escape it

Sister Valeria Gandini lowers her head in prayer. The young women, who adore the soft-spoken, 77-year-old Italian nun, do the same. “Our Father, who art in heaven …” they say in unison. The prayer is followed by another. “Hail Mary, full of grace…”

Sister Valeria asks one of them to invent her own prayer. The woman – maybe a teenager, it’s hard to tell under the wig and layers of makeup – smiles and, without hesitation, says: “Forgive me, Father, for I know what I am doing to my body is wrong.”

We are not in a church. We are on the side of a busy road in La Favorita, the unkempt, 400-hectare park on the northwest fringe of Palermo, the Sicilian capital, that is full of runners and bikers – and dozens of young West African women and teenagers selling their bodies for €20 ($30).

We’ve arrived here in a beat-up Fiat on a warm, sunny morning in late March. The trunk is filled with stacks of half-litre water bottles, little cakes wrapped in cellophane and soda crackers – small comforts for the women whom Sister Valeria works tirelessly to help. Favorita is a 15-minute drive from central Palermo, and it’s immediately apparent why the women choose this part of town to offer sex. The trees and bushes extend to the road. They and their customers need to retreat only a few metres to hide from the traffic.



When we pull off the road for the first time, no women are visible. But within seconds, three come bounding out from the bushes, all smiles. One of them calls Sister Valeria “Mama.” The women wear bright red lipstick, tight skirts or shorts and cheap street wigs. Crosses hang from their necks – they are Christians. They each carry phones, which they often use to check their Facebook pages, presenting normal lives to their friends, at least digitally. “Their Facebook pictures correspond with the notions of Western wealth – you see cars and clothes,” says Maggie Neil, 26, an American of Sicilian descent who has joined the ride as part of post-graduate research she’s doing on human trafficking. What doesn’t get mentioned is how the women are making their money.

Sister Valeria gives them hugs and kisses and hands them the water bottles, cakes and biscuits, which they stuff into their bags after saying “thank you” in English – their Italian is poor. “Who is going to help us today?” Sister Valeria asks. That’s her signal for prayers. A Nigerian with a long wig in rainbow colours and whose street name is “Happiness” – they never reveal their real names or ages – leads us all in prayer, a simple Hail Mary this time.

We make three or four other stops, and the format is similar: Affectionate greetings, food and water, prayers and chats. Sister Valeria and Ms. Neil ask if they need help in any way, such as a visit to the doctor. Probing questions about the identity of their bosses, how much money they owe to them or, if they have bruises or cuts, who beat them up are not asked. The goal is to gain the women’s friendship and trust, not to act like police interrogators, and offer them a way off the streets – if they summon the courage to choose it.


For most of these women, sex work isn’t a choice. It’s slave labour, enforced by vicious gang leaders who threaten the women with physical violence and deportation if they refuse to comply. “Treasure,” the woman who asks God for forgiveness for selling her body, had a black eye and scars on her arms not long ago, Sister Valeria says. Another woman, Michele, improvises a prayer during one of our stops: “Please God, give us better jobs, give us our documents,” she says. Anyone who refers to the women and girls as “prostitutes” gets a piercing look from Sister Valeria. “They are sex slaves,” she says. “They are not prostitutes. They are victims of trafficking.”

Most of the women in Palermo are Nigerian. Father Vincenzo (Enzo) Volpe, 48, the Sicilian priest who works with Sister Valeria to protect the women and offer them hope for a new life, estimates there are some 500 Nigerians working against their will on the streets and in the brothels. That’s a big number for a city with a population of only 1.3 million.

According to the United Nations, charities and university researchers, tens of thousands of Nigerian sex slaves have poured into Italy and more are arriving almost every day in rickety boats dispatched from the Libyan coast, seeking a better life in Europe. What happens to the women when they arrive is a side of the global migration crisis that’s not often reported: a massive human trafficking problem that begins in their home countries plays out on the rough streets of European cities, where the smuggling networks deliver them.

As we drive back to the church, we pass Romanian prostitutes who could also be sex slaves. In Palermo, the darkest side of the migration crisis – trafficked women – is always in plain view. Many have been battered. Over the years, a few have been murdered. The volunteers and religious orders who try to protect the Nigerian women and girls don’t talk about a migration or a refugee crisis; they talk about a trafficking crisis.

“The girls are slaves from every point of view – economically, religiously, physically, psychologically,” says Tania Macaluso, 32, a University of Palermo graduate who wrote a 118-page thesis on the trafficking of Nigerian women and now works at a charity that gives them medical assistance. “The other tragedy is that the ages of the girls is going down, down, down. Now they’re very young. They are fresh meat. The clients prefer young girls.”

Some of them are as young as 15, she says. If that were not sad enough, the reality is that most of them are trapped and cannot escape, at least not until the outrageously expensive debts assigned to them by the traffickers are paid off. Sister Valeria and Fr. Enzo have succeeded in helping only a few of them find new lives. But they keep trying.

Piazza XIII Vittime is an ugly square near the port of Palermo that, I am told, attracts lots of Nigerian sex slaves.

When I arrive at about 10 p.m., the place is empty. A few minutes later, a couple of police cars park on the far side of the square, next to a gas station. Suddenly, nine women head toward a park bench on the edge of the square that is largely hidden by bushes. Even though the women are brutally exploited, they do not consider the police their friends for the simple reason that they lack any form of documentation, meaning they could be deported.

I approach one of the women and say I just want to talk. She is hesitant, so I give her €40 and repeat my offer – just talk. Her street name is “Favour.” She claims she is from Ghana (though most of the women are from Nigeria) and that she’s 25, though she looks 18 and could be younger. She wears a long red wig, ripped fishnet stockings and flat shoes, and shivers in the cool night breeze.

The details of her journey to Palermo, though credible, are impossible to verify. Favour says she left Ghana because she had no money or job prospects. Last October, after hearing Italy was the promised land, she borrowed money to pay for the overland trip to Libya. During the leg from Sabha, the oasis city that is at the heart of the Libyan human smuggling and trafficking network, to Tripoli, she and two other Nigerian women were kidnapped and flung into a warehouse-style structure near the sea. “They only fed us bread and water,” she says. “They raped us. We were in a room and couldn’t leave.”

She says she paid €250 to her captors to secure her freedom, another €800 to buy passage on a rubber boat to the Italian island of Lampedusa. She says she ended up at a migrant centre near Salerno, south of Naples, and wound her way to Palermo, where she has friends. Favour insists she is independent and keeps the cash she earns from having sex with five to 10 men a night, but her claim doesn’t entirely add up.

She says she lives in an apartment in Ballarò with other women who work the streets – a sign that she probably has a live-in boss who exploits her. (The Ballarò neighbourhood, a gritty warren of streets in central Palermo, is a delightful food market by day and an illicit drugs supermarket controlled by Nigerian gangs by night.) When I ask why she does not head north to the wealthy cities of Milan or Turin to find a job, she lets slip that she has to pay off some debt first, another sign that she is probably under tight control. “Some girls pay the bosses thousands [of euros] so they can leave,” she says.

Favour is almost certainly a trafficking victim. “I’m sad because I don’t like my job,” she says. When the police cars leave the square, she and some of the other women stroll back to their preferred spots near the gas station. By now, it’s 11 p.m. and they won’t leave the street for another four or five hours.

When they return to their apartments, they will probably have to hand over most or all of their cash to their Nigerian women bosses, known as mamans. Ms. Macaluso says she befriended a Nigerian woman who once invited her to see where she lived. The outside of each of the bedroom doors had a padlock on it, she says.

The scale of human trafficking globally, and from Africa to Europe, is shockingly high, according to the United Nations anti-slavery officials, human-rights groups and charities that monitor the endless flow of migrants across the Mediterranean.

A website of a global coalition of anti-slavery activists called Stop the Traffik publishes a grim list of slavery statistics. It notes that the Global Slavery Index estimated that, in 2015, almost 36-million people were enslaved and that human trafficking is the world’s second biggest source of illicit income, behind drug trafficking. The International Labour Organization put the annual profits from all forms of human trafficking – including sex slavery and farm slavery – at $150-billion (U.S.).

The majority are Africans trying to escape civil wars, political unrest, unstable economies, famine and drought. With the crossing between Turkey and the Greek islands largely shut down, Italy is now attracting most of the migrants. They usually cross from Libya in dangerously overloaded boats that often sink (the UN’s International Organization for Migration says 5,098 migrants died in Mediterranean last year).

In 2016, Italy took in more than 180,000 migrants, equivalent to the population of Barrie, Ont., or Kelowna, B.C. For the first time, Nigerians were the largest single group: About 37,500 arrived last year, according to the IOM, fleeing rising poverty and violence. About 11,000 of them were women and 3,000 were unaccompanied children. The number of women rises every year, dramatically so. In 2014, only 1,450 Nigerian women were registered at Italian migrant centres.

Who are these women? The IOM believes that about 80 per cent are trafficking victims destined for the streets and brothels of Europe. “The trafficking [from Nigeria] is especially brutal in nature,” Kevin Hyland, Britain’s anti-slavery commissioner, said in early March at a UN Security Council debate on modern slavery. “Women [in Nigeria] who insist they will not work as prostitutes are tied up in a position called ‘the crocodile,’ where their hands are tied to their feet, and they are left for days without food or water. Some are left to die as an example to others.”

The Nigerian women mostly come from Benin City, in Edo State, in the economically poor southern part of the country. The city is known for its low-paying rubber and palm-oil industries and, lately, human trafficking on an epic scale.

The women are lured by “recruiters,” who are sometimes friends of the family. Their pitch: The promise of a job, however menial, in Italy and of pleasant accommodation and meals. While some women know they will be forced to sell their bodies, many do not. Ms. Macaluso says the parents sometimes encourage their daughters to make the trip, even if they suspect the girls are being trafficked into sex slavery, because they know the girls will wire some of their income back to the family.

Many of the girls who agree to make the journey to Europe are taken to a local “juju” priest or priestess – a sort of witch doctor – who casts a spell on the girls, or so they believe. The juju in essence uses fear to enforce a contract, in this case, the girls’ promise to obey their masters in Europe and not leave until their substantial debts to the traffickers and mamans are repaid.

Typically, the juju priest will take head hair, pubic hair or fingernails, even blood, from the girls. He wraps them into a package. “He will say that if you don’t behave, we will burn these pieces of you and something bad will happen to you,” Fr. Enzo says. “You will burn or a family member will burn.”

Their horrific journeys north, across the Sahara to the Libyan coast, begins after the juju ceremony. When they arrive in Palermo or elsewhere in Europe, the debt assigned to the girls for the trip and accommodation in Europe can be €20,000 to €40,000, Ms. Macaluso says. That’s a fortune by Edo State standards.

The high amount virtually guarantees servitude for several years. “The more beautiful you are, the more you have to pay back, because the beautiful ones can make more money,” she says.

Bound by the juju, the girls keep very little of their sex earnings. They have to pay the mamans for room and board, the debts to the traffickers and the mamans and, often, the local Italian Mafia for the right to occupy a strip of road (the Mafia “tax” is known as the pizzo). The endless payments mean the girls are sometimes trapped into prostitution for years. “There’s not much left for the girls,” Sister Valeria says. “We know one who worked the streets for five years.”

One sex slave was killed, her body burned, in Palermo, in 2011. Nike Adekune, known as “Favour” (the street names used by the women don’t vary much), was from Benin City. One of her clients, a 58-year-old Italian man, was convicted of her murder. Her funeral was held in Fr. Enzo’s church. Several Nigerian prostitutes, presumably sex slaves, have been murdered elsewhere in Italy in recent years.

Italian police are investigating the sex-slave traffickers and have made some arrests, though relatively few, given the apparent scale of the crime. Early last year, Catalan police in Spain broke a sex-trafficking network run by a criminal Nigerian gang known as the Supreme Eiye Confraternity. The trials resulted in 23 prison sentences.

Fr. Enzo and Sister Valeria are an odd pair, united by their relentless commitment to helping the sex slaves of Palermo: A towering 6-foot-6, he’s the priest-giant of Palermo; she’s a small, frail nun almost 30 years older. Fr. Enzo reaches out to the Nigerian women and girls at least one night a week; Sister Valeria does her visits in the morning.

In her simple apartment overlooking Ballarò, the historic Palermo market area alive with the noise and smell of street vendors selling everything from artichokes to mussels, I ask Sister Valeria is she afraid for her safety. She gives me a puzzled look, and I elaborate, suggesting that the Nigerian gangs, like the Black Axe, that evidently control some of the sex slaves or their mamans, might not take kindly to a nun who urges their income earners to quit selling their bodies.

“I don’t have fear,” she says. Indeed, Palermo, for all its criminal activity, is a safe haven compared to some of the spots she has worked in as a member of Comboni Missionary Sisters, an order founded in the 1800s by Daniele Comboni, an Italian linguist who devoted his life to helping the poor in northern Africa and raising European awareness about their plight (he was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 2003). She spent 20 years in the Comboni missions in Sudan, Ethiopia and Uganda. “Everywhere I went, there was war,” she says.

By the time she returned to Verona in 1989, Italian cities were already attracting African migrants and some of what she learned shocked her. “The African women needed help,” she says. “I learned about their lives as trafficked prostitutes and I couldn’t believe their stories at first. I got to know a 16-year-old Nigerian girl who slept in garbage bins at night to hide from the men.”

She has been helping African women in Italy since then, and moved to Palermo in 2009. A lot of her work is done with the local branch of Caritas, the Catholic relief and social services agency. “When I came here, I was told not to go onto the streets with the girls, but I did anyway,” she says.

Fr. Enzo took over Santa Chiara five years ago. The 16th-century Sicilian baroque church operates a community centre for needy locals that includes a day care hall for 35 children, many of them children of migrants. The mothers of at least two of the kids are sex slaves.

After the murder of Nike Adekune in 2011, “we decided to start our anti-trafficking effort,” Fr. Enzo says. He joined forces with Sister Valeria and Caritas to spread the word to the municipality, to politicians and to the media that the Nigerian women on the street and in the brothels were not prostitutes – a term that implies a woman’s willingness to sell sex – but victims of trafficking with no freedoms whatsoever. “These girls are treated like pack animals,” he says.

A force of nature, and not just because of his size, Fr. Enzo devotes himself to helping the Nigerian women. (His idea of serving God is never to spend his days kneeling alone in prayer, he says.) Over the years, Fr. Enzo and Sister Valeria have befriended and helped many hundreds of Nigerian women and girls. The ones who are willing to leave are spirited away and placed in safe houses before fleeing Sicily. Ideally, they have jobs, such as hairdressing or cleaning, so they are not tempted to become prostitutes.

Sister Valeria says she has “saved” 12 girls over the years. Fr. Enzo says he has saved only four during his five years. He admits it’s not an impressive number, considering the high number of sex slaves in Palermo. “Today, the girls are much more controlled than they used to be and it’s hard to get them out,” he says. “But I am very happy to do this work, even if there are no immediate results. We have to give these girls hope.”


Source: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/sex-slavery-african-women-in-italy/article34895329/


Related Stories:
* "Sicily after dark: Where the refugee crisis meets the Mafia": https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/sicily-after-dark-where-the-refugee-crisis-meets-themafia/article30390326/
* "Trafficking of Nigerian women into prostitution in Europe 'at crisis level'": https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/aug/08/trafficking-of-nigerian-women-into-prostitution-in-europe-at-crisis-level
* "Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit Sicily's shores": https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/jun/11/mafia-palermo-nigerian-gangsters-hit-sicily-shores
* "The Mafia is Teaming Up With Nigeria’s ‘Viking’ Gangsters to Run Sex Rings in Sicily": http://www.newsweek.com/mafia-nigeria-migration-sex-work-trafficking-629627

EU suspends funding to refugee NGO following claims of sexual abuse, corruption


Ekathimerini

18 May 2017



The European Union has suspended funding to a non-government organization (NGO) aiding refugees in Greece pending an investigation into allegations of sexual exploitation and financial corruption, a spokesman for European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Christos Stylianides has said.

“Although these remain allegations under investigation, the Commission is taking them very seriously,” the spokesman said in a statement.

“We take a zero tolerance approach to any abuse of the rights and personal integrity of all refugees and migrants as well as to any misuse of funds,” he said.

“Our primary concern is the welfare of the potential victims. Accordingly, we shall ensure that immediate support is provided to them,” he said.

The spokesman said the Commission had already informed the Greek authorities and submitted the case to OLAF, the EU's anti-fraud office for immediate investigation.

He did not name the NGO under investigation.

Harvard report

According to a report from Harvard University published earlier this year, unaccompanied child refugees in Greece are being forced to sell their bodies in order to pay smugglers to help them reach their desired European destination.

The report, produced by Dr Vasileia Digidiki and Prof Jacqueline Bhabha at the university’s centre for health and human rights, exposed a “growing epidemic of sexual exploitation and abuse of migrant children in Greece.”

Source: http://www.ekathimerini.com/218513/article/ekathimerini/news/eu-suspends-funding-to-refugee-ngo-following-claims-of-sexual-abuse-corruption

Trapani prosecutor announces inquiry into sea rescue NGOs

Possible charges of aiding clandestine migration

ANSAmed

18 May 2017



(ANSAmed) - ROME, MAY 18 - Trapani prosecutor Ambrogio Cartosio, who is investiganting against some NGOs working in the Mediterranean on possible charges of aiding and abetting clandestine migration, spoke to Italian MPs on Wednesday. The recently announced inquiry has led to polemics between Italian institutions and NGOs and is ''against specific individuals'', he said. Cartosio said that some of the people onboard the NGO vessels had been aware beforehand of where and when the migrant boats would have been. The prosecutor reiterated that no names of NGOs or details would be given until the investigation was over. Cartosio told the MPs that there was a need to clarify especially the ''state of need'', a mechanism according to which the crime is justified and not punishable if the action saves a life. ''If by state of need we indicate the fact that people are drowning at sea, this is one thing, if instead we mean even cases of individuals detained in Libya, tortured and receiving death threats in Libya, then this is a different sphere that would make the crime unpunishable,'' he said. On the issue of the NGOs' collaboration with police authorities, Cartosio said that the ''organizations have their own ethical code'' with ''an imperative of saving human lives'', and this ''inevitably leads to NGOs needing to not collaborate very willingly with police''.

Even a migrant who ''during the journey decides to steer the boat is liable to charges of aiding and abetting clandestine migration'', which carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison. This makes it ''difficult for NGOs'', he stressed, who do not want to expose the migrants to such punishments. Migrants in Sicily ''do not come only on Coast Guard or NGO boats'', he said. ''They also come on dinghies, small boats and rafts, clandestinely'' and are not identified, which carries the risk of their becoming victims of exploitation and prostitution.

''They could be used by the mafia,'' Cartosio stressed.

''There is a need for control, otherwise we may end up giving a new 'army' to criminal organizations''. In any case, fighting against migration ''on the judicial and police levels is an illusion'', since the plan ''must be political and supranational''. (ANSAmed).

Source: http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/politics/2017/05/18/trapani-prosecutor-announces-inquiry-into-sea-rescue-ngos_fe3d0e90-293a-4dff-b5bb-384b739ad525.html

Italy calls for police on charity boats - NGOs refuse transparency and accountability



AFP

16 May 2017



The Italian parliamentary commission chairman, Nicola Latorre, said: migrants were given satellite phones with the numbers of NGOs to call once they were at sea to try to secure their rescue.

"It has emerged that the phones are thrown into the sea if the rescues are carried out by naval vessels. But if an NGO carries out the rescue, the phones are taken back and used in subsequent crossings," Latorre said.


Rome (AFP) - An Italian parliamentary commission on Tuesday called for police to be deployed on or close to charity boats rescuing migrants in waters off Libya.

Nicola Latorre, chairman of the defence commission of the Senate, said the move would ensure investigations into people traffickers begin at sea, where "crucial evidence can be lost."

He was speaking at the presentation of a report based on a series of hearings which have seen NGOs accused of encouraging the mass influx of migrants to Italy by providing a 'taxi pick-up' service for packed rickety boats that traffickers effectively only need to get out of Libyan territorial waters.

NGOs poured cold water on the idea of allowing police to travel with them.

"We have a humanitarian mandate and we want to maintain a clear distinction between that and any military or police intervention," one organisation, SOS Mediterranee, said in a statement. "This is crucial for our independence."

In its report, the commission also recommended a system of registering NGO's active in search and rescue operations in order to ensure full transparency about their financing.

Charity boats have this year been responsible for rescuing around one third of the thousands of migrants picked up in waters off Libya. That is up from around a quarter last year.

Italy has taken in more than half a million migrants rescued in this way since the start of 2014.

The defence commission's recommendations follow a row over claims by a prosecutor based in Sicily that some NGO boats could be being financed by the traffickers themselves to make their job of getting mostly African migrants into Europe in return for payments.

A more subtle version of the argument suggests the charity boats have helped to create a 'pull' factor by decreasing the risks involved in trying to make the Mediterranean crossing.

Figures suggest however that the journey remains extremely dangerous with 1,229 people recorded as having died or disappeared at sea so far this year, according to the International Organisation for Migration. That is one death for every 37 people rescued.


Source:

* AFP - 16.05.2017 - "Italian lawmakers want police on charity boats": https://www.yahoo.com/news/italian-lawmakers-want-police-charity-boats-175616208.html
* Times of Malta - 16.05.2017 - "Malta, Tunisia should do more to tackle migration, Italian parliamentary commission says": http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20170516/local/malta-tunisia-should-do-more-to-tackle-migration-italian-parliamentary.648199

The German NGO ship “Sea Watch 2” once again involved in a direct confrontation with the Libyan Coast Guard. (VIDEO)


28 June 2017



[…] The navy spokesman, Qassem, said several migrant boats were spotted off Libya on Tuesday along with at least six privately operated ships "claiming to carry out rescue operations".
One of the vessels entered Libyan waters before the coastguard forced it to leave, he said, accusing the boats' operators of "complicity" with people smugglers. […]

This information has been also confirmed by Paraic O'Brien, Correspondent – Channel 4 News currently onboard the “Sea Watch 2”

Video of the incident: https://twitter.com/paraicobrien/status/879818245867532288




Source: https://twitter.com/paraicobrien


 "Sea Watch against Libyan Coast Guard" (VIDEO)


22 June 2017


German NGO "Sea-Watch" ship attempted to ram the Libyan CGS "Kifah" anticipating to cause a major international incident. The true intentions of the NGOs were revealed by German journalists from "Spiegel TV" present at the time of incident on board the Libyan Coast Guard ship. See video footage made available today. This incident took place on May 10th, 2017.

Source: "Sea Watch against Libyan Coast Guard"- Sea Watch gegen libysche Küstenwache (VIDEO) http://www.spiegel.tv/videos/207832-sea-watch-gegen-libysche-kuestenwache

Libya orders NGOs to stay out of its territorial waters

“They waited for the boats half an hour ahead of their arrival. They called the traffickers”

17 June 2017



The situation with increasingly aggressive NGO rescues is in danger of causing a real diplomatic incident. The Libyan Coast Guard ordered the NGO ships to leave its territorial waters where apparently they were waiting for inflatables loaded with migrants.

This accusation comes from the Libyan Coast Guard which intercepted wireless calls and later identified the trafficker boats with 570 migrants.

The spokesman of the Libyan Navy Admiral Ayob Amr Ghasem explained how "wireless calls were detected half an hour prior to the identification of the boats. The calls were placed to international non-governmental organizations who were claiming to rescue illegal migrants in proximity. It appeared that the NGOs - he said - waited for the boats to board them. The Coast Guard contacted the NGOs and ordered them to leave Libyan territorial waters”. He said: "the behavior of these NGOs increases the number of illegal migrants and the audacity of human traffickers".

He also mentioned that one of the migrants was already killed by traffickers in the past few days. “They know well that the way to Europe is easy thanks to these organizations and their illegal presence. Additionally, the medium used for communications, the wireless calls are difficult to detect and allow for hiding of contact evidence between traffickers and NGOs.”

The accusations made by Frontex regrading NGO activities in the last few months and resumed criminal investigation by the Italian prosecutor Zuccaro and three of his colleagues now appear to have a solid foundation.

The ships accused of being in the area at the time of communication are the “Prudence” operated by Doctors Without Borders (who incidentally admitted to crossing several times the boundary of Libyan territorial waters), Spanish Proactiva Open Arms - “Golfo Azurro”, Jugend Rettet – “Iuventa” and Sea-Watch – “Sea Watch 2” both German.

Mediterranean Migrant Arrivals Reach 73,189 in 2017; 1,808 Deaths
The UN Migration Agency (IOM) reports that 73,189 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea in 2017 through 11 June, with almost 85 per cent arriving in Italy and the remainder divided between Greece, Cyprus and Spain. This compares with 211,433 arrivals across the region through 11 June 2016.

Source:

* Il Giornale – I libici fermano le Ong: "Chiamano gli scafisti":  http://www.ilgiornale.it/news/politica/i-libici-fermano-ong-chiamano-scafisti-1407924.html
* La Sicilia – Marina Libica respinge navi delle Ong: "Erano stati avvertiti e aspettavano i migranti":  http://www.lasicilia.it/news/catania/87887/marina-libica-respinge-navi-delle-ong-erano-stati-avvertiti-e-aspettavano-i-migranti.html
* Analisi Difesa – “Meno male che ci sono i libici a sparare ai trafficanti e allontanare le Ong”: http://www.analisidifesa.it/2017/06/meno-male-che-ci-sono-i-libici-a-sparare-ai-trafficanti-e-allontanare-le-ong/