Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Rescue ship arrives in Sicily with 245 migrants, 13 corpses


Business Standard


28 July 2017

Rome, July 28 (IANS/AKI) A ship docked in the Sicilian port of Trapani in Italy with 245 migrants on board who were saved earlier this week in the Mediterranean, as well as the bodies of 13 people who perished on the crossing, officials said on Friday.

Rescuers on Tuesday recovered the corpses of 13 migrants including pregnant women from a flimsy inflatable dinghy drifting 15 nautical miles off the Libyan coast.

Shocking pictures of the tragedy emerged showing survivors from sub-Saharan Africa sitting on the sides of the raft around a pile of bodies, many of which were naked.

A Spanish charity rescue vessel that reached the scene found 167 migrants alive.

Nearly 3,000 migrants have died trying to reach Europe across the Mediterranean so far this year, according to the UN migration agency the International Organization for Migration.

A total 113,433 people entered Europe by sea this year through 26 July as the Mediterranean migrant crisis continues, with 94,445 of these people landing in Italy, according to IOM.

--IANS/AKI/mr/

Source: http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ians/rescue-ship-arrives-in-sicily-with-245-migrants-13-corpses-117072801575_1.html

Italy aims to deploy ships in Libyan waters by end-August


Reuters

By Steve Scherer

27 July 2017


ROME (Reuters) - Italy intends to deploy several ships in Libyan waters by the end of August to combat human trafficking and stem a huge influx of immigrants, a government source said on Thursday.

A mission plan should be brought to the Cabinet for approval on Friday, and the necessary parliamentary vote to endorse it may be held next week, the source said.

"The exact number of ships and sailors is still being worked out," said the source. If parliament approves, the mission might begin by the end of August, he said.

Amid mixed signals from Tripoli over whether Libya would allow the deployment, Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni met with military chiefs and ministers on Thursday to discuss "security, immigration and the Libyan situation", according to a statement.

Some 600,000 migrants have reached Italy by sea from North Africa since 2014, making immigration a potent political issue and putting the country under increasing pressure to manage the new arrivals.

Most have embarked from Libya, where people smugglers operate with impunity in the turmoil that has gripped the country since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

Gentiloni told reporters the mission was "a possible turning point".

Details of the plan will be presented to parliament on Tuesday, he said.

In a letter sent on Sunday that Gentiloni outlined on Wednesday, Libya's U.N.-backed government in Tripoli invited Italian warships into its territorial waters. Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Serraj was in Italy for the announcement of the plan on Wednesday.

On Thursday, Gentiloni said he had spoken to several European "colleagues" who supported the mission. "It pleases me to know there is a lot of support in Europe to this new possibility," he said.

Despite Serraj's visit, Libya’s presidential council in Tripoli on Thursday denied it had given permission for Italian forces to be in Libyan waters and warned sovereignty was a red line.

"What was agreed with Italy was the completion of the program supporting the coast guards to train and prepare them with armed capabilities and equipment for saving lives of migrants, and to confront criminal organizations," it said.

"....National sovereignty is a red line that cannot be passed."

The council gave no explanation for the conflicting positions. But Libya's U.N.-backed presidential council is split and Serraj has struggled in a country where rival factions have steadily battled for control since Gaddafi's fall.

In the past, officials have backtracked on statements that appear to impact Libya's sovereignty, such as counter-terrorism cooperation, as they come under pressure from rivals at home.

Tripoli had in the past refused access to its waters to the European Union's anti-trafficking sea mission Sophia since 2015, hobbling efforts to stop smugglers.

Command Ship

A command ship heading a flotilla of at least five smaller vessels and up to 1,000 sailors will be used in the mission, newspaper Corriere della Sera reported on Thursday. Planes, helicopters and drones will also be used, it said.

The rules of engagement, the area of coastline to be patrolled and the nature of cooperation with Libya's security forces have yet to be defined, the source said.

One thing is clear: Italy wants migrants picked up by its ships - should the Libyan coastguard not be able to intervene directly - to be returned to Libya and not taken to Italy.

"This all makes sense only if we can limit the arrival of migrants in Italy," the source said.

Migrants who reach international waters are brought to Italy because Libya is not considered safe for refugees, and returning them there would be a violation of international non-refoulement law.

Because the Libyan coastguard returns migrants to detention centers where they are held indefinitely in "inhuman" conditions, according to the United Nations, Italy wants U.N. agencies to bolster their presence there and to operate migrant camps that respect human rights, the source said.

Additional reporting by Ahmed Elumami in Tripoli, editing by Larry King and John Stonestreet

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-italy-navy-idUSKBN1AC1PA?il=0

Unchecked Migration Continues to Splinter Europe


Carnegie Europe

By Andrew A. Michta

27 July 2017


European governments should engage to tackle the migration crisis at its source, otherwise Europe’s already tenuous tolerance of immigrants will only decrease.

Europe continues to face its greatest migration wave since the end of World War II. The majority of migrants are arriving from outside the continent, especially the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) but also the Sahel and, increasingly, Asia. In March 2017, Frontex, the EU’s frontier agency, warned that the number of people undertaking the Central Mediterranean crossing was on the rise. With the arrival of summer, the next wave of MENA migration into Europe is about to be unleashed.

A May 2017 German government report warned that up to 6.6 million people were clustered around the Mediterranean preparing to cross to Europe from Africa, awaiting favorable summer weather to launch to sea. Now that the Western Balkan migration route has been closed, Libya is fast becoming the main transition point, reportedly with 2.5 million migrants in North Africa waiting to cross by boat. Meanwhile, over 3 million remain stalled in Turkey, prevented from entering Europe by the EU’s March 2016 refugee deal with the Turkish government. The figures could be higher still: some estimates put the number of migrants preparing to enter Europe as high as 8–10 million.

The uninterrupted flow of migration into the EU has redefined Europe’s geostrategic position. Today, Europe’s Southern border runs deep into Africa along the Sahel and across the Middle East. Southern Europe in particular remains exposed and vulnerable to pressure from MENA migration flows, which have had two ripple effects.

The first has been the progressive atrophying of the EU’s Schengen system of passport-free travel, one of the greatest achievements of European integration. The second has been growing polarization among states across the continent, with fundamental and increasingly intractable divisions on the question of resettlement—especially between Germany and Central and Eastern Europe. Temporary border controls established in Europe in September 2015 did not provide much respite. Now, the proposed lifting of border controls within the EU is likely to accelerate migration flows.

Europeans’ initial calm, goodwill, and even enthusiasm for the new arrivals and manifest Willkommenskultur, or welcoming culture, have given way to growing public anger. In parallel, public confidence in European governments’ ability to deal with the crisis has rapidly declined.

The current EU debate on how to tackle the crisis seems to have bifurcated into two strands. On the one hand, the European Commission and some countries most impacted by migration, especially Germany, have made repeated demands for European solidarity on resettlement quotas. On the other hand, states that have been less affected, primarily in Central Europe, have made efforts to slow down the flow by closing off access routes, while others such as Italy have sent money to countries in the region to keep the migrants in place. Despite occasional indicators of success, especially in terms of assistance to transit states, the EU will likely be overwhelmed by the next migration wave, with surging numbers of migrants from deep inside Africa.

Migration continues to reorder domestic politics in Europe, as immigration fatigue sets in across the continent and national populist parties gain traction. No other issue drives political realignment in Europe more directly today than the growing public anger over governments’ inability to stop the flood, process applications in a timely manner, and return those whose asylum applications have been rejected. In election after election, challengers have threatened established political parties, and although anti-immigration parties have yet to prevail and their support fluctuates, they have managed to shrink the political middle ground in Europe.

MENA migration also fuels frictions between governments. Austria’s foreign minister recently demanded that Italy stop allowing illegal migrants to reach the Italian mainland, as this gives them a gateway to Europe. In July, the Italian foreign ministry responded by calling in the Austrian ambassador to complain after the Austrians threatened to deploy 750 military personnel to the Brenner Pass on the Austrian-Italian border.

Meanwhile, the governments of Hungary and Poland have been outspoken in their determination not to allow any migrants to be resettled on their territories. Opposition to the European Commission’s quota schemes for migrant resettlement remains strong across Central Europe.

These tensions have fractured the EU on immigration policy. Resentment has grown in those European countries that have borne the brunt of resettling the new entrants, especially Germany and Sweden but also Austria, Denmark, and, outside the EU, Norway. Some governments have made it clear that they are prepared to use their armed forces to prevent illegal migration into their countries.

A key factor in the current European debate on migration has been the initial decision to allow migrants to enter and be processed in Europe regardless of whether they can prove refugee status, even though the majority are economic migrants. If there is a solution to the current migration crisis, it lies in sealing the EU’s external borders and establishing a system to screen migrants outside Europe.

This would require a large commitment of resources as well as European military power to create areas where initial screenings could take place before migrants can enter Europe. Admittedly, this would be a massive task, as it would require the EU to engage both militarily and in terms of aid to transit countries on a scale not seen so far, beginning with breaking smuggling chains and stopping boats from leaving for the Mediterranean.

Europe is fast approaching a moment of truth about how such massive migration waves will impact the European project, intergovernmental relations, and the overall culture of tolerance that defined postwar democratic Europe. For more than two years, the migration crisis has splintered an already fragile EU consensus on immigration policy, with the blame game becoming ever more common. Finger pointing in Europe, especially against Germany for its decision to open its doors to a large number of migrants in 2015, has become an important variable in how the intra-EU politics of migration has unfolded.

But such accusations and counter accusations will do nothing to address the crisis. Unless governments engage on a large scale at the source, the likely victim will be Europe’s already tenuous tolerance of immigrants. The clock is ticking.

Andrew A. Michta is the dean of the College of International and Security Studies at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies. Views expressed here are his own.


Source: http://carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceurope/72664?lang=en

Tripoli asks Italy to help fight traffickers in Libyan waters


AFP

26 July 2017

Rome (AFP) - Libya's UN-backed Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj has appealed to Italy to send ships into Libyan territorial waters to help combat human trafficking, Rome said Wednesday.

Sarraj "sent a letter requesting the Italian government provide the technical support of Italian naval units in the joint struggle in Libyan waters against human traffickers," Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said.

Gentiloni said the ministry of defence was considering the request and "the options will be discussed with the Libyan authorities and the Italian parliament".

Should Italy respond positively, "as I believe is necessary, it could be a very important development in the fight against people trafficking," he added.

The Italian PM was speaking after a meeting in Rome with Sarraj, the head of the Government of National Authority (GNA), based in the capital Tripoli.

The move would doubtless help cut down the number of migrant boat departures from the coast of crisis-hit Libya and ease the strain on Italy, which has struggled to house the many thousands of people rescued at sea.

Sarraj admitted "we need to do more so that our coast guard can fight illegal immigration and ensure that we have advanced technologies to control our coasts".

Close to 94,000 people have been brought to safety in Italy so far this year, according to Italy's interior ministry, an increase of over five percent compared to the same period last year.

More than 2,370 people have died since January attempting the perilous crossing, the UN refugee agency said.

EU member states on Tuesday agreed to extend the Sophia anti-trafficking operation in the Mediterranean for another 18 months amid growing concern at the number of migrants crossing to Europe.

And European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker promised Gentiloni an extra 100 million euros ($116 million) in funding, on top of nearly 800 million euros already pledged.

Sarraj was in Rome a day after he committed to a ceasefire in the conflict-ridden country with his rival Khalifa Haftar, the military commander based in the east of the vast country.

The commitment, announced in Paris, saw the two men pledge to holding elections that French President Emmanuel Macron said would take place in spring 2018.


Source:  https://www.yahoo.com/news/tripoli-asks-italy-help-fight-traffickers-libyan-waters-113554853.html

Libya ready to declare migrants rescue area-sources

Authorities saved 3,000, stopped other 11,000 leaving Monday

ANSA

25 July 2017

(ANSA) - Brussels, July 25 - Libya is ready to declare its own search and rescue area (SAR) at sea for migrants and work with Italy to see to what degree it is capable of presiding over it, European sources said Tuesday. The development emerges after Monday's meeting in Tunis of the interior ministers of Algeria, Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Libya, Mali, Malta, Niger, Slovenia, Switzerland, Chad and Tunisia. On Monday alone the Libyan coast guard saved 3,000 migrants and took them back to the North African country and stopped another 11,000 leaving for Europe.


Source: http://www.ansa.it/english/news/2017/07/25/libya-ready-to-declare-migrants-rescue-area-sources_e4407f90-5ce5-4c76-b07e-c9a92c44f7a3.html


Friday, July 21, 2017

The NGOs actively engage in criminal activity by aiding and abetting in human trafficking. They also directly communicate with smugglers.  

(scroll down for images & click to enlarge)




THIS IS NOT A JOKE!

Tomorrow is a pick up day! The Libyan human traffickers advertise "NGO pick up services" already for this weekend. A quick check with www.marinetraffic.com and www.vesselfinder.com to see if the "taxi service" is there. They are all in position! Quick check with your friendly FB community smuggler page : ::: Warp-Hijra, from Libya to Italy - Tel. 00218924908001 ::: Everything is set and ready to go! For last minute booking please call the number:

M / 00218924458187
C / 00218924908001

Smuggler's advertising FB page --->


Today, 21.07.2017 the Spanish NGO "Open Arms" vessel illegally entered and was patrolling inside of the Libyan territorial waters in the area of Zuwara. See "screenshot 1".

 

:: Remember the 2359 innocent people that have already drawn this year? Your generous donations have made this possible! ::


NGOs involved:

* MSF (Doctors Without Borders)

http://www.msf.org/en/topics/mediterranean-migration

https://twitter.com/msf_sea?lang=de

* Save the Children

http://www.savethechildren.org/

https://twitter.com/sc_humanitarian

* SOS Méditerranée

http://www.sosmediterranee.org

https://twitter.com/SOSMedFrance

* Sea-Eye e.V.

http://www.sea-eye.org/

https://twitter.com/seaeyeorg/

* MOAS | Migrant Offshore Aid Station

https://www.moas.eu/

https://twitter.com/moas_eu/

* Boat Refugee Foundation

http://www.bootvluchteling.nl/en/

https://twitter.com/bootvlucht

* Proactiva Open Arms

https://www.proactivaopenarms.org/en

https://twitter.com/openarms_found

Ships involved:

- "Open Arms"
- "Aqurius"
- "Golfo Azzurro"
- "Vos Prudence"
- "Vos Hestia"
- "Phoenix"
- "Seefuchs"
- "Sea-Eye"

(click on image for actual size)

 (screenshot 1) 

Spanish "Open Arms" conducting illegal patrols in Libyan territorial waters without any authorization  ("Non-Innocent Passage" Article 19 UNCLOS). Tracking 19-20-07.2017

 

 (screenshot 2)
 (screenshot 3)
 (screenshot 4)
 (screenshot 5)
 (screenshot 6)


Thursday, July 20, 2017

Madness in the Med: how charity rescue boats exacerbate the refugee crisis


They claim to be saving lives, but they are colluding in a people-trafficking operation

The Spectator

By Nicholas Farrell

20 July 2017


Following the EU’s deal with Turkey over people smuggling, the issue of migrants trying to cross, and quite often drowning in, the Mediterranean has largely disappeared from the British media. There have been no more images like that of three-year-old Alan Kurdi, washed up on a Turkish beach after the rubber dinghy in which his family were trying to reach the Greek island of Kos capsized in August 2015.

Now, people smugglers and migrants know there is little point in trying to make the crossing from Turkey to Greece because they will only be sent back, in return for the EU taking refugees directly from camps in Turkey. The deal has successfully curtailed the activities of criminal gangs operating in the eastern Mediterranean: in the first six months of this year arrivals in Greece had fallen by 93 per cent compared with a year earlier.

But the problem hasn’t gone away; it has shifted westwards to Italy, where things just go from bad to worse. Last year a record 181,000 migrants arrived there by sea, nearly all from Libya, and this year there are sure to be many more: over 90,000 have so far been ferried across the Mediterranean from near the Libyan coast to Sicily, 300 miles away, according to the latest figures from IOM, the UN migration agency. Earlier this week IOM reported that 2,359 migrants have died trying to cross the Mediterranean already this year, on top of 5,083 deaths last year and 2,777 in 2015.

The EU, which has mismanaged the migrant problem from the start, only sealing the Turkey deal after years of inaction, has washed its hands of the latest explosion of migrant trafficking. It has ignored the Italian government’s increasingly desperate appeals for help.

Italy used to have a pressure valve. Most migrants used the country as a staging post to more prosperous countries in northern Europe. But with France and Austria reneging on the Schengen agreement by reintroducing border checks, they are stuck in Italy, a country with an unemployment rate of 12 per cent and an economy forecast to take another decade just to get back to the size it was in 2007. Worse, the migrant problem is concentrated in the south of Italy, where the economy is weakest and taxpayers most scarce. Many migrants are living in hostels, each at an annual cost of €13,000 to those Italians who do pay tax. Others disappear into the black economy, sleeping rough or living in illegally let and overcrowded flats.

Thanks in part to guilt about their fascist past, Italians are eager not to be racist, yet they are sick of what they see as an illegal migrant invasion and of the complicit role of four unelected Italian prime ministers since the resignation of the last elected one, Silvio Berlusconi, in 2011. According to a recent opinion poll published in the Rome daily Il Messaggero, 67 per cent of Italians want Italy to close its ports to rescue vessels or deport all migrants ferried to Italy, and 61 per cent want a naval blockade of the Libyan coast.

The left lost heavily in Italy’s local elections in June as a result of brewing anger at the migrant crisis. Giusi Nicolini, the mayor of Lampedusa who had won a peace prize from Unesco and been praised by the Pope, finished a humiliating third in her bid for re-election, defeated by a rival from her own Democratic party. She blamed her defeat on local opposition to a crackdown on illegal building, playing down the bigger issue of migrant arrivals.

But Lampedusa, just seven miles long and two miles wide, is 180 miles north of the Libyan coast and has been in the frontline of people trafficking, for which Nicolini showed rather too much tolerance. Italian attitudes are hardening, thanks to obvious and growing evidence that very few of the arriving migrants can honestly be called refugees - unless you widen that definition to include anyone who lives in Africa, on the basis that its standards of living and respect for human rights are universally lower than in western Europe.

The debate about migrant crossings tends to be held in the context of people fleeing from wars in Syria and Libya. Yet according to Eurostat, the EU’s statistical arm, of the 46,995 migrant arrivals in Italy in the first four months of this year, only 635 were Syrians and 170 were Libyans. By contrast, 10,000 came from Nigeria, 4,135 from Bangladesh, 3,865 from the Gambia, 3,625 from Pakistan and 3,460 from Senegal. None of these countries can be said to be consumed by civil war, and even if some individuals had reason to claim asylum, international law dictates that they should claim it in the first ‘safe’ country they reach - which in every case would be before crossing the sea to Italy.

What is causing growing Italian anger is the role of charities and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in the transport of migrants across the Mediterranean. The image the charities like to present is that of desperate people putting to sea in any vessel they can lay their hands on because whatever risks they run cannot exceed the dangers of staying in their homelands. Save the Children, for example, declares in heartrending prose on its website, between photos of young children wrapped in foil blankets, that ‘children are fleeing bullets, poverty, persecution and the growing impact of climate change, only to drown in European waters’.

The reality could not be more different. The vast majority of migrants from Libya are young men paying the equivalent of €1,000 each to people smugglers in what they see as a calculated risk to reach a better life in Europe. The business model of the smugglers does not include transporting their customers all the way to Italy, but rather to take them 12 nautical miles to the boundary of Libya’s territorial waters, so they can then be ‘rescued’ and ferried the rest of the way to Europe. The people smugglers are quite open about what they are doing: what can only be described as a Libya-based migrant travel agency has set up a Facebook page offering ‘tickets’ to ‘passengers’ with ‘discounts for group bookings’ on ‘ferries’ - i.e., smuggler boats - complete with phone number. The journey, it says, lasts only ‘three or four hours’ before rescue by an NGO, Italian or EU vessel, which will complete the ferry service to Italy.

Between October 2013 and October 2014 the second leg of the journey was provided by the Italian navy and coastguard in a search-and-rescue operation called Mare Nostrum, which brought 190,000 migrants to Italy. But those vessels operated 150 miles north of the Libyan coast near Lampedusa, which itself is 170 miles south of Sicily. This meant migrants had to undertake much of the journey under their own steam. Mare Nostrum encouraged them to take greater risks and thus added to the death toll. The operation was replaced in 2014 when the EU agreed that Europe, not just Italy, should shoulder the search-and-rescue burden. So Operation Triton was launched. Under this, search-and-rescue vessels from across the EU operate up to a line 120 miles north of Libya. However, all charity vessels (now responsible for about a third of rescues) operate right up to the Libyan coast. Among them are the Vos Hestia, a 59-metre former offshore tug operated by Save the Children, the 68-metre MV Aquarius, jointly operated by SOS Mediterranée and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and the 40-metre Phoenix, owned by MOAS, a charity founded by an American businessman and his Italian wife.

The operators of these vessels are legally obliged to assist those ‘in distress’ at sea if they are in a position to do so. What they are not allowed to do is to operate deliberate and unauthorised search-and-rescue missions within territorial waters, nor to pick people off a boat which is not ‘in distress’ on the pretext of ‘rescuing’ them. Moreover, if they do save people in distress, they are obliged under maritime law to take them to the nearest safe port, which is seldom in Italy.

But these boats are entering Libyan territorial waters. I asked an independent Dutch research institute, Gefira, for evidence. It used marine traffic websites (freely available to the public) which track ships in real time via satellite. It discovered that a dozen NGO vessels entered Libya’s waters, often many times. The Vos Hestia, for example, did so on the 5, 16, 22 and 23 May; the Aquarius on the 2, 5, 16 and 23 May and as recently as 9 July. The Phoenix was tracked there three times, most recently on 10 July.

The NGOs are now under investigation by Sicilian magistrates for possible collusion with people smugglers. Carmelo Zuccaro, the magistrate in charge, told the Turin daily La Stampa in April: ‘We have evidence that there are direct contacts between certain NGOs and people traffickers in Libya.’ He says phone calls have been made from Libya to certain NGOs, lamps have been lit to illuminate the route to these organisations’ boats, and some of these boats have suddenly turned off their locating transponders.

At the time, Save the Children said: ‘The Vos Hestia, which operates in international waters and in coordination with the [Italian] coastguard, has never entered Libyan waters.’ It has since changed its tune. George Graham, Save the Children’s Director of Humanitarian Policy, said: ‘Save the Children operates in international waters, moving closer to territorial waters only if instructed by the Italian coastguard. On a highly exceptional basis, and if deemed necessary to save lives, Save the Children may enter Libyan waters operating under the coordination of the Italian coastguard. We are not a ferry service. We do not communicate with traffickers or people smugglers.’

Marco Bertotto, head of advocacy for MSF Italy, admits: ‘There were three occasions in 2016 when MSF — in critical and urgent cases and with the explicit authorisation of the relevant Libyan and Italian authorities — assisted in rescues 11.5 nautical miles from the coast. Also in 2017, we have entered on a few occasions in Libyan waters, and with the explicit authorisation of relevant authorities.’ A MOAS spokesman said Phoenix entered Libyan waters only when authorised by the Italian coastguard in Rome. Despite repeated calls and emails, the coastguard declined to explain why it issued such authorisations.

These charities, and others operating ships in the Mediterranean, of course
claim to be saving lives. But what they are really doing is colluding - either intentionally or not - in a people-trafficking operation. If charities and NGOs stopped providing a pick-up service a few miles off Libya, and if Italy started returning migrants to the North African countries whence they came, the smugglers’ boats would not put to sea.

Those who are dying are the victims of a well–intentioned but thoroughly misguided operation which will come to be seen as great moral stain on Europe.


Source: https://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/07/migrants-and-madness-in-the-med/