Sunday, August 6, 2017

Migrants: NGO vessel blocked in Lampedusa for checks

Iuventa of German group Jugend Rettet did not sign protocol

ANSAmed

2 August 2017

LAMPEDUSA (AGRIGENTO) - In the first measure towards NGOs rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean after the code of conduct drafted by the interior ministry, the Iuventa vessel of German NGO Jugend Rettet was blocked off Lampedusa overnight by Italian coast guards, which escorted the boat to the port.

The NGO did not adhere to the protocol, which was signed only by three organizations.

Several coast guard cutters were deployed to escort the Iuventa and security was tight around the peer where the boat docked. Lampedusa port authority chief, lieutenant Paolo Monaco, boarded the boat and stayed in the control cabin for over two hours. ''It is a routine check that we carried out and it will not lead to any problem - the officer said after leaving the Iuventa -. We will now control the documents of the whole crew and this morning they will already be able to leave Lampedusa if everything is in order.

Two Syrians were escorted off the boat and taken to the island's first reception center. The two migrants were previously transferred aboard the boat of the German NGO by one of the Italian military units deployed in migrant rescue operations in the Mediterranean.
The NGO Jugend Rettet, founded in 2015 by upper middle class youths from Germany with the objective of rescuing migrants fleeing war and famine, bought the Iuventa two years ago at the port of Endem in Germany, turning the old fishing boat into a vessel fit for search-and-rescue operations.


Source:  http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/generalnews/2017/08/02/migrants-ngo-vessel-blocked-in-lampedusa-for-checks_ab151822-932b-4651-bf43-b3f0513b10f5.html?idPhoto=1

Facebook used in people smuggling networks, researchers find

There were more than 885,000 illegal East Mediterranean border crossings in 2015 - a 1,641% increase on the number in 2014.

Sky News

2 August 2017

People smugglers who offer to illegally transport people into Europe are advertising their services openly on Facebook, researchers have found.

Picture and video testimonials from successful migrants are posted on social media as smuggling operations compete to be seen as the safest way to enter Europe.

Researchers are using this information to analyse the networks behind people smuggling operations in the Mediterranean.

Syrian communities displaced by the civil war are especially close users of Facebook. The country had a functional education system before the war and Syrian migrants have on average a higher level of education and digital literacy.

A team led by Paolo Campana, an expert in criminal networks at the University of Cambridge, has pored over a vast range of information to investigate how migrants choose their smugglers and border crossings.

"As everywhere, education matters," Dr Campana said.

"Accessing and evaluating information through channels such as Facebook could mean the difference between life and death."

More than 885,000 illegal border crossings took place along the East Mediterranean route in 2015 - a 1,641% increase on 2014.

Dr Campana did not know how many of these transactions would have been negotiated on the internet, but told Sky News social media must have played a major role.

The smugglers' focus on reputation is a product of smuggling humans into Europe being a "quintessential free market", according to Dr Campana.

Unlike people trafficking, the smugglers' commodity is not the people that they control but the actual crossing of borders.

Regional instability to the south and east of the Mediterranean has caused demand for this commodity to rapidly increase in recent years.

Dr Campana described the range of morals and ethics among smugglers: "Some smugglers cheat, some overcharge, some care about safety, some don't care who lives or dies."

The networks that drive people smuggling are very different from many others because of its free market environment.

Unlike in typical areas of large-enterprise crime, there are no monopolies when it comes to smuggling networks.

Dr Campana's research shows that the networks are heavily fragmented.

Individual smuggling operations "are stunted and localised" said Dr Campana, with nobody in control of all stages of the journey.

"Smugglers operate as independent actors in various stages of an overall journey, whether it's a sea or a desert crossing, or temporary city accommodation, or car trips over European borders.

"While some smuggling groups make arrangements with each other, there seem to be no exclusivity agreements and - despite the localisation of smuggling networks - very little territorial control," said Dr Campana.

The importance of networks and reputations in the free market of smugglers can been seen in the evidence that Dr Campana had collected.

One recording of a wiretapped telephone call revealed how one people smuggler asked another how many of the 366 asylum seekers who had died when an overcrowded boat caught fire near the Italian island of Lampedusa were his.

The wiretap records one of the smugglers berating the other for his lapse safety.

The other smuggler later began to personally notify the families of the dead and pay out $5,000 (£3,778) in compensation to salvage his reputation.

"This is a market driven by exponential demand, and it is that demand which should be targeted," said Dr Campana.

"Land-based policies such as refugee resettlement schemes are politically difficult, but might ultimately prove more fruitful in stemming the smuggling tide."

Sky News has contacted Facebook for a response to the report.


Source: http://news.sky.com/story/facebook-used-in-people-smuggling-networks-researchers-find-10969950?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter


Italian parliament gives green light to Libya naval mission


Reuters

By Crispian Balmer

2 august 2017

ROME, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Italy's parliament authorised on Wednesday a limited naval mission to help Libya's coastguard curb migrant flows, which have become a source of growing political friction ahead of national elections expected early next year.

An Italian official said Rome planned to send two boats to Libyan waters, with Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti saying the vessels would only provide technical support and would not infringe on the north African country's sovereignty.

Italy announced the operation last week, saying it had been requested by Libya's U.N.-backed government. It initially hoped to send six ships into Libyan territorial waters, but the plans had to be scaled back following protests from Tripoli.

"(We will) provide logistical, technical and operational support for Libyan naval vessels, helping them and supporting them in shared and coordinated actions," Pinotti told parliament on Tuesday ahead of Wednesday's vote.

"There will be no harm done or slight given to Libyan sovereignty, because, if anything, our aim is to strengthen Libyan sovereignty," she added, stressing that Italy had no intention of imposing a blockade on Libya's coast.

The lower house voted by 328 to 113 in favour of the mission. The upper house was also expected to back the measure when it votes later in the day.

After a surge in migrant arrivals on boats from Libya at the start of the year the numbers of newcomers has slowed in recent weeks and the Interior Ministry said on Wednesday that 95,215 people had reached Italy so far this year, down 2.7 percent on the same period in 2016.

Some 2,230 migrants, most of them Africans fleeing poverty and violence back home, have died so far this year trying to make the sea crossing.

ELECTIONS AHEAD

The total number of migrants who have arrived in Italy over the past four years is some 600,000, putting Italy's network of reception centres under huge strain and causing increasing political tensions.

Italy is due to hold national elections by next May, with voting widely expected in early 2018, and the migrant issue is expected to top the political agenda. Rightist parties accuse the centre-left government of doing nothing to halt the influx.

"The (migrant boats) will not be being pushed back to the Libyan shore so we don't understand what we are going to be doing there," Giancarlo Giorgetti, deputy head of the opposition Northern League party, told reporters in parliament.

Italy hopes the Libyan coastguard can help prevent flimsy migrant boats from putting to sea and has been at the forefront of efforts to make the small force more effective, training its members and upgrading its fleet.

Rome has also put pressure on non-governmental organisations which have playing an increasingly important role in picking up migrants off the Libyan coast and bringing them to Italy.

The government has introduced a code of conduct for the NGOs and has demanded that armed police travel on their boats to help root out eventual people smugglers. Only three out of eight humanitarian groups operating in the southern Mediterranean agreed this week to the Italian terms.

Italy did not spell out the consequences for those that did not sign up, but on Wednesday, the Italian coastguard halted at sea a boat operated by German NGO Jugend Rettet, which had said 'No'. The vessel was searched and then escorted to port, while the crew ID's were checked. (Reporting by Crispian Balmer, editing by Alister Doyle)


Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/reuters/article-4753494/Italian-parliament-gives-green-light-Libya-naval-mission.html

Italy enforces NGO boat crackdown as migrant flux slows


AFP News

2 August 2017

Italy on Wednesday began enforcing a controversial code of conduct for charity boats rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean as new figures revealed a sharp drop in the numbers of people arriving from Libya.

A boat operated by Germany's Jugend Rettet, one of several NGO's which have refused to sign the code, was intercepted off Lampedusa and escorted to the outlying Italian island for "routine checks", a coastguard spokesman told AFP.

The organisation said its boat, the Iuventa, had not been impounded and the crew had not been arrested, but could not immediately provide further details of the coastguard operation.

Only three of the nine NGO's operating search-and-rescue activities in waters off Libya have accepted the new rules, which Italian authorities say are necessary to ensure the boats are not effectively encouraging migrants to embark on the perilous crossing.

The NGOs have particularly objected to a requirement to allow an Italian police official to travel on each boat and a ban on moving rescued migrants from one aid vessel to another while still at sea, which they say could result in avoidable deaths.

Some 600,000 mostly African migrants have arrived in Italy from Libya since the start of 2014, putting the country's reception facilities under strain and the centre-left government under pressure over the crisis.

For most of this year the numbers of new arrivals have pointed to 2017 breaking all previous records.

But July, normally a busy month, saw the trend reversed, suggesting various efforts to close down the Libya-Italy route to Europe could be having an impact.

The Interior Ministry said 11,193 people had been registered at Italian ports in July, compared with 23,552 in July 2016.

Arrivals for the first seven months of this year were 95,214, up 0.78 percent on the same period last year.

Italy has been working with the Libyan authorities to strengthen the north African state's coastguard with training and new equipment in the hope of making it more effective in policing traffickers and intercepting migrant boats before they reach international waters.

The Italian parliament was Wednesday discussing further support for Libya in the form of a naval mission comprised of a logistics ship and patrol boat dedicated to supporting Libyan coastguard activities.

Officials believe boats being sent back to Libyan ports will have a powerful deterrent effect on would-be migrants considering paying traffickers for passage to Europe.

But the approach has been criticised by international rights groups who say people returned to troubled Libya face detention in squalid camps and abuse at the hands of traffickers.


Source:  https://sg.news.yahoo.com/italy-enforces-ngo-boat-crackdown-migrant-flux-slows-113326028.html

Italy sees unexpected reduction in Mediterranean migration flows

Latest figures show sharp reduction in those crossing from Libya to Europe.

Politico

By Jacopo Barigazzi   

3 August 2017

The number of migrants crossing the Mediterranean to reach Italian shores dropped significantly in July, according to new figures.

Data from the Italian interior ministry shows that about 11,100 migrants made the dangerous crossing in July compared to more than double that amount in the same month in 2016 (just over 23,500).

Indications of a change in migration patterns continued in the first days of August. Statistics released by the ministry Thursday indicate that between January and the first two days of August about 95,200 people crossed from Libya to Italy, compared to 98,500 over the same period last year — a 3.42 percent drop.

“It’s too early to say that we have won the battle,” warned a top migration official at the interior ministry. “But it’s a very encouraging sign and at sea right now we have only about 400 migrants to rescue, which is a reasonable number. It means this trend could last,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The new numbers contrast significantly with earlier data.

“Never before had detections been so high in the Central Mediterranean,” wrote Frontex, the EU’s border agency, in its risk analysis for 2017, adding that the route saw an 18 percent increase in migration flows in 2016.

In June, Interior Minister Marco Minniti sounded the alarm over migration, prompting the European Commission to draw up an “action plan” for the Central Mediterranean route. Some Italian officials also accused NGOs that conduct search-and-rescue missions in the Mediterranean of colluding with smugglers, while Rome drew up a new code of conduct for civil society organizations operating at sea. Only a few NGOs have accepted the rules and on Wednesday Italian authorities seized a ship operated by German NGO Jugend Rettet on suspicion that the vessel was being used “for activities facilitating illegal immigration.”

Italian officials had been bracing for an increase this year, following a record 180,000 arrivals in 2016.

But the Italian interior ministry’s surprising new figures are not the only indication that fewer migrants are opting to make the dangerous journey to Europe.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) wrote that July’s figures highlighted “a trend” it “has observed of slower traffic to Italy during mid-summer, and fewer deaths (approximately half of those recorded in July 2015 and 2016).”

The reasons behind the summer decline remain disputed.

“Since the start of the year there is a decrease of people crossing into Libya from Niger,” said Eugenio Ambrosi, EU director at the IOM. That’s the result of several factors, he said, from better information for those planning to migrate to deals with Niger on fighting people-smuggling.

“The impression is that the stock of those who want to leave Libya is running out,” he said, adding that only 20 percent of the migrants who reach Libya try to cross into Europe.

Despite Libya’s political turmoil, the country — which has the largest oil reserves in Africa — still attracts workers from other countries: for example, more than half a million Egyptians work in Libya.

The EU has also pushed for greater efforts to facilitate voluntary returns from Libya, a figure that stands at over 6,000 so far this year compared to 2,700 in the whole of 2016. European institutions have also disbursed millions of euros in funding for African countries.

In Rome, officials identify cooperation with the Libyan coast guard as one of the main reasons why there are fewer arrivals. In recent weeks, the coast guard turned back 10,000 people.

Officials also point to a recent border protection agreement with local tribal heads in Fezzan, a desert region in southeastern Libya that served as a transit area for 160,000 people last year.

The Italians and the EU are not the only ones trying to work with the Libyans. French President Emmanuel Macron stepped up his involvement over the past week by brokering a fragile peace deal between Libya’s warring factions.

And Rome is preparing for more proactive involvement in the area: on Wednesday, the Italian parliament approved plans for a new military mission in the Mediterranean, including in Libyan waters. But in an interview with an Italian daily on Thursday, Egypt-backed Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar threatened to bomb Italian vessels, a warning Italian officials dismissed as “propaganda.”

Rome’s arrangements with African leaders have drawn criticism from human rights groups.

“After years of saving lives at sea, Italy is preparing to help Libyan forces who are known to detain people in conditions that expose them to a real risk of torture, sexual violence and forced labor,” Judith Sunderland, associate director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

The U.N. has also often raised concerns about conditions at detention camps for migrants. Ambrosi of the IOM said the challenge was to avoid “the paradox of rescuing people at sea to then let them die on the land.”


Source:  http://www.politico.eu/article/europe-sees-unexpected-reduction-in-mediterranean-migration-flows/


Italy must decide migrant Iuventa's fate - UNHCR

Special envoy Cochetel says decision must be 'based on facts'

ANSAmed

4 August 2017

(ANSAmed) - BRUSSELS, AUGUST 4 - UN Refugee Agency special envoy for the Central Mediterranean route Vincent Cochetel told ANSA the Italian justice system must decide the fate of seized migrant rescue ship Iuventa, "based on the facts".

Italian authorities seized the Iuventa this week after the Trapani prosecutor's office said its investigation into NGOs involved in migrant rescue operations found that traffickers had twice accompanied migrants as they boarded the ship.


Source:  http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/nations/europe/2017/08/04/italy-must-decide-migrant-iuventas-fate-unhcr_9d83cd48-c18f-4325-b323-8dd9c2cc0064.html

All NGOs should sign code - Avramopoulos

Commissioner tells ANSA problem when migrants not detained

ANSAmed

3 August 2017


BRUSSELS - European Migration and Home Affairs Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos told ANSA in an interview on Thursday that he wants all NGOs conducting migrant rescues in the Mediterranean to sign the Italian-drafted code of conduct for these operations. "I'm sorry that some NGOs decided not to sign the code of conduct," Avramopoulos said.

"We must all work together to dismantle the traffickers' business model and avoid migrant deaths. This is why I again call on all the NGOs to join the initiative.

"The broader the scale of our common work, the better the results on the ground will be". He also said that "return processing needs to be accelerated and the procedures need to be streamlined.
"Part of the problem is also that once a person in Italy is told they have to return, if they are not detained, then they have no incentive to cooperate with the authorities anymore," Avramopoulos continued.

He said that a law drafted by Italian Interior Minister Marco Minniti was "a good step forward in this direction".

"The Commission is ready to support Italy in implementing the changes needed," he said. Avramopoulos told ANSA that it is possible that the Operation Sophia could be deployed in Libyan waters in the future. "At the moment, priority should be given to what can be done under the current mandate of Operation Sophia which was just renewed with added tasks," he said after the Italian navy started a mission to support the Libyan coast guard against human traffickers. "But the possibility of the Operation moving to a third stage working in Libyan waters was foreseen from the beginning. If the Libyan authorities ask for this, we should be ready to act".

The European Commission also said Thursday that it has faith in the Italian authorities regarding the case of the Iuventa, a ship operated by German NGO Jugend Rettet that has been confiscated in relation to a probe into alleged aiding of illegal immigration. "We know about the incident but we don't have details about whether it is the result of the code of conduct for the NGOs or something else," EC spokesperson Mina Andreeva said. "We have confidence in the Italian authorities that are handling the case".

The NGO's Dutch-flagged Iuventa ship was confiscated on Wednesday at the Italian island of Lampedusa. No members of the NGO have been charged so far and prosecutors in the Sicilian city of Trapani said that they believed Jugend Rettet's activists were working for humanitarian reasons and did not have direct relations with the traffickers.

However, photos that seem to show an incident when migrants were not rescued at sea but were effectively handed over by traffickers sparked almost unanimous condemnation on social media, with many users blasting it as "shameful".

Jugend Rettet put out a statement on Twitter Thursday saying that it was sorry it was unable to conduct search and rescue at the moment, adding that the "rescue of human life is and will be top priority". Jugend Rettet was one of several NGOs conducting rescues in the Mediterranean that this week refused to sign a new code of conduct at the interior ministry. The Commission has said NGOs that do not sign the code will not be guaranteed access to Italian ports.

Leonardo Marino, a lawyer representing Jugend Rettet, said Thursday that "we will appeal against the confiscation of the ship Iuventa".

He said the appeal with regard the computers and documents seized, not just the vessel itself.

Source:  http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/nations/italy/2017/08/03/all-ngos-should-sign-code-avramopoulos_cfc6b800-c117-45dd-8339-0e960e2907de.html