Libya News and Interests

The Libyan Slave Trade Has Shocked the World. Here’s What You Should Know


The grainy undercover video appears to show smugglers selling off a dozen men outside of the capital city Tripoli.

“Does anybody need a digger? This is a digger, a big strong man, he’ll dig,” said an auctioneer, according to CNN. “What am I bid, what am I bid?”

The report has drawn attention to an issue that aid and migrant groups say has gone on for years.

Why is there a slave trade in Libya?

Libya is the main transit point for refugees and migrants trying to reach Europe by sea. In each of the last three years, 150,000 people have made the dangerous crossing across the Mediterranean Sea from Libya. For four years in a row, 3,000 refugees have died while attempting the journey, according to figures from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the U.N.’s migration agency.

The Libyan Coast Guard — supported with funds and resources from the E.U. and more specifically, Italy — has cracked down on boats smuggling refugees and migrants to Europe. With estimates of 400,000 to almost one million people now bottled up Libya, detention centers are overrun and there are mounting reports of robbery, rape, and murder among migrants, according to a September report by the U.N. human rights agency. Conditions in the centers have been described as “horrific,” and among other abuses, migrants are vulnerable to being sold off as laborers in slave auctions.

“It’s a total extortion machine,” Lenard Doyle, Director of Media and Communications for the IOM in Geneva tells TIME. “Fueled by the absolute rush of migrants through Libya thinking they can get out of poverty, following a dream that doesn’t exist.”

The IOM said in April that it had documented reports of “slave markets” along the migrant routes in North Africa “tormenting hundreds of young African men bound for Libya.”

“There they become commodities to be bought, sold and discarded when they have no more value,” Doyle said in the April statement.
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Illegal immigrants are seen at a detention centre in Zawiyah, 45 kilometres west of the Libyan capital Tripoli, on June 17, 2017.

How is Libya handling the crisis?

According to CNN, the U.N.-backed Libyan government has launched a formal investigation into the allegations. But Libya is largely considered a failed state. Since Muammar Gaddafi, who ran the country for four decades, was ousted in 2011, the country has descended into civil war.
A transitional government failed to implement rule of law in the country, which has splintered into several factions of militias, tribes, and gangs.
In lawless Libya, many see the slave trade and smuggling as a lucrative industry.
Tackling the country’s humanitarian crisis will require international assistance.

On Wednesday, Libya reached a deal with E.U. and African leaders to allow the emergency repatriation of refugees and migrants facing abuse in its detention centers.
The government also agreed to open a transit center for vulnerable refugees after months of negotiations, according to Reuters. The center is intended to safely house people before they are resettled or sent to a third country.
How is the international community responding?

Following the publication of the video, there was outcry from all corners of the globe, with some nations recalling their ambassadors from Libya. Protesters rallied outside Libyan embassies across Africa and in Europe.

On Wednesday, African and European leaders met at a summit in the Ivory Coast and agreed on an urgent evacuation plan that would see about 15,000 people flown out of Libya.
Most of the migrants will be sent back to their home countries.
Speaking at the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron, called the abuse “a crime against humanity” and vowed the summit members would “launch concrete military and policing action on the ground to dismantle those networks,” according to the Guardian.
The deal also included initiatives to target traffickers, including setting up a task force to dismantle trafficking networks, the BBC reports.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari expressed shock at how his compatriots were being treated “like goats.” On Wednesday, 242 Nigerian migrants were flown out of Libya back to Nigeria.

The day before, the U.N. Security Council held an emergency meeting and said it would be “stepping up its work” to stop the abuses. However, the U.N refugee agency said it faces “dramatic” funding gaps, especially for its operations in sub-Saharan Africa. “Slavery and other such egregious abuses of human rights have no place in the 21st century,” U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said.

Since 2015, the IOM has repatriated 13,000 people from Libya under a voluntary program. But Doyle, the IOM spokesperson, says more needs to be done to stop migration at its core, particularly from tech companies who own online platforms where traffickers can falsely lure people into paying smugglers.

“They’re being completely misled into thinking that’s a happy future for them and being misled thorough social media,” he tells TIME.

Earlier this week, the foreign ministry of Rwanda said it would extend asylum to 30,000 mainly sub-Saharan Africans stuck in Libya.
“Given our own history … we cannot remain silent when human beings are being mistreated and auctioned off like cattle,” the foreign ministry said.

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley condemned the abuses, saying: “
To see the pictures of these men being treated like cattle, and to hear the auctioneer describe them as, quote, ‘big strong boys for farm work,’ should shock the conscience of us all.”
http://time.com/5042560/libya-slave-trade/
 
Warmonger Hillary Clinton let Americans die so she could topple Qaddafi in Libya.

Now there's a renewed African slave trade there. No liberal outrage on JPP.

Why doesn't Fake News explain how Libya became a broken state through the meddling of inept Obama and Crooked Hillary?
 
Khalifa Haftar has preliminarily approved upcoming elections, but calls for the relocation of the headquarters of the High National High Elections Commission (HNEC) from Tripoli and the change of its management, Al-Salheen Al-Ghaithi, a member of the Dialogue Committee of House of Representatives, declares.

Ghaithi told Cairo-based Wasat news website that
"Haftar has no objection to the elections provided that they are sound and under the auspices of the international bodies, built on the rules and conditions of the electoral law that clarifies all the conditions and controls to prevent manipulation by any one party, especially those who want the return of the Muslim Brotherhood to take control of the legislative and executive branches of the state".
He also quoted Haftar as saying that the headquarters of the HNEC should be transferred from Tripoli to any other city so as not to fall under the control of militias and that the its management should be changed because the current one “has a leniency to political Islam”, adding that Haftar stressed during a meeting with him that it is the people`s decision and they have the right to choose what they want.

“The blood of the martyrs and their sacrifices will not go to waste in elections manipulated by the Muslim Brotherhood or political Islam in general”. Haftar told Ghaithi during the meeting.

Ghaithi, who met Khalifa Haftar on Thursday with the head of the National Defense and Security Committee in the House of Representatives Talal Mehyoub, said "we have discussed the absence of a Libyan constitution that we could use and would be satisfactory to all components of the country, and the choice of whether we return to the Constitution of 1951 or the amended 1963, is one that only the people can make".
On the 6th of December, the HNEC announced the start of the voter registration process and the updating of the electoral register, which will continue the registration process for two months. Registration of the Libyan communities living abroad will start on the first of February.

Many countries and international bodies are pushing for early elections in Libya as a last resort to resolve the Libyan crisis and unify the divided institutions of state, which occurred nearly three years ago.
https://www.libyaobserver.ly/news/eastern-warlord-sets-preconditions-upcoming-elections

"warlord" is a misnomer. he's head of the Libyan National Army - Bengazi based
 
Libya, Egypt to activate joint electricity link
ibya has agreed with Egypt to exchange electric power through a power grid link, the General Electricity Company of Libya (GECOL) announced on Wednesday.

The agreement came in a visit for the Head of the Presidential Council Fayez Al-Sirraj to Cairo, added GECOL on Facebook.

On Tuesday, there was an hours-long meeting in Cairo between Al-Sirraj and Ali Sassi - the CEO of the GECOL - and the Egyptian Electricity Minister Mohammed Sahaker as well as the Egyptian Electricity Holding Company, plus others.

GECOL added that both countries reviewed cooperation in power sector with the capacity of 400 kilovolts so that Libya and Egypt can exchange power, not to mention benefiting from the Egyptian electric power expertise.

GECOL is burdened every year with high power demands in summer and winter times, which makes it fall back upon load shedding that leaves Libyans without power for over 6 hours a day in winter and even more than that in summer.
https://www.libyaobserver.ly/economy/libya-egypt-activate-joint-electricity-link
 
Nigeria is a beautiful country and must take the lead in ending what we are witnessing in Libya. Nigeria must galvanize other African countries to stop the trade currently going on before it gets out of hand.

I heard in interviews young men saying that it is better they die abroad than have no future in Nigeria. Yes, this is soldier-mentality and it is not good. And I am afraid that poverty has hardened some of these youths and that is dangerous.
that is why you see a young man or woman waking up and he decides to move to an unknown land despite the fact that Libya is a dangerous place to go. Every society must grow the middle class; everyone must have basic means of life. And that is what government should do for its citizens because what we are seeing today in Libya is a crime against God and humanity which is very bad.

Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/12...g-libya-stay-nigeria-franzek-prof-psychiatry/
 
Mayor of Libyan city of Misrata killed by gunmen
A Libyan official says gunmen abducted and killed the mayor of the coastal city of Misrata soon after his return from a visit to Turkey.
Misrata, almost 200 km east of Tripoli, is the gateway for food and other imports into Libya and the country's only tax-free zone. It is one of the few places still frequented by foreign business people fearing poor security elsewhere.

Khaled Rofida, the spokesman of the Misrata municipal council, says the mayor, Mohammed Eshtewi, was snatched as he was leaving Misrata's airport after landing there late on Sunday.

The spokesman says Eshtewi's body was found several hours later, near a hospital.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/12...by-gunmen.html
 
Thousands of supporters of Libya's military strongman Khalifa Hifter rallied Sunday in several cities, calling on him to take charge of the country following the expiry of a two-year mandate of a U.N.-backed administration based in the capital, Tripoli.

The rallies in Benghazi, Tobruk and Tripoli called on the Moammar Gadhafi-era general to become the country's ruler to fill the political void. The U.N. maintains that its mandate for the Tripoli government, one of two rival administrations in Libya, remains in effect until a new one is introduced.

In a televised address earlier Sunday, Hifter strongly hinted that he might step in to fill the void, although he stopped short of saying clearly that he would run in presidential elections if a vote is held next year, or that he might take the reins before that. His address appeared to deliberately leave all options open.

The rallies on the streets, however, were a show of force that could be used to his advantage. Hifter did not explicitly call on his supporters to take to the streets, but such rallies have in the past been organized rather than spontaneous.

He said the expiry of the U.N. mandate for the Tripoli administration signaled the demise of all attempts to reach a political solution that would reunite the vast, oil-rich nation. He has already entertained many attempts to do that, but they all failed, he explained.

"We declare very clearly that we will fully obey the orders of the free Libyan people and no one else," said Hifter, speaking from the eastern city of Benghazi.

He is at odds with the administration based in the east that he was once linked to and is a rival of the one backed by the United Nations in Tripoli.

Likely in response to Hifter's recent bluster, the head of the eastern-based, internationally recognized parliament, Agila Saleh, called on Sunday for parliamentary and presidential elections to be held in 2018. That chamber acts as a de facto government in eastern Libya.

"I call upon the Libyan people to participate in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections," he said in a TV broadcast, "It is the only way to peacefully and democratically transfer power."

The United Nations, meanwhile, said in a statement Sunday that it was "intensively trying to establish the proper political, legislative and security conditions for elections to be held before the end of 2018."

Hifter, leading the so-called National Libyan Army, has been fighting Islamic militants in the east and occasionally threatening to march on the rest of the country. He is backed by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.

The presence of two rival governments and a strongman with military muscle attest to the chaos prevailing in Libya following the 2011 uprising against Gadhafi's rule. Alongside the two rival administrations, mostly Islamic militias wield considerable influence and control large swathes of territory in the vast North African nation.
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/article190226464.html
 
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^ flooded road in Tripoli

Bad weather closes schools and offices across western Libya

eavy rains and cold weather have forced local authorities across western to close schools and other public buildings until after the weekend.

Municipal councils in Sabratha, Sorman, Khoms, Zliten, Central Tripoli and Suq Al-Juma have all taken the same decision. Even in those places where no such announcement has been made schools have closed because of cold buildings, flooded roads and the difficulties of driving.

In Misrata, everything was already closed because of the three days of mourning for the slain mayor, Mohamed Eshtewi.

In Tripoli and elsewhere, roads have become flooded and in some cases impassable. Some have been washed away. Even where they are passable, such as the main Tripoli highway, traffic has been moving very slowly. Homes have also been damaged.

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In Ghadames, a World Heritage site, the heavy rains brought down a wall in the old town.
 
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Armed attackers blew up a major oil pipeline in Libya on Tuesday, military and oil sources said.

The pipeline feeds into the central distribution station of Al Sider port on the Mediterranean Sea.

The state-run National Oil Corporation said in a statement that oil flow had been reduced by about 70,000-100,000 bpd.

Pictures showed a black ploom of smoke rising high into the sky.

It was unclear who carried out the attack.

"Islamic State" militants had been in the area before government forces defeated them in their Siirte stronghold last year.

Libya is rife with rival militias and armed groups, some in competition with the internationally backed government.

Oil was trading at more than $65 (€55) a barrel after the incident, close to its highest price since mid-2015. Voluntary OPEC-led supply cuts also impacted the price.

The pipeline is operated by Waha, a subsidiary of the National Oil Corporation (NOC) and a joint venture with Hess Corp, Marathon Oil Corp and ConocoPhillips.

Wada claims to pump 260,000 barrels a day from Libya's southern desert.

Libya produces abotu 1 million barrels of per day, but production is often cut due to sabotage, politics and instability.
 

sixty-four people have died after an overcrowded rubber dinghy launched from Libya sank in the Mediterranean, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) has said.

The Italian coastguard rescued 86 people from the boat hours after it sustained a puncture and started sinking on Saturday morning. A girl survived after clinging to her mother, who drowned, witnesses said.
 
Nigeria is flying out thousands of its citizens from Libya who face grave abuses such as rape and slavery as they attempt to reach Europe through the war-torn North African nation.

Large numbers of Nigerians have been trapped in Libya where they were trying to cross to Italy by sea, but were stopped by local armed factions and the Libyan coastguard.

Nigerian officials on a fact-finding mission to Libya expressed shock at what they saw and heard from victims.

"They talked about various abuse - systematic, endemic, and exploitation of all kinds," said Nigeria's Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama. "There were obviously interests that wa
 
As chaos and despair grow in Libya, Gadhafi son plans comeback
PUBLISHED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 7,

the fugitive son and onetime heir apparent of Libya’s late Moammar Gadhafi is planning a comeback.

Seif al-Islam “decided to run in presidential elections and I see a big chance for him because all the big tribes are supporting him,” said Abdel Majeed al-Mansouri, who headed Libya’s economic development board before 2011 and was close to him. “People are frustrated. Even those who were against the old regime will side with him as he’s not coming back representing the old regime. He’s coming with his plan for Libya’s future.”

Most Libya analysts disagree, dismissing Seif’s chances in a potential presidential election this year.
Yet the return of Gadhafi loyalists to the political arena six years after the NATO-backed uprising that killed him exposes the depth of public anger over insecurity and economic decay in the once-wealthy oil exporter. It will feed international concerns about the spread of Islamic State militants across North Africa and the tide of migrants clamoring to reach Europe.

“It’s a sign the Gadhafists are mobilizing, trying to have their say” for the first time since 2011, said Issandr El Amrani, North Africa Project Director at the International Crisis Group. “Libya’s getting more complicated. A breakthrough doesn’t seem imminent.”

Since Gadhafi’s ouster, Libya has been carved up among dozens of militias and rival administrations in the east and in Tripoli. Infighting crippled shipments of oil, Libya’s most important source of income, for nearly two years. While shipments have resumed, the economy has been devastated.

Libyans line up for hours outside banks to obtain paltry sums. The weakening of the dinar on the black market has fueled inflation that has impoverished wage-earners and enriched speculators.


A U.N.-brokered unity deal concluded in 2015 failed to heal the country’s divisions. The government it parachuted into Tripoli, led by Fayez al-Sarraj, struggled to impose its authority over armed factions and the administration in the east. A new U.N. envoy appointed in June, Ghassan Salame, unveiled a revised plan, but the Dec. 17 expiry of Sarraj’s mandate came and went without a final deal.

While Sarraj continues to be recognized internationally, the peace process has been declared a dead letter by Khalifa Haftar, the commander of the self-styled Libyan National Army who controls much of the oil-rich east. Haftar’s bid to become military ruler of Libya pending elections has faltered, though, as he labors to win support outside his base.

Something, Libyans say, has to give.

“We’ve lost confidence in all the political figures in parliament, in the two governments, east and west,” said Waheed Jabu, who works at the chambers of commerce in Tripoli. “Libyans now live in poverty. The banks are empty. People are unable to buy medicine, food or anything. There are gasoline shortages, electricity failures, water disruptions and general insecurity.”
Into this murky political landscape wades Seif. Nothing has been heard from him directly, but a man identified as the family spokesman told the Egypt Today magazine that he plans to run. Mansouri, now living in Turkey, confirmed the plan. He offered no details about Seif’s plan to reconcile Libyans and rebuild the battered economy, but said he thinks he will play an economic role if Seif wins.
 
Saif al-Islam Qaddafi, son of late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, attends a hearing behind bars in a courtroom in Zintan May 25, 2014

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At least 20 dead as clashes shut airport in Libyan capital

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A plane, that was damaged during clashes, is seen at Mitiga airport in Tripoli, Libya, January 15, 2018

Fierce clashes broke out in the Libyan capital Tripoli on Monday, killing at least 20 people, shutting the airport, and damaging planes during what the government said was a failed attempt to spring militants from a nearby prison.

he attack triggered the heaviest fighting in Tripoli for months, undercutting claims by the internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) to have largely stabilised the city. The violence also undermines GNA efforts to persuade diplomatic missions to return there.

Automatic gunfire and artillery rounds could be heard from the city centre early in the day and authorities at Mitiga airport, which operates all civilian air traffic to and from the capital, said flights had been suspended until further notice.

he airport was empty in late afternoon, when the clashes had largely died down, though pilots flew several aircraft across the capital to the international airport - closed since 2014 due to damage from earlier fighting - in an effort to protect them.

A Reuters reporter saw one Airbus A319 operated by Afriqiyah Airways sitting in a hangar at Mitiga with a hole in its roof from artillery fire.

At least four other aircraft suffered what appeared to be lesser damage from gunfire, including two jets operated by Libyan Wings and two Buraq Air Boeing 737s that the airline said it was preparing to fly out of the country for maintenance.

The fighting pitted the Special Deterrence Force (Rada), one of Tripoli’s most powerful armed groups, against a rival faction based in the city’s Tajoura neighbourhood.

Rada acts as an anti-crime and anti-terrorism unit and controls Mitiga airport and a large prison next to it. It is aligned with the GNA and is occasionally targeted by rivals whose members it has arrested.

Rada said the airport had been attacked by men loyal to a militia leader known as Bashir ‘the Cow’ and others it had been seeking following their escape from a prison it controls elsewhere in Tripoli.


The GNA said the attack had “endangered the lives of passengers, affected aviation safety and terrorised residents”.

“This assault was aimed at freeing terrorists from Daesh (Islamic State) and al Qaeda and other organisations,” it said in a statement. The attack had been repelled, and an operation to secure the area was ongoing.
Slideshow (5 Images)

Rada posted pictures of streets around the airport, showing pick-up trucks mounted with guns, armoured vehicles and a tank.

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-shut-airport-in-libyan-capital-idUSKBN1F410L
 
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Donald Trump: A Strong Supporter of the Libyan Military Intervention

Trump was a strong supporter of the 2011 military intervention in Libya, arguing "fervently" on a number of occasions that U.S. military intervention was necessary to advert humanitarian disaster in Libya and warning that it would be "a major, major black eye for this country [the U.S.]" if it failed to depose Gaddafi.

In a February 2011 video blog, Trump said: "I can't believe what our country is doing. Qaddafi in Libya is killing thousands of people, nobody knows how bad it is, and we're sitting around we have soldiers all have the Middle East, and we're not bringing them in to stop this horrible carnage ... Now we should go in, we should stop this guy, which would be very easy and very quick." Trump made similar comments in a March 2011 appearance on Piers Morgan Tonight. In 2011, Trump also advocated U.S. seizure of Libyan oil.
 
^ already covered..
HRClnton had the full resources of the US State Dept, and chose to deal with known terrorists
( Libyan Islamic Fighting Group)a.k.a. NTC to overthrow a lawful Qadaffi who was respected as legitimate leader of Libya.

Trump was a lay person...which one has an excuse they got it wrong?
 
UN envoy says military forces in Libya are flexing muscles

The U.N. envoy for Libya said Wednesday that military forces "are flexing their muscles in many parts of the country" and the oil-rich nation needs a competent government.

Ghassan Salame told the Security Council that "the specter of violence remains present," pointing to clashes between forces allied with two rival communities close to Libya's border with Tunisia, rival groups at a flashpoint in the eastern vicinity of the capital of Tripoli, and heightened tension around the city of Derna.

He said he was delivering the briefing by videoconference from Tunis and not Tripoli as he had planned "because bloody clashes at the airport have halted all flights in and out ... for the whole week."

Libya fell into chaos after the ouster and killing of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011 and since 2014 it has been split between rival governments and parliaments based in the western and eastern regions, each backed by different militias and tribes.


Salame said Libya needs a government that can deliver desperately needed public services, unify the country's institutions, provide order and justice, and preside over elections that would end the current transition.

He lamented that civilians continue to be killed and injured "in crossfire and indiscriminate attacks" and "armed groups fight recklessly in residential areas, with no thought to the safety of civilians."

Libya already has "20 million pieces of arms" and the arms embargo on the North African nation "has never been more important," Salame said.

"It is for this reason that recent reports of a large shipment of explosives intercepted by the Greek Coast Guard are particularly alarming," he said.

Salame said the U.N. panel of experts monitoring the arms embargo on Libya is looking into the shipments
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2018/0...tary-forces-in-libya-are-flexing-muscles.html
 
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Libya's U.N.-backed government in Tripoli has condemned attacks against hundreds of displaced black Libyans known as Tawergha who are stranded in a camp while attempting to return home.

In a statement late Sunday, it says it is still working to ensure that the hundreds of families taking refuge in a camp near the town of Bani Walid can return to their home city, also known as Tawergha.

Local media had reported that the Tawergha, who were due to return on Feb. 1 under an agreement with neighboring Misrata, were barred from entry by militias who fired in the air and even shot up some cars.

Misrata militiamen blame the Tawergha for siding with Libya's longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi during the 2011 uprising that overthrew and killed him.
 
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A Libyan woman displaced from the town of Tawergha stands at a camp in Tripoli, Libya, February 5, 2018. More than six years after they were forced to leave their homes in the civil war that toppled Muammar Gaddafi, tens of thousands of residents of the Libyan ghost city of Tawergha were finally meant to start going home last week. It never happened
 
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Ninety migrants are feared drowned after a boat capsized off the Libyan coast, says the UN's migration agency.

Three survivors said most of those who drowned were Pakistani nationals. Libyans were also aboard.

TRANSIT

Libya has for years been a major transit route for migrants trying to reach southern Europe by sea.

EU countries have wrangled over both reducing migrant numbers and deciding which countries are responsible for processing migrants on arrival.

The EU struck a deal with the Libyan coastguard last year to help intercept migrants and return them to Libya.

But aid agencies and the UN accused European governments of taking an "inhuman" approach.

From a boat carrying more than 90, only three survivors are reported - two of whom managed to swim to shore, while the third was picked up by a fishing boat.

"Ten bodies are reported to have washed up on Libyan shores," the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in a statement.

MIGRANTS

Unusually, there were also Libyans among the dead and survivors of the shipwreck, reports the BBC's North Africa correspondent Rana Jawad.

The Facebook page of the security directorate in the coastal city of Zuwara, where the bodies washed up, said a Libyan woman had drowned, but that of the three survivors two were Libyan nationals.

The majority of incidents of this kind involve migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.

In this case, most of those on board were Pakistani. The IOM says this is becoming more common.

While Pakistanis were 13th on a list of the number of migrants trying to reach Europe last year by nationality, so far this year they are third, the IOM says.

DANGER

Perhaps aware of the danger, Libyans rarely attempt the boat journey from their country to southern Europe.

Some cases of illegal Libyan migration were documented last year, but they usually involved sturdier boats that were carrying few people.

Overall this year, the IOM reports that there have been 6,624 arrivals by sea to Europe, compared to 5,983 in the same period of 2017.

So the numbers are comparable but this year's figures still represent a considerable bounce-back following a dramatic fall over the second half of 2017, the IOM told the BBC.

Some of last year's decline can be attributed to the EU's controversial deal with the Libyan coastguard, but the IOM also believes there were difficulties within the people-trafficking industry.

"We think that there was a lot of pent-up demand in terms of migrants being held in warehouses by the smugglers," said the IOM's Joel Millman.

If the channels have been opened again, that might explain the sudden surge which has seen numbers increase again.

RESCUES

The latest deaths come just after the EU border agency Frontex announced the launch of Operation Themis on Thursday.

Unlike its previous mission, known as Triton, migrants rescued at sea will now be taken to the country that is co-ordinating the rescue, rather than just Italy.

Italy has increasingly vocally complained about a lack of EU solidarity in managing migration. It is also conscious of popular unease ahead of a March 4 national election.

However, as Italy undertakes the vast majority of sea rescues in waters between North Africa and its coast, Themis is unlikely to have more than a token effect on the numbers arriving in the country.

https://www.nation.co.ke/news/afric...-Libya-coast/1066-4290420-13hcmjyz/index.html
 
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