Amnesty Accuses Europe of 'Complicity' in Abuse of Libya Migrants

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Amnesty International on Tuesday accused Italy and other EU governments of being "knowingly complicit" in horrific abuses of migrants in Libya, warning of legal action against them at European and UN rights institutions.

The charges by the London-based rights group mark a ratcheting up of activist and other accusations against the European Union's policy of aiding the UN-backed government in Tripoli in order to stop migrants from travelling to Europe.

"European governments are knowingly complicit in the torture and abuse of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants detained by Libyan immigration authorities in appalling conditions in Libya," Amnesty said in a report.

European governments are "actively supporting a sophisticated system of abuse and exploitation of refugees and migrants by the Libyan coastguard, detention authorities and smugglers in order to prevent people from crossing the Mediterranean," Amnesty said.

"The various EU governments, Italy in particular, know full well that this is going on," Amnesty's Europe Director John Dalhuisen told AFP in Brussels.

"This system puts Italy in particular very much in breach of its international obligations," especially on the prohibition of torture, Dalhuisen added.

Italy, the main landing point for migrants sailing from Libya, has of all the EU governments "the most sophisticated set of arrangements" with Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj's government to detain migrants, he said.  

Dalhuisen said Amnesty and other people he did not name are preparing to take the charges to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, the UN's Committee Against Torture and its Human Rights Committee.

The Amnesty report amounts to "the presentation of an argument that will subsequently provide the material for us and I'm sure others to litigate," he said.

Amnesty, citing testimony from dozens of migrants, said officials in the Libyan coastguard, trained and equipped by European governments, notably Italy, "are known to operate in collusion with smuggling networks and have used threats and violence against refugees and migrants."

Dalhuisen said the Libyan authorities, militias, armed groups and smugglers are "often working seamlessly together for financial gain."

- 'Reckless actions' -Migrants whose boats have been intercepted are sent to detention centres "where they endure horrific treatment. Up to 20,000 people currently remain contained in these overcrowded, unsanitary detention centres," Amnesty said.

Amnesty said it studied video footage, pictures and documents indicating that a boat, the Ras Jadir, which Italy donated in April to the Libyan Coast Guard, contributed to the drowning of up to 50 people on November 6 as a result of "reckless actions" by its crew.

It said for example that the Ras Jadir ignored security protocol when it approached a sinking inflatable boat full of migrants 30 nautical miles off the Libyan coast.

The Ras Jadir then failed to deploy its own inflatable boat to rescue migrants, allegedly forcing them to climb its high sides before many of them fell back into the water.

A nearby NGO vessel, Sea-Watch 3, deployed its inflatable boats in a rescue bid but footage shows those aboard the Ras Jadir throwing objects to force the migrants away, the rights group said.

Amnesty said the footage also shows migrants aboard the Ras Jadir being whipped with a rope and others trying to jump into the water to try and reach the rescue vessels.

The German charity Sea Watch said at the time that five migrants including a young child died as the result of a "violent, reckless" and "illegal" intervention by Libya's coastguard in international waters.

The UN-backed government in Tripoli said on Saturday that Italy and Libya are to set up a joint commission in an attempt to fight back against people traffickers and tackle illegal migration.

Human-trafficking networks have flourished in the chaos that followed a NATO-backed uprising which toppled long-time Libyan dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.

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