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Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing "migrants"

Posted by Olog-hai on Thu Jun 24 00:22:40 2010

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Let's hear the love (or hate) for Amnesty International now. They called Gaddafi the "nightclub bouncer" for the EU, among other things, because they grab up "migrants" headed for the EU and perform undisclosed horrors afterwards.

EU Observer

Europe's cosy relations with Libya crushing human rights, says Amnesty

LEIGH PHILLIPS
23.06.2010 @ 09:29 CET
With Brussels midway through negotiating a pact with Libya on areas including migration and asylum, Amnesty International has sharply criticized relations with Tripoli, saying that so long as Colonel Gaddafi continues in effect to be the nightclub bouncer for Europe, dealing with the bloc's unwanted migrants from Africa, the EU will ignore the human rights situation in his country.

In a letter to the European Commission and a report published on Wednesday (23 June), the human rights group laments the situation: "Members of the EU have been actively seeking the collaboration of Libya in controlling the flow of migrants to European shores — turning a blind eye to Libya's dire human rights record, the absence of a functioning asylum system in Libya, and persistent reports of the abuse and ill-treatment of refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants."

The focus is on Italy, but the group is worried that the same attitude is being replicated in the ongoing EU-wide negotiations with the administration of hard-man Colonel Moammar Gaddafi, as anti-immigrant discourse gains favor among politicians across the bloc.

A "Friendship Treaty" signed between Italy and Rome in 2008 provided for bilateral efforts to combat so-called illegal immigration, notably a joint patrolling of the Mediterranean. In return for $5 billion in funds for construction projects, student grants and soldier pensions, Libya agreed to tighter control of its waters and to let Italy dump it with any migrants intercepted at sea.

Since May 2009, in violation of international law, the Italian coast guard has been returning refugees, asylum seekers and other migrants without checking whether any individuals on board were in need of international protection or basic humanitarian assistance, a development Italian interior minister Roberto Maroni, a member of the hard-right and stridently anti-immigrant Northern League party, calls "an historic achievement."


While in the custody of Libyan authorities, the same people are "exploited, beaten and abused in ways that can constitute torture," says Amnesty. Thousands are held in overcrowded detention centers indefinitely, while risk being deported to countries such as Somalia and Eritrea to face further persecution.

Libya, which is not a party to the UN 1951 Refugee Convention, does not recognize the need for people to receive international protection.

Two weeks ago, as commission officials were in Tripoli to discuss the Framework Agreement, the government expelled the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. In the same week, Libya intercepted a boat carrying some 20 people, mainly from Eritrea, in the Maltese search and rescue zone. Their whereabouts are unknown, according to the European Council on Refugees and Exiles, which has also recently criticized the EU-Libya relationship.

Libya, for its part, is very clear about its role as Europe's 'bouncer.'

During meetings with the country's General People's Committee for Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation — equivalent to a foreign ministry — in 2009, Libyan officials told Amnesty International delegates of their frustration that Libya is expected to "guard" Europe from incomers and is blamed by members of the EU for the influx of migrants.

In Malta in January this year, Libyan foreign secretary Mussa Kussa told reporters: "There are six million Libyans and we have two million illegal immigrants, this problem is really on the shoulders of the Libyan people ...We are working as guards to the EU, and Libya might not be able to continue doing this."

"The EU and individual member states must ensure that human rights are at the core of any agreement with Libya and that every agreement recognizes explicit rights for migrants," said Amnesty's EU office director, Nicolas Beger.

Beyond the issue of migrants, according to the 135-page report, Libya makes dissidents disappear, flogs adulterers and detains individuals suspected of terrorism or of being opponents of the regime incommunicado and without access to lawyers. Such detainees are frequently tortured. Tripoli also maintains the use of the death penalty, mainly against foreigners, according to Amnesty.

However, such issues are overlooked by the EU, as well as the US and other countries, in favor of cooperation on counterterrorism measures.

The country also remains a vital asset due to its oil riches. Its proven reserves are the ninth largest in the world, with great swathes of territory still unexplored.

UK firm BP, responsible for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, signed an oil deal with Tripoli in 2007 worth some $900 million and plans to begin deep-water drilling in the Mediterranean soon.

On Tuesday, Libya's top oil official, chief of the national oil company Shokri Ghanem, assured British industry representatives and investors at a conference in London that the Gulf spill will not result in a halt to the project.

"I don't think it will impact our deep-water drilling," he said, according to Dow Jones. "This is part of industry risks."


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(632751)

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Re: Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing ''migrants''

Posted by Olog-hai on Tue Jul 13 13:55:45 2010, in response to Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing "migrants", posted by Olog-hai on Thu Jun 24 00:22:40 2010.

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Yeah, this is important enough to bump. Shows all the bleeding hearts for the hypocrites they are.

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(644904)

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50% drop in "border crossings" (A.I. slams Italy, EU over Libya' role in capturing migrants)

Posted by Olog-hai on Tue Aug 3 17:15:14 2010, in response to Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing "migrants", posted by Olog-hai on Thu Jun 24 00:22:40 2010.

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O rly. Only difference is outsourcing the concentration camps, not solving the problem. (Note "EuroDAC"; scary stuff.)

EU Observer

50% drop in EU irregular migrant border crossings after Italy-Libya pact

LEIGH PHILLIPS
2010-08-03 @ 18:47 CET
Italy's "push-back" pact with Libya to send migrants picked up at sea to detention centres in the north African country instituted last year has produced an extraordinary drop in the number of migrants apprehended irregularly crossing the EU border — whether by land or sea.

Irregular crossings into the EU had been climbing in recent years, with Brussels data from EuroDAC, the EU's biometric common asylum registration system released on Tuesday showing a rise of 62.3 percent in the number of cases between 2007 and 2008.

However, the number dropped by a whopping 50 percent in the last year.

While not all of this reduction could be described as a result of Italy's new policy — significant drops have also been seen in Spain, which also launched a fresh anti-immigrant offensive in the last two years — the largest drop was seen in Italy, with a total of 7,300 cases in 2009 compared to 32,052 the year before. Spanish cases of irregular migration dropped from 7,068 to just 1,994.

Until Rome's pact with Tripoli, Italy was the front-line EU member state with highest incidents of irregular border entries, a position Greece now holds, responsible for 60 percent of all cases registered by EuroDAC.

According to EuroDAC rules, which were updated last year allowing for police access to the system's biometric database, each member state must "promptly" take the finger prints of all "aliens" over the age of 14 that have arrived via an irregular border crossing by land, air or sea and, as the report points out, who is not turned back.

The major change in 2008-09, was that Italy and, to a lesser extent Spain, began turning back thousands before they ever officially arrive.

In the Italian case, most are now shipped back before landing Italy and sent to Libya, while Spain has in the past two years stepped up police cooperation with source nations in Africa, notably Cape Verde, Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau and Morocco, delivering satellite data via the EU-funded system, Sea Horse, which began operating in 2008 and allows police to track migrant vessels around the Atlantic coast of Africa towards Europe.

The data backs up related statistics from Rome that employ different information sources and time scales. In April this year, Italian interior minister Roberto Maroni, of the anti-immigrant Northern League, hailed the Libya deal.

"The Italian model of fighting illegal immigration has produced exceptional results and we think it should be copied by other European countries," he told the Ansa news agency.

He said that in the first three months of 2010, there had been a 96 percent drop in arrivals compared to 2009, with 28,000 fewer arrivals.

"It's an unprecedented and concrete achievement which is the result of Berlusconi's diplomacy and the agreement he struck with Libya," he said.

European Commission home affairs spokesman Michele Cercone cautioned that the 50 percent drop should be read carefully as the 2009 EuroDAC data does not contain information from six states, the Czech Republic, Latvia, Luxemburg, Portugal, Iceland and Norway, the latter two part of the Eurodac system but not EU members.

However, apart from Portugal, none of the countries lie on the EU's immigration front line — the Mediterranean crossing from Africa.

"But it is of course there has been a clear decrease in arrivals to Italy via illegal channels, that's evident," said Cercone. "Frontex data [the EU's border agency] reports a 36 percent decrease in to Italy in 2009."

The EuroDAC system was created to prevent refugees from applying for asylum status in multiple EU member states at the same time and to ensure that they applied in the country where they first landed.

EU law requires that they take the fingerprints of all border-crossers over 14 and send them into a central database managed by the commission. They can then automatically be checked against new asylum applications to weed out duplications and if they have transited through another EU state.

According to the EuroDAC annual report, issued on Tuesday, about a quarter of the some 240,000 people who applied for asylum did so in more than one country last year.

The report says that the majority of those who entered the EU in an irregular fashion via Greece and then traveled further headed mainly to Norway, the United Kingdom or Germany Those having entered via Italy and having moved on proceeded mainly to Switzerland, the Netherlands, Norway, or Sweden. Those who entered via Spain and eventually traveled further most often left for France or Switzerland, while those who entered via Hungary traveled on mainly to Austria, Switzerland or Germany.

The UN High Commission for Refugees last year criticized the EuroDAC system and the "basic assumption underlying" the prevention of "asylum-shopping", saying that until refugees can able to enjoy "generally equivalent levels of procedural and substantive protection", via a largely harmonised asylum system, it is rational for refugees to seek out those locations viewed to be most friendly.

Human rights groups have also criticized Italy's pact with Libya. Human Rights Watch's Bill Frelick calls it "a dirty deal to enable Italy to dump migrants and asylum seekers on Libya and evade its obligations."


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Racist Qaddafi wants €5 billion a year to do EU's dirty work; Italy angered

Posted by Olog-hai on Wed Sep 1 00:42:40 2010, in response to Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing "migrants", posted by Olog-hai on Thu Jun 24 00:22:40 2010.

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He's also demanding that the citizens of the EU convert to Islam. He also came out with racist stuff like saying that Europe "might even be black" if not for his "services" where he captures migrants and makes them "disappear". The excesses at the meeting ought to highlight the disgusting spectacle on display, which La Repubblica called a "humiliating circus"; they're heading for outdoing those of seventy years ago.

EU Observer

Libyan leader seeks €5 billion a year to halt EU-bound migrants

VALENTINA POP
31.08.2010 @ 09:26 CET
Libya's eccentric ruler Muammar Gaddafi has caused outrage in Italy by saying Europeans should convert to Islam and pay billions for him to stop African migrants crossing the Mediterranean.

"Tomorrow Europe might no longer be European and might even be black, as there are millions [of Africans] who want to come in," he said, amid other remarks, at a business leaders' event in Italy on Monday (30 August).

The EU should consider paying Libya "at least €5 billion a year" for it to stop the migrants, he added.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi in 2008 signed a readmission agreement with Gaddafi aimed at stopping migratory flows and involving a contribution of €5 billion, with Italy keen to Europeanize the financial commitment in the current age of austerity.

Ties between Gaddafi and Berlusconi have grown stronger over the past two years. Politics aside, the two elderly men share a passion for young women, with the Libyan leader famously hiring beautiful female bodyguards for his entourage.

Some 800 Italian women, some wearing Islamic headscarves, were organised by a hostess agency and paid for by the Libyan government to escort Gadaffi on his three-day visit to Italy. Several hostesses who took part in a meeting on Sunday told reporters that he had lectured them on Islam, and then presided over a ceremony in which a handful of them converted.

An equestrian parade was also staged during his visit, with dozens of purebred Berber horses being brought in from the petro-rich African state for the event.

The Italian press lambasted the "humiliating circus" (La Repubblica) and quoted the Libyan leader as telling the women that "Islam should become the religion of Europe."

For his part, Berlusconi said critics of the visit were "prisoners of outdated ideas" and hailed Italy's relationship with Libya at the evening ceremony on Monday, which was packed with representatives of the country's biggest companies, looking for lucrative contracts.

One of the CEOs present at the event was Pier Francesco Guarguaglini from the defense engineering group Finmeccanica, who said "let's hope so," when asked about the prospect of winning business in Libya, Reuters reports.

Italy's close ties with Libya have been criticised by human rights groups and the United Nations' refugee agency, which repeatedly flagged up the inhumane and even life-threatening treatment that migrants are subjected to when taken back by Libyan authorities.

Berlusconi credited good relations between Italy and Libya "for countering with success the trafficking of illegal migrants from Africa to Europe, [which are] controlled by criminal organizations."


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EU signs "unclear" pact with Libya vis-ΰ-vis "migration"

Posted by Olog-hai on Tue Oct 5 14:50:33 2010, in response to Amnesty International slams EU, Italy over Libya's role in capturing "migrants", posted by Olog-hai on Thu Jun 24 00:22:40 2010.

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The EU is claiming that it's a "breakthrough" that will improve the treatment of refugees by Libya. But like all things EU, the wording is "worryingly vague" (per AI) and as Qaddafi says, these deals are to "prevent Europe from turning black" (that's a direct quote, per the article; nothing like an open racist, eh).

EU Observer

EU signs up to 'unclear' migration pact with Libya

VALENTINA POP
2010-10-05 @ 18:26 CET
The European Union has cautiously agreed to allocate €50 million for projects aimed at improving Libyan treatment of refugees, mostly coming from African conflict zones and heading to Europe. The deal was branded as "worryingly vague" by human rights groups, as Libya does not even recognize the term "asylum seeker."

The financial assistance of €50 million over the next three years "will not be handed over to Libyan authorities directly," but will finance contractors in projects adhering EU rules, a spokesman for the European Commission said on Tuesday (5 October).

The funds, part of a "cooperation agenda" with the north African nation that includes a "dialogue on refugees", was signed by two commissioners — Cecilia Malmstrφm dealing with home affairs and Stefan Fuele in charge of relations with EU's southern neighbors — and their counterparts in the Libyan capital.

Under the non-binding agreement, Libya is set to receive money and assistance from EU experts in adopting new legislation on refugee protection and to upgrade its border surveillance systems. A broader dialogue on migration issues between the EU and other African countries is also mentioned in the agreement.

The mere fact of having started to talk about refugees — a concept that is not even recognized by the authoritarian administration of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi — is seen by Brussels as a breakthrough in EU relations with Tripoli.

Successive attempts by former justice and home affairs commissioner Jacques Barrot to meet the Libyan authorities were snubbed as soon as he mentioned "asylum seekers" and "human rights," one commission official recalls.

In the past two years, Tripoli has intensified its crackdown on refugees from Somalia, Eritrea, Darfur and western Africa, as part of a bilateral deal with Italy, much to the outrage of international organizations and watchdogs.

Despite the commission's optimistic statements, human rights groups question whether the Gaddafi government will halt its random arrests, torture and deportations to the desert of refugees from Somalia, Eritrea and Darfur.

"What worries us is the vagueness of the deal," Annelise Baldaccini from Amnesty International told this website. "We do not know what the EU has signed up to. It mentions for instance addressing the burden of recognized refugees and rejected asylum seekers, but it does not say what this involves."

The human rights NGO has been monitoring the treatment of migrants by the Libyan authorities for a number of years.

"The problem is that Libya does not even allow them to claim asylum, as it treats everybody as an illegal immigrant," Baldaccini says.

Another worrying development, in the expert's view, is the "clear evasion" by the EU from opposing Libya's June closure of the local office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees — the UN's refugee agency.

Pressed by journalists on the matter on Tuesday, commission spokesman Michele Cercone said that this was "a very sensitive issue" and that his institution was hoping negotiations between Libya and the UN would ultimately allow the office to be reopened.

Meanwhile, Libyan foreign minister Moussa Koussa has renewed an appeal for EU assistance to the tune of €5 billion a year in order to stop "clandestine immigration" to Europe.

In August, Colonel Gaddafi put it even more bluntly, asking for the same amount "to prevent Europe from turning black."


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