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Rwanda praised for Libya `slaves’ offer

Government-run migrant detention centers across Libya are overflowing with detainees waiting to be repatriated.

Blockade in EU

More than 1.5 million migrants have arrived in Europe since 2015, according to UN figures and the EU has been desperate to stem the influx. But leaders are at a loss to find solutions for the asylum seekers on the other side of the Mediterranean.

The EU has faced heavy criticism from the UN over its training of the Libyan coastguard, which the world body’s rights chief said resulted in migrants being sent back to “horrific” prisons.

`Unimaginable horrors’

With EU support, Italy has been training Libyan coastguards to intercept boats as part of a controversial deal that has seen migrant arrivals down nearly 70 percent since July.

But the UN charges that the policy leaves migrants returned to Libya at risk of torture, rape, forced labour, and extortion.

“The international community cannot continue to turn a blind eye to the unimaginable horrors endured by migrants in Libya,” UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said.

Brussels has hit back that its coastguard training has helped save lives — nearly 3,000 people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean this year — while EU aid has helped UN agencies to send 10,000 migrants home from Libya voluntarily.

In The Gambia, Karamo Keita set up a group to warn fellow youngsters not to attempt the trip to Europe, after suffering horrific abuses in Libya including slave labour.

“In Libya, black people have no right,” he told AFP back in September.

“We were taken to various farms where the Libyan guy sold us as slaves. We worked on the farms for free.”

The International Organisation for Migration had in April reported the existence of markets where migrants became “commodities to be bought”.

And several months later the head of medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres, Joanne Liu, wrote an open letter to European governments warning of the thriving “kidnapping, torture and extortion business”.

“In their efforts to stem the influx, are European governments ready to pay the price for rape, torture and slavery?” she asked, adding: “We can’t say we didn’t know about this.”

‘Don’t condemn, act’

Amnesty’s Tine said that in its efforts to stop migrants arriving “at all cost”, Europe bore “a fundamental responsibility” for the horrors in Libya.

Yet others are also to blame, he told AFP.

“African countries do nothing to make their young people stay, to give them work,” he said.

Analyst Hamidou Anne also said a passive response from African leaders was in part to blame for the unfolding disaster, along with “systematic racism in the Maghreb countries”.

“This cannot go on,” he said.

“Faced with a crime against humanity you don’t condemn it, you act.”

Migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos meanwhile told AFP on Nov.23 that the EU was “working without let-up” to find solutions.

Tine said slavery needed to be on the agenda at an EU-AU summit on November 29-30 in Abidjan, an idea already floated by Niger’s President Mahamadou Issoufou.

“We need an impartial investigation to see how the trafficking is organised and who is behind it,” Tine said.

And, he added, “everyone must take their responsibilities.”

4 comments

  1. Rwanda should take its people who are refugees in Uganda, Congo, Tanzania etc. Rwanda has always said it does not have enough land, so Rwanda’s bonders been redrawn

    • Bwire, the Rwanda of today is different than your grand parents left years back! Every Rwandan is welcome back home should they wish to return, but for many reasons some will not return, whether for legitimate reasons or not. Finally, you need to understand that human migration is as old as time and will always be there whether we like it or not. There areas in London and Boston where you visit a community and find Luganda commonly in use, these are Ugandans who moved there and became residents and citizens of those places. So let’s be positive about Rwanda and applaud the positive gesture! It is true that Habyarimana and his keen used to use the refrain that “Rwanda is too small”, not the modern state

  2. There are also unconfirmed but chilling reports (that require urgent investigation) that some of the sold slaves are traded for their body organs. The slaves are killed and body organs are removed for sale at very exorbitant prices! Similar happens have been said about illegal immigrants that are smuggled to the far East and Middle East countries! The international community MUST intervene urgently to stop this inhuman practice because all human beings are equal before God!

  3. Thanks Kagame and the Rwanda to show your will to save the Africans who are on market as commodities

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