The Abuse of Migrants in Libya is a Blot on The World's Conscience
By William Lacy Swing, IOM Director General
Libya
is awash with tears for the tens of thousands of migrants from across
Africa and beyond who have traveled there in search of a better life.
This
time-honored practice began last century, when workers from the Middle
East and Africa flocked to Libya for jobs in its booming petro-economy -
a pattern that continues even now, despite Libya's dismal security
climate.
That
practice has become conflated with the global trend of migrants from
poor lands seeking jobs in developed countries - especially Europe, a
continent that will require millions of new health care workers to serve
its increasingly elderly populations.
Libya's
emergence as a migration choke point is a symptom of this labor demand,
but not its cause. Nonetheless, with insecurity all around, the age-old
trade in smuggling people to Europe has become turbo-charged - and has
turned into a machine of exploitation and profit, impacting thousands of
migrants as well as Libyan citizens.
What can realistically be done about this?
Tens of thousands of the estimated 700,000 migrants
in Libya suffer horrendously at the hands of unscrupulous people
smugglers. The abuse of migrants being held against their will in
squalid, inhumane conditions is a blot on our conscience.
I
was the first head of a United Nations agency to venture into the
country since Moammar Gadhafi was toppled in 2011. There, I had the
chance to meet with some of the country's more than 5,000 migrants
arbitrarily held in government-run detention centers.
The
detainees' harrowing stories have left an indelible mark on me, both
the journeys to Libya and the endless misery of unjust detention.
Their
ordeal begins before reaching Libya. Tragically ill-equipped, these
sub-Saharan Africans travel in open trucks across a thousand or more
miles of desert with little food or water. Countless witnesses have
testified to seeing friends abandoned after falling off trucks, only to
be left to die.
Once
over the border and in the hands of people smugglers, a fresh nightmare
begins for the migrants. One man reported systematic beating and rape;
others witnessed people being starved to death or shot.
The
agency I run focuses on saving migrant lives. In multiple meetings with
various Libyan authorities, I have requested that they do all in their
power to stop rounding up migrants and confining them to detention
centers where they lose their freedom and dignity.
I
have also called, repeatedly, for the establishment of alternatives to
detention and to ensure accountability for abuses perpetrated against
migrants in detention.
Engaging
with Libyan authorities seems to be paying off. I'm happy to report
that seven of the more than 30 official migrant detention centers in
Libya have closed recently.
While
this is progress, IOM calls for all detention centers - official and
nonofficial - to be closed and replaced with open centers, where
migrants' basic human rights are respected. We stand ready to provide
the necessary support to the Libyan authorities that would help make
this a reality.
But let's be clear: Exploiting migrants is not exclusively a Libyan matter.
An
eternal optimism is what keeps migrants taking to the road - the same
optimism that makes migrants everywhere crucial spurs to any receiving
country's economic growth. But for those who travel through Libya,
optimism too often leads to a deadly trap.
In
the face of often overwhelming evidence that their journeys may be
undertaken in vain, they still leave. Climate change, poverty and
outright persecution drive many to migrate. But migrants are enticed
with false promises to take dangerous journeys. Tantalizing photos
appear on social media of migrants apparently doing well in Europe,
while messaging apps provide secret channels through which smugglers
guide migrants on their journeys. This is a disturbing development.
The
worst abuse happens at the hands of people looking to make a profit
from the lucrative business of people smuggling. They show no mercy in
enslaving migrants or torturing them for extortion.
A
few months ago, IOM highlighted the fact that smugglers had arranged
for a Facebook Live broadcast of some 75 migrants being held and
tortured in a dungeon. Short video clips were sent via the mobile phone
messenger platforms to anguished family members thousands of miles away.
Unfortunately,
it is difficult to reach or influence the criminal gangs behind these
acts. So we are asking social media giants to prevent their platforms
from becoming instruments of migrant exploitation.
Many
detained migrants want only to go home and right now; often, only IOM
can help them. Indeed, already this year IOM has managed to return over
10,000 stranded migrants to their homes -- many of whom had spent
months, or even years, in Libya's worst detention centers. Since 2015,
we have flown a total of 13,530 men, women and children home to 30
countries.
The
closure of all the centers is still not a reality, so to save lives we
must be pragmatic. We need to provide an escape from the grinding
nightmare of detention by helping migrants get home, and simultaneously
protect them in detention.
In
Libya today, brave IOM staff are working against the odds to improve
conditions to meet minimum standards of safety, hygiene and sanitation:
installing proper toilets and water purification systems, repairing
sewage pipes and electrical cabling, and providing ventilation fans and
water heaters.
Migrants
in detention have limited choices and are subject to extreme stress.
But they can make informed decisions that save their lives.
Right
now, IOM's voluntary humanitarian return assistance is one of few
viable humane solutions for migrants in this Libyan nightmare. They can
decide to go home in a free and informed process, with institutional
safeguards. They can withdraw an application any time -- as some do.
We
are working to establish safe houses as alternatives to detention for
the most vulnerable, especially children and victims of trafficking. We
want women and children who are released from detention to be
temporarily placed inside migrant community houses, and for migrants
with medical and mental health conditions to be released to hospitals.
IOM
is working to establish what we call a Migrant Response and Resource
Mechanism that provides information and referral services including
health screening, psychological first aid and support to vulnerable
migrants from mobile teams. Libya, once a destination for hardworking
migrants across the continent to earn a living wage in decent
conditions, can become just that once again.
We
have been criticized for our work in detention centers but let's be
clear: Not a single additional migrant is detained as a result, nor does
our work prolong detention.
Instead,
it offers a glimmer of hope for brutalized, innocent people as long as
they are locked up. If we were not bearing witness and improving
conditions, I know that migrants would unnecessarily die.




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