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News > World

Libyan Coastguard Bans Charities from Rescuing Asylum Seekers

  • Migrants gather at a safe house in the town of Bani Walid, Libya March 25, 2018. Picture taken March 25, 2018.

    Migrants gather at a safe house in the town of Bani Walid, Libya March 25, 2018. Picture taken March 25, 2018. | Photo: Reuters

Published 6 May 2018
Opinion

On Saturday, the Libyan coastguard also forced the Astral and another ship to move away from a boat carrying 38 migrants.

The Libyan coastguard prevented Sunday a rescue ship belonging to two charity groups from approaching a boat in distress carrying migrants, an AFP photographer witnessed.

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The Aquarius, chartered by SOS-Mediterranee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF), was informed by the Italian coastguard of the presence of an overloaded boat off the coast of Tripoli, reported the photographer on board the NGO boat.

But Rome also alerted the Libyan coastguard which took charge of coordinating the rescue operation and banned the NGO ship from approaching, also ordering it to move away when asylum-seekers jumped into the water to avoid being picked up by the Libyans.

The Libyan navy later announced it had rescued more than 300 migrants in three separate operations, reporting one dead and three missing.

The two victims were with 114 other migrants including 21 women and four children, said a Libyan navy spokesman, General Ayoub Kacem, although he declined to say whether they had been aboard the boat seen by the Aquarius. He also warned that tensions between the Libyan coastguard and the NGO boats could worsen over coming days if they continued to approach stricken boats.

But Italian deputy Riccadro Magi, who was present on board the Astral, a boat chartered by the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms, earlier Sunday when it rescued 105 migrants, accused the Libyans of being heavy-handed.

"The Libyans act as pirates in international waters demanding that they would be recognized as an authority. They act outside the law and they do so with the means provided by the Italian government," he said on Twitter.

Last November, German charity group Sea Watch said lives had been needlessly lost because of a Libyan coastguard being trained and financed by the European Union. According to the NGO, the Libyans began "beating and threatening" the migrants on the stricken boat, provoking panic that caused some to fall overboard.

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