Libyan migrants
Arab rights group have asked for international help for the hundreds of rescued Libyan migrants left in the desert by Tunisian police. Image by flickr.com

Home » Human rights group wants support for rescued Libyan migrants

Human rights group wants support for rescued Libyan migrants

An Arab rights group called Monday 17 July 2023 for international help for 360 sub-Saharan migrants who Libyan authorities say were rescued after having been abandoned in the desert by Tunisian police on the border with Libya. The Cairo-based Arab Organisation for Human Rights (AOHR) said it welcomed Libya’s reception of the migrants who had […]

18-07-23 09:57
Libyan migrants
Arab rights group have asked for international help for the hundreds of rescued Libyan migrants left in the desert by Tunisian police. Image by flickr.com

An Arab rights group called Monday 17 July 2023 for international help for 360 sub-Saharan migrants who Libyan authorities say were rescued after having been abandoned in the desert by Tunisian police on the border with Libya.

The Cairo-based Arab Organisation for Human Rights (AOHR) said it welcomed Libya’s reception of the migrants who had “experienced difficult humanitarian conditions” before being picked up by Libyan border guards.

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“According to Libyan border guards, 360 migrants, including women and children, need urgent humanitarian and medical aid,” the AOHR’s Libya chapter said, urging Libyan authorities to “authorise the concerned organisations — the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Organization for Migration — to meet them and help with legal procedures”.

IS THERE HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE FOR MIGRANTS?

The IOM in Libya said on Monday it had provided “emergency humanitarian assistance to migrants rescued at the border with Tunisia”. It said, “191 migrants were provided with hygiene kits, clothes, mattresses & screened for medical, protection and psychosocial assistance”.

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Libya’s interior ministry said on Monday it had “documented the expulsions by the Tunisian authorities towards the Libyan border” and posted a video on Facebook showing migrants telling their stories.

On Sunday, Libyan border patrols rescued dozens of migrants who had been abandoned in the desert without water, food or shelter near the border with Tunisia, AFP journalists said.

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The migrants, whom the border guards said had been abandoned by Tunisian police, were found in an uninhabited area near Al-Assah 150 kilometres (93 miles) west of Tripoli and around 15 kilometres inside Libyan territory.

An AFP team at the border saw the visibly exhausted and dehydrated migrants sitting or lying on the sand and using shrubs to shield themselves from the scorching summer heat that topped 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).

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Hundreds of migrants from sub-Saharan African countries were forcibly taken to desert and hostile areas bordering Libya and Algeria after racial unrest in early July in Sfax, Tunisia’s second-largest city.

The trouble flared after the July 3 killing of a Tunisian man in an altercation between locals and migrants. The port of Sfax is a departure point for many migrants from impoverished and violence-torn countries seeking a better life in Europe by making a perilous Mediterranean crossing.

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TUNISIA PROVIDED SHELTER TO MORE THAN 630 LIBYAN MIGRANTS

The Tunisian Red Crescent said it had provided shelter to at least 630 migrants who had been taken after July 3 to the militarised border zone of Ras Jedir, north of Al-Assah, on the Mediterranean coast.

On Sunday, Tunisia and the European Union signed a memorandum of understanding for a “strategic and comprehensive partnership” that includes financial assistance of 10 million euros (about $11 million) to help deal with irregular migration.

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THE AGREEMENT WAS SIGNED DESPITE THE LIBYAN MIGRANTS MISTREATMENT

Amnesty International’s Eve Geddie called it an “ill-judged agreement, signed despite mounting evidence of serious human rights abuses by authorities” in Tunisia.

The agreement “will result in a dangerous expansion of already failed migration policies and signals EU acceptance of increasingly repressive behaviour by Tunisia’s president and government,” added Geddie, the rights group’s advocacy director in Brussels. “This makes the European Union complicit in the suffering that will inevitably result,” she said.

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© Agence France-Presse

This article was originally published by Fredrick Muthuni.