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UN investigation says EU ‘aided’ crimes against humanity in Libya – Middle East Eye

A UN fact-finding mission has said the European Union "aided and abetted" Libyan authorities' crimes against migrants.

A new report from the UN will be released and presented to the Human Rights Council later this week. According to the report, crimes against humanity were carried out against migrants in detention centres. The report is based on interviews with 400 people including migrants and witnesses, along with photographs and videos.

"Although we're not saying that the EU and its member states have committed these crimes. The point is that the support given has aided and abetted the commission of the crimes," Chaloka Beyani, one of the independent mission's members, said.

The EU and member states have supported and trained the Libyan coastguard, which returns migrants to detention centres. They have also funded Libyan border management programmes.

The vast majority of people attempting the Mediterranean crossing pass through war-torn Libya. According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), 32,450 people were intercepted by Libyan forces in 2021 and "hauled back to arbitrary detention and abuse" in the country.

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The UN mission said it would pass any evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity to the International Criminal Court. According to the mission, militia groups have carried out murders, rapes, enslavement, judicial killings, and forced disappearances.

The violations and abuses investigated by the mission were connected primarily to the consolidation of power and wealth by militias and other state-affiliated groups," the report said.

"Trafficking, enslavement, forced labour, imprisonment, extortion and smuggling of vulnerable migrants generated significant revenue for individuals, groups and state institutions.

In 2022, the EU was criticised for using a drone to help Libyan forces intercept boats carrying migrants in the Mediterranean.

The drone, which operated out of EU member Malta, played a "crucial role" in detecting boats leaving Libya, information that the EU's border agency, Frontex, then hands to the Libyan coastguard, HRW said.

"Frontex claims the surveillance is to aid rescue, but the information facilitates interceptions and returns to Libya... [despite] overwhelming evidence of torture and exploitation of migrants and refugees in Libya," HRW said in a statement.

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.

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UN investigation says EU 'aided' crimes against humanity in Libya - Middle East Eye

Libya: Crimes against humanity committed since 2016 rights probe – UN News

In the case of State security forces, human rights violations were committed to quash dissent and exploit vulnerable migrants, with no justice in sight, according to thelatest report, from theIndependent Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) on Libya.

It documents the widespread practice of arbitrary detention, murder, torture, rape, enslavement and enforced disappearance in the country. In addition, the Mission states for the first time that sexual slavery was committed against migrants.

There is anurgent need for accountability to end this pervasive impunity, said Mohamed Auajjar, the Missions chair. We call on Libyan authorities todevelop a human rights plan of actionand a comprehensive, victim-centred roadmap on transitional justice without delay, and hold all those responsible for human rights violations accountable.

Libya has been in turmoil since the ouster of former long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi, with the country divided between rival administrations and warring militias, with a UN-recognized Government of National Accord based in the capital Tripoli and the forces of General Khalifa Haftars so-called Libyan National Army holding sway in the east and southern areas of the oil-rich nation.

The Mission which has reported since 2016, noted thataccountability for the violations was severely lacking, as most survivors weretoo afraid and mistrustful of the justice systemto officially report the abuse. As a result, the violations continue unabated, the Mission said.

As its mandatecomes to an end next week, the Mission called for the creation of new rights monitoring and investigation mechanisms, to support Libyan reconciliation efforts and help the authorities achieve transitional justice and accountability.

The report notes that more than 670,000 migrants from over 41 countries were present in Libya in the period since July 2022, when the Missions mandate was last extended, until March of this year.

The Missioninterviewed more than 100 migrants over the course of its investigationsand its report points tooverwhelming evidence of systematic torture and sexual slavery,among other violations.

Detention centres in which migrants were enslavedwere under the actual or nominal control of the authorities, including the Directorate for Combating Illegal Migration and the Libyan Coast Guard.

The widescaleexploitation of migrants is a lucrative business, the Mission said, noting that trafficking, enslavement, forced labour, imprisonment, extortion and smuggling generated significant revenue for individuals, groups and State institutions.

Detention-related violations were also found to affect Libyans on a large scale, and the Mission points to the responsibility of State authorities and their leadership.

The report notes thatvictims came from every segment of Libyan society and included children, adult men and women, human rights defenders, political participants, civil society representatives, members of military or security forces, legal professionals and persons of perceived or actual diverse sexual orientations and gender identities.

Most of those interviewed by the Mission were held without charge in horrific conditions, subjected regularly to torture, solitary confinement, held incommunicado and denied access to water, food and other essentials.

Children walk past damaged buildings in Benghazi in Libya.

According to the Mission, the situation of women in Libyahas only worsened over the past three years, in a context of a weakening of State institutions amid the rising power of armed groups.

The report documentssystematic discrimination against women, a rise in domestic violence, which is not punished by any comprehensive law, and a lack of accountability for crimes against prominent women leaders, such as theenforced disappearance of member of parliament Sihem Sergiwanearly four years ago, and the killing of Hannan Barassi in 2020.

The Mission reiterated its call on the authorities in Benghazi, where the two high-profile crimes took place, toadequately investigate themand bring the perpetrators to justice.

Established by the Human Rights Council in 2020 to investigate human rights violations by all parties since the beginning of 2016, the Missions mandate ends on 4 April,at a time when the human rights situation in Libya is deteriorating, parallel State authorities are emerging and the legislative, executive and security sector reforms needed to uphold the rule of law and unify the country arefar from being realized, says the report.

In this context, the Missioncalls on the Human Rights Council to establish a sufficiently resourced, independent international investigation mechanism, and on the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to create another mechanism with an ongoing mandate to monitor and report on gross human rights violations in Libya.

Among other recommendations, the reportcalls on the international community to cease all direct and indirect support to Libyan actors involved in crimes against humanity and gross human rights violations against migrants, such as the Directorate for Combating Illegal Migration, the Stability Support Apparatus and the Libyan Coast Guard.

The Mission also says it willshare its findings with the International Criminal Court, including a list of possible perpetrators of international crimes.

UN Human Rights Council-appointed rights experts such as the members of the Mission work on a voluntary and unpaid basis, are not UN staff, and work independently from any government or organization.

Following a UN-brokered ceasefire in October 2020, elections were due to take place in December 2021, but were postponed.

Last month,Abdoulaye Bathily, Special Representative for Libya and head of the UNs political mission in the country(UNSMIL)announced to the Security Councilanew initiative aiming to facilitate the holding ofpresidential and legislative elections before the end of the year.

Speaking about the need for reconciliation in Libya, Mr. Bathily said at the time, Reconciliation is a long-term process that should be inclusive, victim-centred, rights-based and grounded on transitional justice principles.

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Libya: Crimes against humanity committed since 2016 rights probe - UN News

EU defends its Libya migrant record over UN team allegations – ABC News

The European Union is defending its record on helping relieve migrant suffering in Libya after U.N.-backed investigators accused the bloc of abetting human rights abuses and other crimes there

By

LORNE COOK Associated Press

March 28, 2023, 9:14 AM ET

3 min read

BRUSSELS -- The European Union on Tuesday defended its record on helping relieve the suffering of migrants in Libya after U.N.-backed investigators accused the 27-nation bloc of abetting human rights abuses and other crimes in the largely lawless north African country.

Libya is a major departure point for people from northern Africa and elsewhere willing to make the perilous Mediterranean Sea crossing in poorly maintained boats in search of better lives or sanctuary in Europe.

At least 529 migrants were reported dead and 848 others missing off Libya last year, according to the United Nations' International Organization for Migration (IOM). More than 24,680 people were intercepted by the Libyan coastguard as they tried to leave, and brought back.

Presenting a report on Monday by a U.N.-commissioned fact-finding mission to Libya, investigator Chaloka Beyani said that EU assistance to the Libyan authorities, migration department and the coastguard has aided and abetted the commission of the crimes, including crimes against humanity.

The report said that migrants, some of whom might have been eligible for asylum, were apprehended, detained, and disembarked in Libya solely to prevent their entry into Europe as a corollary of both European immigration policy and the economic agenda of migration in Libya via their subsequent detention and exploitation.

The EUs executive branch, the European Commission, said it takes the allegations very seriously but noted that its work in Libya is vital and often done in coordination with U.N. agencies like the IOM and U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.

Not doing anything is not an answer. And our objective, our joint objective, is to help to improve the situation of the people stranded in Libya, commission spokesman Peter Stano said.

Of course, there are incidents. There are issues which are a source of concern. We try to address them with the partners in Libya, with the international partners, Stano told reporters in Brussels. He said the EUs Libya mission had cooperated with the investigators.

The report also said that investigators believe the EU and its member countries directly or indirectly, provided monetary and technical support and equipment, such as boats, to the Libyan Coast Guard and the Directorate for Combating Illegal Migration, which were used to intercept and detain migrants.

But Stano denied suggestions that the EU might be paying to keep migrants in Libya.

We are not financing any Libyan entity. We are not giving physical money to partners in Libya, he said. What we are doing is allocating a lot of money, which is then usually used by our international partners. A lot goes through the U.N., for example.

Earlier this month, the commission said that a new boat was recently handed over for coastguard service. Two more new boats and an undisclosed number of refurbished ones are yet to come.

At the same time, the EU has refurbished six other boats for Libyas General Administration of Coastal Security, which is separate to the coastguard. In February, Italy supplied two more fast boats to the GACS fleet. The commission said Tuesday that 142 GACS officers have received EU training.

Italy, where most people leaving Libya arrive, has received at least 15 million euros ($16.3 million) in EU money to fund migration and border control work there.

Last year, in a written answer to a question from the European Parliament, EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson said that the EU has devoted around EUR 700 million ($760 million) to Libya during 2014-20, including EUR 59 million ($64 million) for the coastguard and GACS.

___ Follow APs global migration coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/migration

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EU defends its Libya migrant record over UN team allegations - ABC News

UN-backed probe cites crimes against humanity in Libya – Indiatimes.com

Geneva: UN backed human rights experts said on Monday there is evidence that crimes against humanity - including sexual slavery - have been committed against Libyans and migrants in the North African country. The investigators commissioned by the U.N.-backed Human Rights Council also faulted the European Union for sending support to Libyan forces that they say contributed to crimes against migrants and Libyans. The findings come in an extensive new report, based on hundreds of interviews with hundreds of people including migrants and witnesses, that wraps up a fact-finding mission created nearly three years ago to investigate rights violations and abuses in Libya. Libya was plunged into turmoil after a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled longtime autocrat Moammar Gadhafi, who was later killed and left the country divided between rival governments on the east and west. Oil-rich but largely lawless Libya has in recent years emerged as the dominant transit point for migrants seeking a better quality of life in Europe, and activists have long decried horrible conditions faced by migrants.

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UN-backed probe cites crimes against humanity in Libya - Indiatimes.com

UN nuclear watchdog says missing Libya uranium found – The Associated Press

CAIRO (AP) U.N. inspectors visiting southern Libya found drums containing natural uranium reported missing earlier this month in the chaos-stricken country, the U.N. nuclear watchdog said Saturday.

The International Atomic Energy Agency said earlier this month that some 2.5 tons of natural uranium stored at a site in the southern town of Sabha had gone missing. Forces of the Libyan commander Khalifa Hifter said they found the missing material close to the storage site.

In a statement to The Associated Press on Saturday, the Vienna-based agency said U.N. inspectors visited the area on March 21 and saw the material being transferred to the storage site.

U.N. inspectors found that a relatively small amount of UOC (Uranium ore concentrate) was still unaccounted for, it said.

The IAEA said, however, there was no immediate radiological risk at the location.

The statement said investigations were still underway on the matter including reconciling the quantities of natural uranium at the site with those previously verified by the IAEA.

The IAEA said its director-general, Rafael Mariano Grossi, informed member states Friday about the findings of the visit.

Natural uranium cannot immediately be used for energy production or bomb fuel, as the enrichment process typically requires the metal to be converted into a gas, then later spun in centrifuges to reach the levels needed.

But each ton of natural uranium if obtained by a group with the technological means and resources can be refined to 5.6 kilograms (12 pounds) of weapons-grade material over time, experts say.

The material dates back to the rule of late dictator Moammar Gadhafi, who stored thousands of barrels of so-called yellowcake uranium for a once-planned uranium conversion facility that was never built in his decadeslong secret weapons program.

Estimates put the Libyan stockpile at some 1,000 metric tons of yellowcake uranium under Gadhafi, who declared his nascent nuclear weapons program to the world in 2003 after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Sabha is located some 660 kilometers (410 miles) southeast of Tripoli, in the countrys lawless southern reaches of the Sahara Desert. Libya has descended into chaos following a NATO-backed uprising that ousted and later killed Gadhafi. The country has for years been split between rival administrations in the east and the west, each backed by armed groups.

Following the IAEAs revelations in mid-March that some 2.5 tons of natural uranium had gone missing in Libya, Hifters forces said they found the drums some 5 kilometers (3 miles) south of the facility.

In a statement, Hifters forces claimed that Chadian separatist fighters, who operate in the region, likely attempted to steal the drums after mistaking them for weapons and ammunition. Hifters forces provided no evidence for the accusation.

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UN nuclear watchdog says missing Libya uranium found - The Associated Press