Category Archives: Mediterranean

Frontex Concedes it “May Be Helping” with Italian Push-Back Practice (News)

A Frontex spokesperson has modified Frontex’s strong denial several days ago that it had no involvement in or responsibility for the Italian push-back practice in the Mediterranean.

Frontex now concedes that it is assisting the Italians with the detection and interception of migrant boats, but that Frontex has no information regarding what happens to intercepted migrants after the Italian coastguard intercepts them.

“In an interview with European Voice [reporter Judith Crosbie], [Frontex spokesperson Gil] Arias-Fernández said: ‘Technically speaking, assets co-ordinated by Frontex are taking part in operations in the area and … these people could be sent back to their country of origin.’ But he said to hold Frontex responsible for the return of migrants to Libya was ‘far from reality’. ‘We can’t be accountable for decisions taken by Italy,’ he said.”  Arias- Fernández, however, conceded that Frontex might bear some moral responsibility for the push-back practice.

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Italian Official: Migrants Forcibly Returned to Libya Never Ask For Asylum (News)

The Italian Government has rejected the ongoing criticism by HRW and others of its push back policy.

News24 reports that Interior undersecretary Alfredo Mantovano, stated that Italian authorities “have never denied” intercepted migrants the right to ask for asylum.  “Each operation to escort migrants back to Libya lasted more than 10 hours during which none of the people involved, asked to be recognised as refugees, nor did they say they were fleeing from persecution in their countries of origin, Mantovano said.”

According to Mantovano, 757 migrants have been forcibly returned to Libya between May 6 and August 30.

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Frontex Issues Response to HRW Report (Communiqués)

Frontex has denied responsibility for and involvement in the Italian push-back practice.

Full text of the Frontex press release:

“By way of response to statements included in the Human Rights Watch report “Pushed Back, Pushed Around” Frontex would like to state categorically that the agency has not been involved in diversion activities to Libya (these are based on a bilateral agreement which Italy signed with Libya in May this year).

“The Frontex operation referred to in the report, Operation Nautilus 2009, was underway on June 18th 2009, but in a different operational area. Though German helicopters did participate in this operation, they were at no time involved in the incident described in the report (on the basis of two press reports, one from ANSA and one from Malta Today).

“In general, Frontex would like to point out that the task of helicopters involved in joint operations coordinated by the agency is only to patrol the operational area, not to divert. “

Click here for press release.

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Perejil Survivors Expelled from Morocco (News)

The 11 rescued survivors from the boat that sank near the Spanish island of Perejil this past Saturday have been deported from Morocco.  AFP quoted a Moroccan official saying “By order of the prosecutor, the 11 African escapees left Tangiers at about 2100 GMT (on Sunday) during an expulsion operation.”  The survivors, from Niger and Senegal, were probably expelled into Algeria.  While Moroccan officials believe there were 42 migrants on the boat, the Spanish Red Cross estimates the number at approximately 60.

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HRW Report: Italy’s Forced Return of Boat Migrants and Asylum Seekers, Libya’s Mistreatment of Migrants and Asylum Seekers (Reports)

Blog - HRW Cover

Human Rights Watch has released a report regarding Italy’s forcible push-back policy:

Pushed Back, Pushed Around – Italy’s Forced Return of Boat Migrants and Asylum Seekers, Libya’s Mistreatment of Migrants and Asylum Seekers

“On May 6, 2009, for the first time in the post-World War II era, a European state ordered its coast guard and naval vessels to interdict and forcibly return boat migrants on the high seas without doing any screening whatsoever to determine whether any passengers needed protection or were particularly vulnerable. The interdicting state was Italy; the receiving state was Libya.  Italian coast guard and finance guard patrol boats towed migrant boats from international waters without even a cursory screening to see whether some might be refugees or whether others might be sick or injured, pregnant women, unaccompanied children, or victims of trafficking or other forms of violence against women. The Italians disembarked the exhausted passengers on a dock in Tripoli where the Libyan authorities immediately apprehended and detained them.”

HRW’S Recommendations include:

“To the Government of Italy

  • Immediately cease interdicting and summarily returning boat migrants to Libya.
  • Investigate allegations that Italian naval personnel beat and used electric shocks to force interdicted boat migrants onto Libyan vessels and prosecute naval or coast guard officials who abused their authority, including those with command responsibility.
  • Stop cooperating with the Libyan authorities on the interdiction and interception of third-country nationals trying to leave Libya.
  • Make public all treaties and agreements between the governments of Italy and Libya.
  • Cease to fund or provide other bilateral support to Libya aimed at increasing that country’s effectiveness at intercepting asylum seekers and migrants before they take to the sea or before they reach Italian waters. Redirect such support into multilateral efforts, especially through UNHCR and OHCHR, to ensure that fundamental human rights standards relating to the treatment of such persons in Libya are observed.
  • Ensure access to full and fair asylum procedures, including the right to raise fear of treatment contrary to article 3 of the ECHR, for every person in the control of the Italian authorities, including those interdicted or rescued at sea.”

“To European Union Institutions and EU Member States

  • Demand that Italy not violate article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights by its interdiction and summary return of migrants to a place where they are subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment.
  • Ensure access to full and fair asylum procedures, including the right to raise fear of treatment contrary to article 3 of the ECHR, for every person in the control of any EU member state, including those interdicted or rescued at sea.
  • Adopt clear, consistent, and binding rules on EU member states establishing responsibility for disembarking migrants rescued at sea.
  • Refrain from expelling third-country (non-Libyan) nationals to Libya, either directly or as partners in Frontex-coordinated operations, until Libya’s treatment of migrants, asylum seekers and refugees fully meets European standards in relation to persecution or risk of treatment contrary to article 3 ECHR. Under current conditions, the return of third-country nationals breaches European nonrefoulement obligations not to return people to inhuman or degrading treatment.
  • Encourage Libya to 1) ratify the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol; 2) adopt a national asylum law; and 3) formally recognize UNHCR.
  • Display greater transparency in negotiations with Libya on all matters relating to migration and border controls.
  • Ensure  that the human rights clause in the Libya-EU Framework Agreement, being negotiated at the time of this writing, and in agreements flowing from it, contain explicit reference to the rights of asylum seekers and migrants as a prerequisite for any cooperation on migration-control schemes.
  • Refrain from encouraging Libya from establishing any reception regime which falls below the European reception condition standards
  • Quickly admit UNHCR-identified refugees in need of resettlement from Libya. Do so, however, only as a supplement rather than as a substitute for allowing spontaneous arrivals in EU territory to seek asylum.
  • Direct development assistance to improve respect for human rights and human dignity in migrants’ and asylum seekers’ countries of origin to address the root causes of forced migration.”

Click here for the report.

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Migrant Boat Sinks Between Morocco and Spain (News)

A migrant boat carrying between 40 to 60 migrants sank near Perejil, off the northern coast of Morocco.  More than five bodies have been recovered; more than 20 persons are presumed dead.  Rescued survivors have been taken by Spanish rescuers to Morocco.

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Accusation Against Italian Coast Guard Regarding Deaths of Migrants During 2008 Rescue Attempt (News)

An anonymous letter has reportedly been sent to an Italian prosecutor’s office and to the media accusing an Italian Coast Guard captain of mishandling a rescue attempt in June 2008 during which up to 15 migrants were killed.  The survivors were reportedly taken to Malta after the incident.

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Propondrá Besson a la UE Que Se Intercepten Inmigrantes en el Mar (News)

“Francia quiere que la UE dé su visto bueno para poder interceptar y repatriar inmigrantes ilegales en el mar, según informó hoy el ministro de Inmigración francés, Eric Besson, en una carta que envió a sus homólogos comunitarios.”

“Besson considera inaudita la presión que los traficantes de inmigrantes ilegales ejercen en las fronteras de la UE y considera que la [Frontex] precisa una nueva doctrina basada en la interceptación y repatriación, pero que al mismo tiempo respete el derecho de asilo.  El ministro francés propuso también una mayor cooperación entre Frontex y los países de los que parten los inmigrantes.”

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Besson Calls For Intercepting Migrants on High Seas (News)

Eric Besson, French immigration minister, has proposed five measures for reinforcing the EU border against irregular immigration, including:

-a new doctrine of engagement for maritime operations overseen by Frontex in the Mediterranean focusing on interception and return of migrants, with respect for international obligations; and

-increased operational cooperation between Frontex and departure countries so as to coordinate maritime control operations.

Besson will present the five measures at the EU council of ministers meeting in Brussels on 21 September.

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Besson propose une nouvelle doctrine d’engagement pour les opérations maritimes (News)

Eric Besson, ministre de l’Immigration de la France propose cinq mesures pour renforcer l’action de l’Union Européenne contre l’immigration irrégulière:

– L’élaboration d’une nouvelle doctrine d’engagement pour les opérations maritimes conduites par Frontex en Méditerranée, tournée vers l’interception et la reconduite, dans le respect des obligations internationales notamment en matière d’asile.

– Une coopération opérationnelle renforcée entre Frontex et les Etats de départ des migrants, afin de coordonner les actions de contrôle en mer.

– L’installation d’un état-major de Frontex en Méditerranée, pour coordonner les opérations de surveillance et de contrôle au plus près du terrain.

– L’affrètement par Frontex de vols groupés pour des opérations conjointes de reconduite à la frontière

– La création d’un programme « Erasmus » pour les gardes-frontières en Europe, coordonné par Frontex, afin de faire émerger progressivement une véritable communauté professionnelle à l’échelle de l’Europe.

Besson présentera ces mesures lors du prochain conseil des ministres, lundi 21 septembre à Bruxelles.

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68 Migrants Arrive in Malta (News)

68 migrants from Eritrea were brought to Malta by an Armed Forces of Malta patrol boat after their boat lost power near Malta.

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Photo: Mark Tabone/AFM Maritime Squadron

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EC Commissioner Barrot: Forced Returns Inconsistent With EU Law (News)

At the end of a debate on immigration at the European Parliament, EC Commissioner for Freedom, Justice and Security, Jacques Barrot, said it was necessary to respect the “principle of no forced returns established by the EU legislation with regard to people crossing the outer borders of the EU.”  “[R]eturns [should not be ] carried out to countries where people risk being subjected to degrading and inhuman treatment.”

Barrot said the Commission was still reviewing the Italian government’s response to the request for clarification of  the Italian migrant push-back policy.

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Italian Push-Back Policy Criticized by UN Human Rights Commissioner (News)

UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay criticized the Italian policy of forcibly turning migrants back to Libya without screening in her speech to the opening session of the UN Human Rights Council.  Italian government officials questioned the validity of Pillay’s criticism.

Pillay said ”In a tragic repetition last month, the deaths of migrants at sea, as well as the hardship of those who are left stranded near the shores of Libya, Malta, and Italy, once again drew attention to the plight of migrants and refugees. In many cases, authorities reject these migrants and leave them to face hardship and peril, if not death, as though they were turning away ships laden with dangerous waste”.

The push-back policy has had drastic results: “Last week, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said the policy had resulted in a 90% drop in migrant arrivals since it was launched in May ‘’From May 1 to August 31 2008 more than 15,000 migrants who set out from Libya landed in Italy. During the same period this year, we had 1,400 people, a 90% drop,’ Maroni said.”    “[S]ince May more than 1,000 people intercepted in international waters have been sent back to Libya.”

”A spokesperson for EU Justice Commissioner Jacques Barrot … said the Italian government had provided a written response to the European Commission’s requests for further information about its push-back policy. ‘For now, the Commission’s offices are analyzing the content,’ said spokesperson Michele Cercone.”

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EC Commissioner: New Policies Needed for Mediterranean to “Head Off This Great Tide of People” (News)

Joe Borg, Commissioner for Maritime Activities and Fisheries, said that the time has come to act on new policies between Europe and North Africa.  Borg said a new strategy is needed to find mechanisms more suited ”to involving cooperation with third-party states of the basin. If we do not achieve this objective, we will be left with a somewhat unbalanced system of management for the Mediterranean”.

If a joint system between Europe and third countries is developed, assessment of sensitive issues such as illegal immigration ”could be coordinated with other aspects of the problem, such as developing systems of surveillance in North African countries, using development funds to head off this great tide of people”.

ANSAmed: “A pilot project is also on the cards for improving cooperation between national authorities of member states involved in surveillance operations as well as information exchange between port authorities. A study will then be launched to plan European maritime space and to realise an integrated project in connection with the EU’s Era-Net research network for strengthening coordination in marine research. All of which, Borg notes, must not disregard significant implements which are already in place: from the Mediterranean Union to Europe’s neighbourhood policies. The ball is now in the court of the EU’s general Council of Ministers and the Euro-parliament in the hope that it be taken up at December’s European summit.”

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Italians Ignore Intercepted Migrants’ Requests for Asylum (News)

The group of 75 migrants used a satellite telephone to seek assistance while they were being returned to Libya by Italian authorities.  Several of the migrants telephoned a BBC reporter in Italy from the Italian patrol boat which had intercepted their dinghy.

One caller told the reporter ”we told the Italian military that we wanted to request asylum and asked them not to hand us over to the Libyans because we were afraid of going to jail, but they wouldn’t listen to us.”

Some of the migrants protested and refused to be moved from the Italian patrol boat to a Libyan patrol boat.  The Italian boat was forced to dock at the Libyan port of Al Zuwarah in order to off load the migrants.

“A spokesman for the European Commission, Dennis Abbott, said the EU executive would ask the Italian government for details regarding Monday’s expulsion. But Abbot clarified that the EC was not ‘pointing its finger’. The spokesman explained that the EC’s goal was rather ‘to protect the right of every human being to request refugee status’ by enlisting the cooperation of member countries to share in the burden of hosting them.”

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