Peter Sutherland, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for International Migration and Development in a statement welcomed the European Commission’s “European Agenda on Migration” but “urge[d] [EU] Member States not to put any refugees or migrants in the line of fire, and to design any [anti-smuggling] operation in complete conformity with international law.” Sutherland urged the EU to take steps to ensure that Frontex Operations Triton and Poseidon “are at least equal in effect to Mare Nostrum” and “to make search-and-rescue the top priority…”
Tag Archives: Operation Poseidon
UN’s Sutherland calls on EU “not to put any refugees or migrants in the line of fire.”
Filed under European Union, Frontex, Libya, Mediterranean, Statements, United Nations
Tagged as Deaths at sea, European Agenda on Migration, Frontex, Human Trafficking, Italy, Libya, Mare Nostrum, Migrants, Military Intervention, Operation Poseidon, Operation Triton, People smuggling, Peter Sutherland, Refugees, Rescue at Sea, UN Charter Chapter VII, UN Security Council, United Kingdom, United Nations
Interview with Frontex Spokesperson Michal Parzyszek
Frontex spokesperson Michal Parzyszek was interviewed by the Sofia News Agency on 27 May. Here are some excerpts:
Current Frontex sea operations: “Operation Hera, which is in the territorial waters of Senegal and Mauritania; Operation Indalo in Spanish waters; Operation Hermes in Italian waters; Operation Aeneas in Italian waters; Operation Poseidon in Greek waters.”
Frontex operations in Italy: “The help on part of Frontex in the southern waters, including in Italy, is more on providing risk analysis – to give a better idea of what is going on, and what can happen. … So in terms of [Frontez] assets, there are just two airplanes and two boats which are deployed there under Frontex in the waters south of Sardinia and south of Lampedusa. … There are 10-15 Frontex experts that are identifying the migrants once they reach the reception facilities there. They are deployed to Caltanissetta, Catania, Trapani, Crotone, and Bari….”
Arrivals to Lampedusa: “It varies every day. You have days when you have no arrivals, and then suddenly you have 1 000 people arriving to Lampedusa. Since the start of the operation on February 20, 2011, there have been almost 31 000 people that arrived to Lampedusa.”
Irregular migrants prefer entering Greece rather than Bulgaria: “… In the case of Greece, a readmission agreement with Turkey doesn’t truly work; in the case of Bulgaria, the cooperation with Turkey is much better so the Turkish authorities – if they receive proper documentation and justification – they accept people back. This is a very important element – potential migrants know that if they cross the border between Turkey and Bulgaria, there is high probability that they will be sent back to Turkey so they don’t choose that way….”
(HT to Euro-Police.)
Click here for full interview.
Filed under Aegean Sea, Black Sea, Bulgaria, Eastern Atlantic, European Union, Frontex, Greece, Italy, Libya, Mauritania, Mediterranean, News, Senegal, Spain, Tunisia, Turkey
Tagged as Bari, Bulgaria, Caltanissetta, Catania, Crotone, Frontex, Greece, Interception at sea, Italy, Lampedusa, Libya, Maritime Interdiction, Mauritania, Michal Parzyszek, Migrants, Operation Aeneas, Operation Hera, Operation Hermes, Operation Indalo, Operation Poseidon, Readmission Agreements, Refugees, Senegal, Spain, Trapani, Tunisia, Turkey