Ministers
want to seize smugglers and destroy their boats off Libyan coast to combat
rising number of migrants fleeing war and poverty in north Africa
Migrants queue at a detention centre in Tripoli on Monday. They were arrested as they attempted to board boats destined for Europe, authorities in the Libyan capital said. Photograph: AFP/Getty |
EU
ministers have agreed to launch a sea and air mission that could in its later
phases destroy vessels used by human traffickers, which have carried an
estimated 1,800 migrants to their deaths in the Mediterranean this year.
An
intelligence-gathering operation will herald the mission’s first phase, with
the UK expected to offer drones and surveillance equipment as a partial riposte
to calls for it to take in more refugees.
In later
phases, hostile vessels suspected of harbouring migrants could be boarded,
searched, seized or disposed of in Libyan territory or international waters –
as long as a chapter 7 UN resolution to authorise the use of force to do so is
obtained first.
The plan
could be launched as soon as 25 June, the EU’s foreign policy chief Federica
Mogherini told a Brussels press conference.
“There is a
clear sense of urgency as we all know that June is the beginning of summer and
in this operation, seasons are important,” she said. “As summer comes, more
people are travelling so we want to have the operation in place as soon as
possible, if it is to deter the traffickers’ and smugglers’ organisations.”
Mogherini
avoided mention of the “boots on the ground” option to destroy smugglers’
assets, outlined in an EU strategy paper revealed by the Guardian before the
summit.
The
mission’s rules of engagement have still to be thrashed out and one diplomat
described the deployment of such forces as “the next step in terms of
operational details”. The level of collateral damage considered acceptable
would also be discussed after the mission was up and running, he said.
The
operation will have its headquarters in Rome and be run by an Italian rear
admiral, Enrico Credendino, with an initial year-long mandate.
Concerns
about the militarisation of the migrants issue will probably be raised at the
UN, though, with Libya already describing the mission as very worrying, citing
concerns over its potential to mistakenly target fishermen’s boats.
Refugee
rights groups fear that bombing the escape routes of people fleeing for their
lives from Syria, Eritrea and west Africa – where most migrants begin their
journeys – will simply lead to more deaths, away from the public spotlight.
“An
unintended consequence of this mission is that it may even lead to more
deaths,” said Michael Diedring, the secretary general of the European Council
on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE). “If there is a shortage of vessels, even more
people will be packed into them. There is even a possibility, given the
desperate situation these people face, that they might try to construct their
own boats.”
At present,
smugglers’ vessels are often leased from local fishermen on a trip-by-trip basis by a wide variety of low-level criminals. The last-minute loading of
human cargoes could prevent the timely targeting of such vessels.
Once
loaded, the hulls of these boats are often crammed with people not visible from
outside and Diedring said that there was a huge risk that boats could be
targeted with people still on board.
“The
solution to putting the smugglers out of business is to increase safe legal
channels for migration,” he said. “It is ironic that people fleeing from war
and persecution are being met with more of the same.”
Search and
rescue operations have been stepped up in the Mediterranean since an estimated
800 people died when a ship sank off the Libyan coast in April. The UK has sent
a Royal Navy flagship, HMS Bulwark, to join the operation and sent £800m in aid
to help poor frontline countries such as Lebanon and Jordan deal with a refugee
crisis of overwhelming proportions. About 1.5 million refugees have fled to the
two small countries.
But the EU
ended its Mare Nostrum search and rescue mission, despite warnings of the potential for an increase in tragedies at sea. Members currently remain at odds
over a European commission proposal to more evenly share the number of migrants
who arrive in Europe between EU member states.
Over the weekend, the French prime minister, Manuel Valls, joined the UK in opposing a
quota measure which could stir anti-migrant feelings. “France has already done
a lot,” he said.
Under the
commission proposal, France would have been asked to take 14% of migrants who
reached the EU’s shores, while 18% would be assigned to Germany, by far the
largest recipient of migrants at present. Italy would have been asked to accept
nearly 12% of the north African evacuees, and Spain 9%.
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