Libya: 44 people killed in
airstrike
A migrant picks up her belongings outside a detention centre that was hit by an airstrike |
At least 44 people die in a Libyan detention centre in a
Khalifa Haftar led airtrike.
By Francesca Merlo
At least 44 people have died after an airstrike hit a
detention facility where migrants are being held outside the Libyan capital,
Tripoli.
Libya
A civil war has been raging in Libya since 2014, where
General Khalifa Haftar of the Tobruk-led government has control over the vast
majority of the country. The airstrike was carried out by pro-Haftar forces
over one of the few areas of the country not under the control of General
Haftar’s Army.
The attack, which also injured over 130 people, is being
described by the UN’s Mission in Libya, as one that “clearly could constitute a
war crime, as it killed by surprise innocent people whose dire conditions
forced them to be in that shelter”.
The camps
These shelters are at times referred to as refugee and
migrant camps whilst others find torture camps to be more a more appropriate
term as those residing in them are victims of both mental and physical forms of
torture.
Seeking shelter
Between internally displaced people from the ongoing civil
war in Libya and migrants fleeing wars, hunger and poverty in other African
countries, the number of migrants currently seeking shelter in the North
African country is almost 700,000. Of these, around 6000 are believed to be
held in these camps, living in what many human rights groups have defined as
inhumane conditions.
A huge number of those crossing the African deserts to reach
Libya, often on foot, are already victims of horrific acts of violence, at
times kidnapped by human traffickers along their journey. They cross the
continent in hope of using Libya’s port as a gateway to Europe. Instead, they
are either placed in camps, where they are raped and tortured. Or after paying
what little they have left to board an unsafe boat headed for Southern Europe
they are either intercepted by Libyan coast guards and sent back to the camps,
or they are ‘saved’ by rescue ships who are in turn rejected by European
countries.
Increasingly cruel
Pope Francis, who has made the importance of the protection
of migrants and refugees one of the mainstays of his pontificate, noted on
Tuesday that “today’s world is increasingly becoming more elitist and cruel
towards the excluded”.
Ahead of July 8th, when Pope Francis will preside
over mass for migrants and refugees, the Holy Father has condemned the
“complicit silence” of so many and urged for less “calculations” and more
“solidarity and mercy” when responding to today’s phenomenon of migration.
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