Libya navy bars foreign ships from migrant ‘search and rescue’ zone

Libya navy bars foreign ships from migrant ‘search and rescue’ zone
Ayoub Qassem, Libyan navy spokesman gives a press conference at the Tripoli naval base in the capital on August 10, 2017. (AFP)
Updated 10 August 2017
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Libya navy bars foreign ships from migrant ‘search and rescue’ zone

Libya navy bars foreign ships from migrant ‘search and rescue’ zone

TRIPOLI: The Libyan navy has ordered foreign vessels to stay out of a coastal “search and rescue zone” for migrants headed for Europe, a measure it said targeted non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
“We want to send out a clear message to all those who infringe Libyan sovereignty and lack respect for the coast guard and navy,” Libyan navy spokesman General Ayoub Qassem told a news conference in Tripoli.
Gen. Abdelhakim Bouhaliya, commander of the Tripoli naval base where the conference was held, said: “No foreign ship has the right to enter” the area without authorization from the Libyan authorities.
Libya has “officially declared a search and rescue zone,” said Bouhaliya, without specifying the scope of the exclusion zone.
Qassem said the measure was aimed against “NGOs which pretend to want to rescue illegal migrants and carry out humanitarian actions.”
He urged humanitarian organizations to “respect our will... and obtain authorization from the Libyan state even for rescue operations.”
Italy has also said it wants to keep a tighter rein on NGOs helping the multinational search and rescue operation by making them sign up to a new code of conduct.
Italian authorities last week impounded a boat operated by German aid organization Jugend Rettet on suspicion its crew effectively collaborated with people traffickers in a way that facilitated illegal immigration.
Its crew is suspected of taking on board migrants delivered directly to them by people traffickers, and of allowing the smugglers to make off with their dinghies to be used again.
The Libyan coast guard has accused NGOs of aiding people traffickers in their lucrative business.
Six years since a revolution that toppled longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi, Libya has become a key departure point for migrants risking their lives to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.
Italy, the main destination of the people traffickers, has sent naval vessels at the request of Libya’s UN-backed Government of National Accord to assist Tripoli, on a mission disputed by rival authorities in eastern Libya.
More than 111,000 migrants have reached Europe by sea so far this year, the vast majority of them arriving in Italy, according to the latest figures from the International Organization for Migration.
Over 2,300 have died attempting the crossing.