Libya issues arrest warrants for over 200 alleged traffickers

Libya issues arrest warrants for over 200 alleged traffickers
Siddiq al-Sour, head of the Investigations Bureau at the Office of the Attorney General, speaks during a press conference in the Libyan capital Tripoli where 200 traffickers were arrested, Mar 14, 2018.(AFP)
Updated 14 March 2018
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Libya issues arrest warrants for over 200 alleged traffickers

Libya issues arrest warrants for over 200 alleged traffickers

TRIPOLI: Libya has issued arrest warrants for more than 200 Libyans and foreigners suspected of involvement in a smuggling network for Europe-bound migrants, the attorney general’s office said on Thursday.
“We have 205 arrest warrants for people (involved in) organizing immigration operations, human trafficking, (cases) of torture, murder and rape,” said Seddik Al-Sour, the director of the attorney general’s investigations office.
The trafficking ring is alleged to include members of security services, leaders of migrant detention camps, and embassy officials from African countries based in Libya, Sour said.
Libya has descended into chaos since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi’s regime in 2011, and has become a hub for hundreds of thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants trying to reach Europe by sea.
The oil-rich country ruled by a web of militias and two rival authorities has routinely been criticized for abuses against migrants.
Sour said investigations into smuggling networks were carried out in coordination with the Italian prosecutor’s office.
Rome and Tripoli agreed in December to form a joint unit to combat smugglers and human traffickers involved in the intelligence, coast guard and justice sectors of each country.
Sour said his office had established a direct link between the smugglers and Daesh group jihadists.
The latter take advantage of trafficking networks to move from one country to another, to find refuge or to seak medical treatment, he said.
The official also said a probe was still ongoing into a CNN television report in November of African migrants being auctioned off as “slaves” in Libya.
Sour said that according to the investigation, traffickers do “sell” migrants to each other, but not as slaves.