Libya, Malta slammed on migration
A pregnant Somali migrant, who was separated from her husband and returned to Libya during a sea rescue last July, endured the trauma of giving birth to a stillborn baby alone two months later, according to Amnesty International.
Reporting the story of Ahmed Mahmoud and Mariam Hussein, Amnesty slammed Malta for believing its only obligations towards asylum seekers was to ensure their physical safety at sea.
It said a group of 55 migrants were rescued in a joint operation by Libyan and Maltese armed forces at sea and, “thinking they would be taken to Italy”, 27 boarded a rescue vessel until one of them overheard Arabic and realised the boat would be headed for Libya.
In the chaos, where some migrants jumped in the sea and threatened to commit suicide, Mr Mahmoud and his wife, who was seven months pregnant, were separated and the rescue vessels went in opposite directions.
Mr Mahmoud had spoken to The Sunday Times about his ordeal in July where he made a heartfelt plea to the authorities to help him bring his wife from Libya.
According to accounts given to Amnesty, all males returned to Libya were lined up against a wall and beaten with batons while some were given electric shocks during interrogation.
The report accuses Libya of systematic torture of migrants and of refusing to acknowledge the difference between illegal immigrants and refugees eligible for protection.
“Most commonly, detainees are punched or hit with metal wires or batons. Sometimes, guards hit detainees to punish them for requesting medical treatment or complaining about their conditions. At other times, the beatings appear to be done for no reason at all.”
The report says women are most vulnerable in Libya and one woman was reportedly forced to cut her umbilical cord with a piece of “dirty metal”.
“Sa’adiya Moussa, a Somali woman, told Amnesty International in Malta she had a miscarriage in Ganfouda detention centre in Libya after guards beat and kicked her, causing severe bleeding. A week lapsed before she was taken to hospital.”
Entitled Seeking Safety, Finding Fear, the report also criticises Malta for taking part in the forcible return or removal of already vulnerable individuals to Libya.
It calls on the Maltese authorities to end the practice of mandatory detention and set standards at open residential centres, while providing enough medical staff and social workers to cater for migrants’ needs.
Regarding the cooperation agreements signed between the European Commission and the Libyan authorities, Amnesty says: “EU-Libya cooperation needs to have human rights and responsibility-sharing at its core – the founding principles of international protection. The EU and its member states must not turn a blind eye to continuing human rights violations in Libya when seeking Libya’s cooperation to stem the flow of people arriving in the EU from Africa.”
Amnesty’s report also speaks about the unhygienic and “deplorable” conditions in Malta’s open centres.
A Somali human rights defender reported his seven months in detention where he suffered from depression. “He did not have access to outdoor space and was trapped with 48 other men in a cell equipped with three showers and two toilets.” He then lived in the Ħal Far hangar where he slept on a mattress on the floor inside a windowless hangar with 450 other people.
“He said sanitary conditions were so poor rats bit him at night. He now lives in a container with 15 other men.” The Maltese Jesuit Refugee Service recently called on the government to bring Malta’s detention laws and policies for irregular immigrants in line with its human rights obligations.
It urged the government not to use detention or to do so only as a last resort when “less coercive measures proved insufficient to secure the individual’s removal from national territory”.
“It is a cause of great concern to JRS that people fleeing war, persecution, torture and other serious violations of their human rights are subjected to prolonged detention, without adequate guarantees of protection from arbitrariness because of their irregular immigration status,” director Fr Joe Cassar said.
Reacting, the Justice Ministry insisted all Maltese laws and policies were in line with and conformed to EU laws and the European Convention for Fundamental Human Rights.
As a result, the government believes it should not change its detention policy which is similar to that adopted by other member states.
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Sean Grima
Dec 16th 2010, 10:43
as usual, the comments prove that racism is the product of ignorance.
CZarb
Dec 15th 2010, 15:17
Wouldn't it be nice and christian enough if all locals leave Malta so that there would be ample space for these poor people? We should also scrap our democratic system and allow JRS, Amnesty and co to lead the country like some kind of dictatorship found in some third world country in Africa, Asia and erm the Vatican
Louise Vella
Dec 15th 2010, 15:04
Amnesty International report is based entirely on the say-so of illegal immigrants who have an interest in describing their conditions in the worst possible colours in the hope of getting access to some European country. The reports of Malta's Refugee Commissioner say repeatedly that one of his problems are the unverified and unlikely stories told by applicants for asylum. Amnesty International is one of the do-gooder organisations that believe everything illegal immigrants say.
Sean Grima
Dec 16th 2010, 01:00
amnesty is an internattionay recognised NGO, unlike u
edwin Mifsud
Dec 15th 2010, 15:01
"It calls on the Maltese authorities to end the practice of mandatory detention and set standards at open residential centres, while providing enough medical staff and social workers to cater for migrants’ needs"
Who is to pay for this?
Louise Vella
Dec 15th 2010, 14:58
At the back page of the report, Amnesty International childishly tells its readers to write to the Swede Cecilia Malmstrom and gives her address. It adds she should be addressed as "Dear Commissioner". Dear Amnesty International, you are not up to your first gimmick.
Sean Grima
Dec 16th 2010, 01:06
seems you have an axe to grind with NGO...
Louise Vella
Dec 15th 2010, 14:53
The Amnesty International report also says there are 3 million illegal sub-Saharan Africans in Libya waiting to set sail for Europe. Does Amnesty International want Malta to take the 3 million? If not Malta, which country then? Italy does not want them. Germany does not want them. France does not want them. Britain does not want them. Sweden definitely does not want them, especially now that it has started suffering terrorist attacks. The solution is what one illegal immigrant said he would do if he is not resettled into some European country. He said he would go back to his country. Amnesty International should help these people to go back to their countries.
Sean Grima
Dec 16th 2010, 01:11
i'm sure you could take ina few
Phil Humphries
Dec 15th 2010, 14:44
How many times have we read about pregnant African women travelling for months through dangerous countries before further endangering themselves (and their unborn) in an expensive, hazardous and illegal sea crossing? - At the risk of being branded a 'racist', why would anyone even consider having children when their own lives are (supposedly) at risk?
Also, whenever African countries are blighted by famine for several consecutive years, the TV Aid appeals invariably show countless young and newborn children starving. How bad must it get before their parents (and the Catholic missionaries) consider birth control? Who do they imagine will look after those children, The Good Lord ?
For decades I willingly gave to countless humanitarian causes in Africa, but now my charity and sympathy have dried-up. Africa is potentially the richest continent on the planet, yet because of corruption and a collective inability to address its own problems, its people travel north expecting (and even demanding) charity, security and a place to breed ever more children. Meanwhile, we struggle to pay the taxes necessary to keep our univited guests.
As we can no longer afford to have large families, Europeans have good reason to feel our culture is under threat.
Sean Grima
Dec 16th 2010, 01:09
cultural values play a large Part.
Malcolm Farrugia
Dec 15th 2010, 12:27
"Mr Mahmoud had spoken to The Sunday Times about his ordeal in July where he made a heartfelt plea to the authorities to help him bring his wife from Libya."
I wonder how come Mr Mahmoud didn't travel back to Libya to be reunited with his wife, since he (by all means) was so worried for her!!!