No Result
View All Result
Friday, December 12, 2025
23 °c
Tripoli
24 ° Sat
24 ° Sun
  • Advertising
  • Contact
LibyaHerald
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
LibyaHerald
No Result
View All Result
Home Libya

Amnesty International damns Libyan people-traffickers

byNigel Ash
July 1, 2016
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A

By Libya Herald reporters.

amnesty

Tunis, 1 July 2016:

Amnesty International is demanding the international community take serious measures to improve the lot of migrants trapped in Libya. It warns that EU cooperation on migrants with the Government of National Accord should not go ahead if it leads directly or indirectly to what it describes as further shocking human rights abuses.

Amnesty has today published a withering report which details the murder, rape, robbery and abuse carried out by Libyan people-smugglers on some of the tens of thousands of migrants crossing Libya on their way to a perilous sea journey to Europe and a hoped-for better life.

RELATED POSTS

Three million illegal immigrants in Libya, 75 % of whom are families, constitute ”settlement” which Libyans reject – illegally transfer US$ 7 billion annually: Interior Minister Trabelsi

IOM identifies 894,890 migrants in Libya from 45 nationalities in May-July 2025 reporting period – 18 percent up on 2024

The testimony gathered from some 90 migrants and refugees who made it to the safety of three camps in Italy describes the way in which sub-Saharan Africans were imprisoned and exploited until they could earn their onward fares or more money be sent by relatives back home.

The human rights organisation’s MENA deputy director Magdalena Mughrabi said that its investigators had talked to victims who had “described in harrowing detail the horrors they were forced to endure in Libya”.

These included being abducted, incarcerate underground for months, sexually abused, forced to work, beaten and shot at by people-smugglers, traffickers or criminal gangs. Migrants said that they had faced abuse at every stage of their journey from their arrival in the country until they reached the northern coast.  Other sub-Saharan Africans interviewed in Italy said that they had lived in Libya for years but had decided to get out because of increasing intolerance and harassment by local gangs, police or armed groups.

While Amnesty makes clear that it blames the Libyan gangs, it is also highly critical of the failure of the international community to try and help the migrants in Libya, which the International Organisation for Migration currently numbers at 264,000. Only 37,500, largely Syrians, have registered with the UNHCR.

“No one should have to face abduction, torture and rape in Libya,” said Mughrabi. The EU and governments around the world should dramatically increase the number of resettlement places and humanitarian assistance for vulnerable refugees.

She added: “The EU should focus less on keeping migrants and refugees out and more on finding safe and legal ways for those trapped in Libya to access a place of safety. The priority should be saving lives. This means deploying enough resources in the right places to prevent further tragedy”.

Amnesty said that the GNA should be held to its promises to address the scandal, not least of the appalling conditions for would-be migrants picked up by the Libyan coastguard and held in detention centres, where their abuse and torture continues.

Investigators spoke to 15 women who said that so great was their fear of sexual violence that they had begun taking contraceptive pills before setting out on their journey across Libya.

An 18 year-old Somali, named as Ahmed, described how last November, his group of migrants travelling in from Sudan were denied water as a punishment. After a young Syrian man died of thirst, the smugglers gave them water but it was too late for another Syrian who also died.

A 24 year old Eritrean claimed that the smugglers had thrown a disabled man out of the pick up truck and left his in the desert to die.

Sixteen women talked to by Amnesty said that they had been raped. They had been sexually assaulted by the smugglers or members of armed groups.  Attacks took place all along the smuggling route and while women were being held in private houses or in abandoned warehouses near the coat, waiting to board a smuggler’s vessel.

Victims talked of gang rapes by drunken or stoned people-traffickers, including one incident near Ajdabiya. An Eritrean woman, Ramya ,said that guards would come in and choose a woman and take her outside.  “The women tried to refuse but when you have a gun pointed at your head, you don’t really have a choice if you want to survive. I was raped twice by three men…I didn’t want to lose my life,” she said.

Amnesty also found evidence of religious persecution. One Eritrean Christian woman said that she and ten other women had been seized by people she thought were IS. They had been taken to Tripoli and kept underground for nine months, during which they never saw the sun.  They were pressured into converting to Islam and beaten with sticks and hoses when they refused. When they finally gave in, the men considered them as their wives and treated them as sexual slaves.

Several accounts given to Amnesty tell of traffickers always demanding more money, if not from the migrants, from their families back home.  An Eritrean said that he had been taken to a warehouse in Bani Walid where further payments were required. In the ten days before he managed to escape, he saw one man who couldn’t pay put into water and electrocuted.  He told investigators “ They said that is anyone else couldn’t pay, their fate would be the same”.

Tags: Amnesty InternationalEUfeaturedGNALibyamigrantspeople smugglers

Related Posts

ACA reveals 94,000 cases of state sector salary duplication in 2015
Libya

“Building Libyan National Capacities in the Fields of Combating Corruption and Money Laundering 2025–2027” agreement signed between ACA and UNSMIL at Anti-Corruption event

December 10, 2025
CBL Governor Issa announces three strategic initiatives to build a stronger banking sector at 6th Banking Sector Development Forum in Tunis 7 to 9 December
Business

CBL Governor Issa announces three strategic initiatives to build a stronger banking sector at 6th Banking Sector Development Forum in Tunis 7 to 9 December

December 7, 2025
CBL receives results from meetings with international banks
Business

Latest CBL stats to November 2025 show significant growth in Libya’s electronic banking sector

December 6, 2025
Nine deaths and 16 injured in Tajura state-recognised militia clashes
Libya

Overnight Zawia clashes end with civilian injuries and unconfirmed deaths

December 5, 2025
Interior Ministry’s Diplomatic Missions Protection personnel receiving training in Ukraine
Libya

Three million illegal immigrants in Libya, 75 % of whom are families, constitute ”settlement” which Libyans reject – illegally transfer US$ 7 billion annually: Interior Minister Trabelsi

December 4, 2025
EU to end Operation Sophia and to launch new Mediterranean operation to monitor UN Libya arms embargo
Libya

EU concludes Rome consultations with Libyan institutions on new migration and border management programme

December 4, 2025
Next Post

LNA claims full control of Ganfuda and mopping up pockets of resistance in Gwarsha

GNA loses four from cabinet line-up

libyaherald-Ads

Top Stories

  • NOC announces force majeure at Zawia port

    BP celebrates the reopening of its Tripoli office: NOC

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • CBL Governor Issa announces three strategic initiatives to build a stronger banking sector at 6th Banking Sector Development Forum in Tunis 7 to 9 December

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Housing and Construction Ministry discusses partnership with China’s CSCEC for infrastructure and housing projects

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Libyan banks cannot give loans without proper collateral and regulations that allow for recourse in case of default: Tadawul Tech Chairman Naaman Elbouri

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Lack of control of state spending and the de facto existence of two governments in Libya negatively affects the CBL’s effectiveness: CBL Board Member

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
ADVERTISEMENT
LibyaHerald

The Libya Herald first appeared on 17 February 2012 – the first anniversary of the Libyan Revolution. Since then, it has become a favourite go-to source on news about Libya, for many in Libya and around the world, regularly attracting millions of hits.

Recent News

Aldabaiba defends subsidies, grants, overspending, over-employment – will support housing but not corruption

Libyan banks cannot give loans without proper collateral and regulations that allow for recourse in case of default: Tadawul Tech Chairman Naaman Elbouri

Sitemap

  • Why subscribe?
  • Terms & Conditions
  • FAQs
  • Copyright & Intellectual Property Rights
  • Subscribe now

Newsletters

    Be the first to know latest important news & events directly to your inbox.

    Sending ...

    By signing up, I agree to our TOS and Privacy Policy.

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password? Sign Up

    Create New Account!

    Fill the forms below to register

    *By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
    All fields are required. Log In

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Login
    • Sign Up
    • Libya
    • Business
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • BusinessEye Magazine
    • Letters
    • Features
    • Why subscribe?
    • FAQs
    • Contact

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.