Libya rejects EU military action against migrant ships

May 18, 2015

Libya's internationally recognised government rejected Monday any military operation against ships carrying illegal migrants after EU nations approved plans for a naval mission starting next month to fight human traffickers.

BENGHAZI - Libya's internationally recognised government rejected Monday any military operation against ships carrying illegal migrants after EU nations approved plans for a naval mission starting next month to fight human traffickers.

"Any military action must be done with the cooperation of the Libyan authorities," government spokesman Hatem el-Ouraybi told AFP by telephone.

"The military option to deal with the boats inside Libyan waters or outside is not considered humane."


Migrants from sub-Saharan Africa receive water as they wait at a detention center on May 17, 2015 in Tripoli, after being arrested in Tajoura, a coastal town east of the capital, as they prepared to board boats for Europe. Libyan authorities arrested at dawn 400 illegal migrants, including several pregnant women, officials said. AFP PHOTO /  MAHMUD TURKIA

Brussels gave the green light to a mission that would see warships and reconnaissance aircraft deployed in the Mediterranean after a series of deadly shipwrecks in which hundreds of people have drowned trying to reach Europe.

Many would-be migrants pay traffickers to transport them by boat from Libya.

"The government will not accept any violation of Libyan sovereignty," Ouraybi said, and "will not accept the plan unless it is coordinated" with Libya's internationally recognised administration.

The EU is still waiting for a UN resolution that will allow it to destroy boats belonging to people smugglers in Libyan waters, the epicentre of the humanitarian disaster unfolding on Europe's southern shores.

Libya has descended into chaos since the NATO-backed ouster in 2011 of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi, with rival governments and powerful militias battling for influence in the oil-rich North African state.

AFP

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