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UN 'concerned' over Libya migrant, asylum seekers arrests

UN 'concerned' over Libya migrant, asylum seekers arrests amid 'rising hate speech'
MENA
2 min read
Migrants in Libya are currently witnessing a wave of been detentions, deportations and expulsions amid an increase in racist and hateful rhetoric, the UN mission in Libya said.
Libya has a history of gravely mistreating migrants in the country [Getty]

The United Nations mission in Libya said on Monday it was concerned by the arbitrary arrest of migrants and asylum seekers in the country, accompanied by what it called a disturbing rise in hate speech and racist discourse.

The mission said Libyan authorities had detained thousands of men, women and children from the streets and their homes, or following raids on alleged traffickers camps and warehouses.

It said many of them, including children and pregnant women, were being detained in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions and that thousands of others, including some who entered Libya legally, had been collectively expelled.

Last week eastern Libya authorities deported thousands of migrants into Egypt, making them cross the border by foot. In Tripoli, migration police have recently deployed at a major city roundabout where many migrants gathered daily for work.

Despite insecurity in Libya, where political control is contested and armed factions control most territory, the country is home to about half a million migrants. Some seek to travel onwards to Europe, others to work in the oil-financed economy.

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Both Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah in Tripoli and eastern Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar recently travelled to Rome where Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is pushing to reduce migrant crossings to Italy.

In eastern Libya, authorities said on Monday they had detained 20 Bangladeshi citizens aboard a boat attempting to cross illegally to Italy and that "all legal measures" had been taken against them.

Mohammed Ismail, 48, a Sudanese metal worker who had arrived in Libya illegally said he had faced brutal treatment from people traffickers but had regularised his status with authorities. He was worried about reports of deportations, he said.

In Tripoli, in the west, an Egyptian plumber who asked to remain anonymous because he feared reprisals, said many of his friends had been arrested.

"I'm frightened of detention, kidnapping, being held for ransom and forcible deportation, it's difficult to survive in Libya," he said.

The Government of National Unity in Tripoli and local authorities in eastern Libya did not immediately respond to requests to comment on the UN mission's statement.

(Reuters)