EU backs naval mission to end migrant crisis

Agence France-Presse

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EU backs naval mission to end migrant crisis

AFP

But the EU is still waiting for a UN resolution that will allow it to destroy boats that belong to people smugglers in Libyan waters, where political turmoil has created safe harbor for traffickers

BRUSSELS, Belgium – EU nations approved plans on Monday, May 18, for an unprecedented naval mission starting next month to fight human traffickers responsible for a flood of migrants crossing the Mediterranean from Libya.

The scheme backed by foreign and defense ministers in Brussels will involve European warships and surveillance aircraft gathering intelligence and then raiding boats to crack down on people smugglers.

But the EU is still waiting for a UN resolution that will allow it to destroy boats that belong to people smugglers in Libyan waters, where political turmoil has created safe harbor for traffickers.

“Decision just taken to establish the EU naval operation to disrupt the business model of smugglers and traffickers networks,” EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini said on Twitter after a meeting of the bloc’s foreign and defense ministers.

The military operation is part of a bigger EU blueprint launched after the Mediterranean experienced its deadliest ever migrant shipwreck in April, which took the death toll this year to 1,800 people alone.

More than 5,000 people have died in the past 18 months while trying to make the dangerous crossing in flimsy dinghies and fishing boats.

Libya says plan not ‘humane’

Libya’s internationally recognized government in Tobruk – which is fighting both a rival administration in Tripoli and the rising threat of Islamic State (ISIS) militants – opposes the naval plan and said Brussels must talk with it first.

“The military option to deal with the boats inside Libyan waters or outside is not considered humane,” government spokesman Hatem el-Ouraybi told Agence France-Presse by telephone.

Mogherini however said operational planning for the EU Navfor Med mission, to be headquartered in Rome and led by an Italian admiral, will now start immediately.

It will be in 3 phases starting with intelligence gathering, progressing to the boarding of smugglers’ boats and finally destroying them, she told a press conference.

The force could be formally launched in June after a summit of European leaders, Mogherini said, adding that she hoped for UN Security Council approval so the EU could “launch the operation in all its phases” including the targeting of boats.

Mogherini confirmed that Brussels was in touch with both Libyan governments.

RESCUE. A handout image made available by the British Ministry of Defence (MOD) on May 13, 2015 of Royal Marines leading migrants to safety on a Landing Craft of HMS Bulwark from an inflatable boat on the Mediterranean. Carl Osmond/UK MOD/Handout/EPA

“We are looking for partnership in this. There is a responsibility that the EU can take but there is a responsibility that Libya also has to take,” she said.

NATO head Jens Stoltenberg, also attending the meeting in Brussels, said the US-led military alliance was ready to assist but the EU had not yet asked for help.

He also warned that “terrorists” from Islamic extremist groups could also be making the crossing by “trying to hide, trying to blend in among the migrants.”

Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain have already promised to deploy warships for the mission, a rare joint EU military venture for a bloc that was formed to promote peace after World War II.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said ministers needed to put together a complete program, with the current plan “an important first step”. He said cooperation with Libya was also key.

The final phase of destroying smugglers’ boats in Libyan waters is the most controversial, with the organization Human Rights Watch describing it as “utter madness.”

Migrant quotas split EU

The rest of the European Commission’s migrant plan also remains dogged by divisions.

Suggestions of a quota system to share the migrant burden more evenly among member states, instead of relying on Mediterranean nations to deal with asylum seekers, has had some countries up in arms.

Spain joined Britain and France in rejecting the idea Monday.

Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia Margallo said the Commission’s call for solidarity had to be “proportionate, just and realistic”, adding that it took no account of Spain’s high unemployment and the “huge effort we are making to control migration from Morocco, Mauritania and Senegal which impacts the whole EU”.

Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia have also opposed the quota system. Britain already has an opt-out but says economic migrants should be pushed back to where they came from.

The EU has also pledged to boost funding for and step up non-military search and rescue efforts in the Mediterranean. – Bryan McManus, AFP / Rappler.com

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