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The Deepening Mediterannean Tragedy and the EU’s Military Response – Solidarity

The Deepening Mediterannean Tragedy and the EU’s Military Response

by Nizar Visram

May 29, 2015

More than 800 migrants died on April 19 this year when their overcrowded boat capsized in the

Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast. The tragedy sent soaring this year’s Mediterranean death

toll which was by then around 1,500–10 times the deaths during the same period last year. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), between 23,000 and 24,000

migrants had tried to cross over to Italy since the beginning of the year, while just under 21,000

migrants made the journey in the same period in 2014. While the overall number of migrants

rose somewhat, migrant deaths at sea skyrocketed.

Things are bound to get worse before getting better. It is estimated that in 2015, between 500,000

and 1,000,000 refugees will cross the Mediterranean and land in the European Union. So far

some 1,600 people have died during crossing. These figures are the known cases, many more

having died in undetected vessels. The numbers are on the rise: in 2011, 58,000 people tried to

enter the EU across the waters, while the figure grew to 218,000 in 2014.

Most of the migrants crossing the Mediterranean in fact are not Libyans. They come from as far

as the Sudan, Central African Republic, Nigeria, Eritrea, Somalia, Senegal, and Ghana, running

for their lives due to either sectarian conflicts at home or pervasive poverty. Many more come from Syria. These are the countries that face serious internal

crises intensified by western military interference. In desperation, these migrants scraped together approximately $2,000 for the trip across the sea on wobbly vessels, run by gangs of

human traffickers.

The Italian coastguard approaches a ship with more than 400 Syrian refugees.

The coastguards of Italy, Malta, and Greece have rescued thousands of such migrants from the hazard of

Mediterranean Sea. They have been feeling isolated and left alone to deal with what they termed

“the cemetery of the Mediterranean Sea.” The European Union (EU) put forward a proposal to rescue the African migrants, but the suggestion

went under with a deadlock as to who is going to “share the burden”. The proposals included

joint search-and-rescue patrols, establishing resettlement quotas. Some EU members such as France, Spain, and Britain rejected the idea of quotas for sharing migrants among them, while others suggested deploying military forces to Libya to keep migrants as far away from Europe as possible.

The European Commission reacted to the boat tragedy with plans to set up offshore camps in

Libya and Tunisia, to lock up and pre-empt asylum seekers before they cross the Mediterranean.

It has been described ingenuously as “outsourcing border control and containment mechanisms

to prevent departures.” Italy’s foreign minister even called for air strikes in Libya against ISIL positions there.

The general agreement among EU is that something needs to be done and the first proposal was

to send more ships to the Mediterranean so as to ensure that fewer people die due to unseaworthy

vessels crammed with their human cargo. On the other hand, some European bureaucrats are toying with the idea of military strikes to

destroy smuggling vessels before they leave Libya. However, they have been cautioned by

activists that the last thing the African refugees need is more assaults and bombing—especially

coming from the very countries that they expect to beg for asylum.

EU ministers sanctioned a plan for a new naval force to intercept smugglers before their boats

reach Europe. It was reported that the EU parliament was drafting a United Nations resolution to

authorize the deployment of military off the coast of Libya in order to “capture” and “destroy”

the boats. Two rival ‘governments’ in Libya, however, have indicated their opposition to the plan,

saying any deployment of troops to Libyan waters would be a violation of the country’s

sovereignty.

Meanwhile, some European political parties have embarked on their anti-immigrant and

xenophobic tendencies to obstruct immigrants from entering their countries while deporting

those who managed to sneak in. Italy’s ultra-nationalist Northern League called on the

authorities to stop “by any means” any accommodation of further refugees. The party said it ‘was

ready’ to take steps to prevent their arrival. Similarly, Germany refugee centers have been targeted with fire bombings, while ultra-right

groups such as Pegida have conducted racist campaigns, attacking immigrants as ‘social

spongers’. Such right-wing ultra nationalist groups have even received implicit sympathy from governing

parties such as Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Social Democratic Party (SPD).

Meanwhile, it was revealed that the EU is planning a military strategy against the refugee transport

networks in the Mediterranean. Documents disseminated by WikiLeaks say the operation

contains “detailed plans to conduct military operations to destroy boats used for transporting

migrants and refugees in Libyan territory, thereby preventing them from reaching Europe.”

The whistle-blower website exposed two classified documents which indicate that the plan was approved by

delegates of all 28 EU member states on May 18. The project has no well-defined “political end

state” which means they are looking at a sweeping military operation without a clear

end goal.

In reaction to this, more than 300 European migration academics and scholars have condemned

the EU’s envisioned use of military might against migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean.

They have come out against the EU’s plan of military intervention against the boats crossing the

Mediterranean. The academics argued that any attempt to justify military intervention by comparing the

Mediterranean boats with the 18th century clampdown on the slave trade is “entirely self-

serving” and based on “a parody of history.”

It is likely that the military option will do nothing to curtail the flow of immigrants

escaping conflicts in their destabilized countries or looking for jobs. For them the long-term

solution lies in social development of the countries they come from. This means

investment in sustainable development, and an end to plundering of resources. It means better

education systems, better medical system, and better shelters. It means a prohibition on the sale of weaponry to these countries. European and NATO countries need to criminalize the arms trade and cease supplying weapons for wars in countries such as Syria. These Western countries have to take responsibility because they have in various ways created the current turmoil. They can find money for global warfare yet they can’t find the

money to rescue the refugees running away from the war zones they create.

Apart from the influx of migrants from Africa, we have also to look at those coming from the

Middle East. This is the direct result of the military invasion carried out by the US and its

NATO allies. They have sustained and shared the military operations in Iraq, Libya, Syria and now Yemen. As

a result the Middle East and large portion of Africa has plunged into disarray and disorder. By

2014, it is estimated that two million of the six million inhabitants of Libya fled the country, as a

result of US-French-British bombardments. The current US-led drive at regime change in Syria has driven the country into total disarray,

disorder, and deaths, with the subsequent exit of an estimated four million refugees. Most of them fled

to the neighboring countries, while many others have taken the difficult and deadly path to Europe.

A new theatre is unfolding with the US and Saudi Arabia embarking on a new battlefront in

Yemen. This is bound to lead to a great number of refugees seeking asylum. Meanwhile, as increasing number of distressed citizens seek sanctuary in Europe, the EU is

converting the Mediterranean into a graveyard, hoping that this will serve as deterrent to others.

Nizar Visram, a freelance writer and retired lecturer of Development Studies, is a Tanzanian

citizen, born in Zanzibar and currently in Ottawa. He can be reached at nizar1941@gmail.com.