• 161 Civil Society Organisations call on MEPs to vote down harmful EU Migration Pact
    https://migreurop.org/article3248.html

    Amidst warnings from over 50 Civil Society Organisations, EU lawmakers reached a political agreement on the EU’s New Pact on Migration and Asylum in December. The agreement is a continuation of a decade of policy that has led to the proliferation of rights violations in Europe. Moreover, it will have devastating implications for the right to international protection in the bloc and greenlights abuses across Europe including racial profiling, default de facto detention and pushbacks. On April (...) #Press_releases

    https://picum.org/blog/open-letter-eu-human-rights-risks-migration-pact
    https://picum.org/blog/human-rights-organisations-days-left-for-eu-legislators-to-save-the-right-to-
    https://www.savethechildren.net/news/historically-bad-new-eu-pact-migration-and-asylum-normalises-rights
    https://euromedrights.org/publication/eu-migration-pact-to-impose-sweeping-new-human-rights-rollback
    https://ecre.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/ECRE-Commentary-Fiction-of-Non-Entry-September-2022.pdf
    https://www.rescue.org/eu/article/what-eu-turkey-deal
    https://english.elpais.com/international/2024-01-11/migrant-deaths-and-irregular-arrivals-reached-a-new-high-in-the-eu-i
    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/9/29/more-than-2500-dead-missing-as-some-186000-cross-mediterranean-in-2023
    https://protectnotsurveil.eu
    https://homodigitalis.gr/en/posts/131019
    https://picum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Digital-technology-policing-and-migration-What-does-it-mean-for-undocumented-
    https://www.enar-eu.org/policy-briefing-structural-racism-in-the-new-european-union-pact-on-migrati
    https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/53166/greek-migrant-camps-malfunctioning-and-overcrowded-warn-ngos
    https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/53182/italy-asylum-seeker-reception-system-fragmented-and-inadequate-say-reg
    https://left.eu/issues/publications/black-book-of-pushbacks-2022
    https://blogs.law.ox.ac.uk/border-criminologies-blog/blog-post/2024/01/persisting-challenges-new-european-commissions
    https://ecre.org/eu-external-partners-libya-and-tunisia-continue-crimes-and-abuse-eu-continues-

  • [Israel/Palestine] Considerations prior to the EP Plenary vote on Wednesday, 13 March 2024 - EuroMed Rights
    https://euromedrights.org/publication/israel-palestine-considerations-prior-to-the-ep-plenary-vote-on-wedne

    Appel de l’association EuroRights, un réseau d’associations dans les pays de la zone euroméditerranéenne, actuellement présidé par Walid Al Asmar, président du centre libanais pour les droits de l’Homme contre le vote de deux amendements dans le budget de l’Union européenne visant l’un à suspendre les financements de l’UNWRA l’autre à imposer aux organisations bénéficiaires des fonds européens une clause les obligeant à reconnaitre l’Etat d’#Israël, ce qui très problématique dans plusieurs pays où Israël n’est pas reconnu, et à s’engager à refuser tout acte antisémite, sans qu’une définition claire et « constructive » de l’antisémitisme ne soit fournie.

    Amendment 36 calls for the suspension of EU funds to UNRWA, following until now unproven allegations that a few UNRWA staff members took part in the attacks of October 7th. This amendment comes just a few days after the EU announced it had resumed funding with the UN organization following internal analysis. Amidst the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza, UNRWA represents the only source of relief to the majority of its population, the larger part refugees. Over 80% of Gazans have been internally displaced since the beginning of the war, with over 570.000 Palestinians under severe risk of starvation. Defunding UNRWA would represent not only a worsening of this humanitarian crisis in Gaza, but would also affect Palestinian refugees in other UNRWA fields in the region. It is important to highlight that countries that had decided to defund UNRWA, such as Canada and Sweden, recently reverted their decisions and have stepped up with contributions to the organizations.

    On January 26, coinciding with Israel’s delivery of the alleged incriminating evidence to UNRWA, the International Court of Justice ruled that there is a plausible claim that the crime of genocide may be perpetrated in Gaza by the Israeli government by, between other means, “Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part”. The deliberate starvation of Gaza constitutes one these inflicted conditions, and by removing the only source of relief to Gazans, western countries risk being complicit to the accusation of genocide, as stated by UN Special rapporteur to Palestine, Francesca Albanese.

    The other concerning amendment is Amendment 39 which would call for all recipients of EU funds to the MENA region to sign a document recognizing Israel’s right to exist and condemning antisemitism, and suspending funds to civil society that refuse to sign such a declaration, act against the spirit of such a declaration after signing it, or directly or indirectly contribute to the financing of beneficiaries that act against the spirit of such a declaration.

    This amendment represents an escalation in the weaponization of antisemitism accusations by the Israeli government to suppress legitimate criticism at international level. It fails to define antisemitism in constructive ways, giving the opportunity for it being instrumentalized by representing any form of dissent against the Israeli government as an antisemitic act.

    It is necessary to also acknowledge that several independent civil society organizations in the MENA region could not officially recognise the state of Israel – even if they were politically aligned to do so – due to

    legal limitations in their home countries. Demanding MENA organizations to officially recognize Israel in exchange for funding puts organizations tin an untenable situation, where they must choose between losing vital support or suffering legal repercussions at home.

    This kind of one-sided conditionality fails to grasp the complexities of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, which extends far beyond ethnic and religious considerations and is rooted in decades of colonization and oppression. Nor does it seem to consider the growing polarization and the rise of Islamophobia alongside anti-Semitism. Furthermore, it sets a dangerous precedent for restricting freedom of thought and expression.

    Many recipients of EU funds in the region are strong advocates of human rights and international law, serving the most vulnerable members of their populations. Any action that jeopardizes their ability to carry out their essential work only serves to undermine the values that the EU claims to uphold.

  • Leaked letter on intended Cyprus-Lebanon joint border controls: increased deaths and human rights violations

    In an increasingly worrying context for migrants and refugees in Cyprus, with the recent escalation of violent racist attacks and discrimination against refugees on the island and the continued pushback policy, civil society organisations raise the alarm concerning Cyprus’ increased support to the Lebanese Army to harden border control and prevent departures.

    A letter leaked on 26 September 2023 (https://www.philenews.com/kipros/koinonia/article/1389120/exi-metra-protini-ston-livano-i-kipros), from the Cypriot Interior Minister to his Lebanese counterpart, reveals that Cyprus will provide Lebanon with 6 vessels and speedboats by the end of 2024, trainings for the Lebanese Armed Forces, will carry out joint patrol operations from Lebanese shores, and will finance the salaries of members of the Lebanese Armed Forces “who actively contribute to the interception of vessels carrying irregular migrants to Cyprus”. In this way, by providing equipment, funding and training to the Lebanese Army, Cyprus will have a determining influence, if not effective control, on the interceptions of migrants’ boats in Lebanese territorial waters and forced returns (the so-called “pullbacks”), to Lebanon. This in violation of EU and international law, which is likely to trigger legal liability issues. As seen in numerous cases, refugees, especially Syrians, who are pulled back to Lebanon are at risk of detention, ill-treatment and deportations to Syria where they are subject to violence, arrest, torture, and enforced disappearance. The worsening situation of Syrian refugees in Lebanon, who face increasing violence and deportations, confirms that Lebanon is not a “safe” third country.

    As seen in the past with several examples from other examples at the EU’s external borders, (e.g. Turkey, Libya and most recently Tunisia), striking deals with EU neighboring countries of departure in order to increase border controls and contain migratory movements has several catastrophic consequences. Despite officially aiming at decreasing the number of lost lives, they actually increase border violence and deaths, leading to serious human rights abuses and violations of EU and international laws. They also foster a blackmail approach as third countries use their borders as leverage against European countries to get additional funds or negotiate on other sensitive issues, at the expense of people’s lives. All these contribute to having a negative impact on the EU and Member States’ foreign policy.

    As demonstrated by a recent article from the Mixed Migration Centre (https://mixedmigration.org/articles/how-to-break-the-business-model-of-smugglers), the most effective way to “disrupt the business model of smugglers” and reduce irregular departures, migrants’ dangerous journeys and the consequent losses of lives, is to expand legal migratory routes.

    By going in the complete opposite direction, Cyprus, for many years now, has prevented migrants, asylum seekers and refugees from reaching the island in a legal way and from leaving the island for other EU countries1. Cyprus has resorted to systematic practices of pushbacks sending refugees back to countries where they are at risk of torture, persecution and arbitrary detention, has intensified forced returns, has dismantled the reception and asylum system, and has fueled a toxic anti-refugee narrative that has led to indiscriminate violent attacks that were initially against Syrian refugees and their properties in #Chloraka (https://kisa.org.cy/sundays-pogrom-in-chloraka) and a few days later to against migrants and their properties in #Limassol (https://cde.news/racism-fuelled-violence-spreads-in-cyprus). More recently, Cyprus has also announced its willingness to push the EU and Member States to re-evaluate Syria’s status and consider the country as “safe” in order to forcibly return Syrian refugees to Syria – despite on-going clashes, structural human rights violations, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

    These deadly externalisation policies and unlawful practices have and continue to kill individuals and prevent them from accessing their rights. A complete change in migration and asylum policies is urgently needed, based on the respect of human rights and people’s lives, and on legal channels for migration and protection. Cyprus, as well as the EU and its Member States, must protect the human rights of migrants at international borders, ensure access to international protection and proper reception conditions in line with EU and international human rights law. They must open effective legal migratory pathways, including resettlement, humanitarian visas and labour migration opportunities; and they must respect their obligations of saving lives at sea and set up proper Search and Rescue operations in the Mediterranean.

    https://euromedrights.org/publication/leaked-letter-on-intended-cyprus-lebanon-joint-border-controls-increa

    #mourir_aux_frontières #frontières #droits_humains #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Chypre #Liban #racisme #attaques_racistes #refoulements #push-backs #militarisation_des_frontières #joint_operations #opérations_conjointes #aide #formation #gardes-côtes_libanaises #pull-backs #réfugiés_syriens #externalisation

  • North Africa a ’testing ground’ for EU surveillance technology

    The EU is outsourcing controversial surveillance technologies to countries in North Africa and the Sahel region with no human rights impact assessments, reports say.

    Controversial surveillance technologies are being outsourced by the European Union to countries in North Africa and the Sahel region with no transparency or regulation, according to two new reports.

    Funding, equipment and training is funnelled to third countries via aid packages, where autocratic governments use the equipment and techniques to surveil the local population.

    Beyond the borders of Europe, the movements of asylum seekers are being policed and eventually used to assess their asylum applications.

    Antonella Napolitano, author of a report for human rights group EuroMed Rights, told Middle East Eye that the implementation of these projects is opaque and lacks proper consideration for the rights of civilians and the protection of their data.

    “There aren’t enough safeguards in those countries. There aren’t data protection laws,” Napolitano said. “I think the paradox here is that border externalisation means furthering instability [in these countries].”

    The complex web of funding projects and the diversity of actors who implement them make the trails of money difficult to track.

    “This enables states to carry out operations with much less transparency, accountability or regulation than would be required of the EU or any EU government,” Napolitano told MEE.

    The deployment of experimental technologies on the border is also largely unregulated.

    While the EU has identified AI regulation as a priority, its Artificial Intelligence Act does not contain any stringent provision for the use of the technologies for border control.

    “It’s creating a two-tiered system,” Napolitano told MEE. “People on the move outside the EU don’t have the same rights by design.”
    Asylum claims

    The surveillance of migrants on the move outside of Europe is also brought to bear back inside Europe.

    A Privacy International report published in May found that five companies were operating GPS tagging of asylum seekers for Britain’s Home Office.

    “It’s been massively expanded in the past couple of years,” Lucie Audibert, legal officer at Privacy International, told MEE.

    Other, less tangible forms of surveillance are also deployed to monitor asylum seekers. “We know, for example, that the Home Office uses social media a lot… to assess the veracity of people’s claims in their immigration applications,” Audibert told MEE.

    According to the reports, surveillance equipment and training is supplied by the EU to third countries under the guise of development aid packages.

    These include the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa (EUTF for Africa) and now the Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument.

    The reports cite multiple instances of how these funding instruments served to bolster law enforcement agencies in Algeria, Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, furnishing them with equipment and training that they then used against the local population.

    The EUTF for Africa allocated 15 million euros ($16.5m USD) in funding to these countries to train up a group of “cyber specialists” in online surveillance and data extraction from smart devices.

    A Privacy International investigation into the role of CEPOL, the EU law enforcement training agency, revealed that it had supplied internet surveillance training to members of Algeria’s police force.

    The investigation highlights a potential connection between these tactics, which contravened the EU’s own policies on disinformation, and the wave of online disinformation and censorship driven by pro-regime fake accounts in the aftermath of the 2019 Hirak protests in Algeria.
    A dangerous trend

    For journalist Matthias Monroy, the major development in border surveillance came after the so-called migration crisis of 2015, which fuelled the development of the border surveillance industrial complex.

    Prior to that, Europe’s border agency, Frontex, was wholly dependent on member states to source equipment. But after 2015, the agency could acquire its own.

    “The first thing they did: they published tenders for aircraft, first manned and then unmanned. And both tenders are in the hands of private operators,” Monroy told MEE.

    Frontex’s drones are now manned by the British company Airbus. “The Airbus crew detected the Crotone boat,” Monroy told MEE, referring to a shipwreck off the coast of Crotone, Italy, in February.

    “But everybody said Frontex spotted the boat. No, it was Airbus. It’s very difficult to trace the responsibility, so if this surveillance is given to private operators, who is responsible?”

    Almost 100 people died in the wreck.

    Since 2015, with the expansion of the border surveillance industrial complex, its digitisation and control has been concentrated increasingly in the hands of private actors.

    “I would see this as a trend and I would say it is very dangerous,” Monroy said.

    https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/eu-north-africa-surveillance-technology-testing-ground

    #surveillance #technologie #test #Afrique_du_Nord #Sahel #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #intelligence_artificielle #IA #EU_Emergency_Trust_Fund_for_Africa (#EUTF_for_Africa) #développement #Emergency_Trust_Fund #Algérie #Egypte #Tunisie #Libye #complexe_militaro-industriel #contrôles_frontaliers #Frontex #Airbus #drones #privatisation

    ping @_kg_

    • The (human) cost of Artificial Intelligence and Surveillance technology in migration

      The ethical cost of Artificial Intelligence tools has triggered heated debates in the last few months. From chatbots to image generation software, advocates and detractors have been debating the technological pros and societal cons of the new technology.

      In two new reports, Europe’s Techno-Borders and Artificial Intelligence: The New Frontier of the EU’s Border Externalisation Strategy, EuroMed Rights, Statewatch and independent researcher Antonella Napolitano have investigated the human and financial costs of AI in migration. The reports show how the deployment of AI to manage migration flows actively contribute to the instability of the Middle East and North African region as well as discriminatory border procedures, threatening the right to asylum, the right to leave one’s country, the principle of non-refoulement as well as the rights to privacy and liberty.

      European borders and neighbouring countries have been the stage of decades-long efforts to militarise and securitise the control of migration. Huge sums of public money have been invested to deploy security and defence tools and equipment to curb arrivals towards the EU territory, both via externalisation policies in countries in the Middle East and North Africa and at the EU’s borders themselves. In this strategy of “muscling-up” the borders, technology has played a crucial role.

      EuroMed Rights’ new reports highlight how over the decades, surveillance technology has become a central asset in the EU’s migration policies with serious impacts on fundamental rights and privacy. In Artificial Intelligence: The New Frontier of the EU’s Border Externalisation Strategy we analyse how surveillance technology has been a crucial part of the European policy of externalisation of migration control. When surveillance technologies are deployed with the purpose of anti-smuggling, trafficking or counterterrorism in countries where democracies are fragile or there are authoritarian governments, they can easily end up being used for the repression of civic space and freedom of expression. What is being sold as tools to curb migrant flows, could actually be used to reinforce the security apparatus of repressive governments and fuel instability in the region.

      At the same time, Europe’s Techno-Borders highlights how this security obsession has been applied to the EU’s borders for decades, equipping them with ever-more advanced technologies. This architecture for border surveillance has been continuously expanding in an attempt to detect, deter and repel refugees and migrants. For those who manage to enter, they are biometrically registered and screened against large-scale databases, raising serious concerns on privacy violations, data protection breaches and questions of proportionality.

      Decades of “muscling-up” the EU’s borders keep showing the same thing: military, security, defence tools or technology do not stop migration, they only make it more dangerous and lethal. Nonetheless, the security and surveillance apparatus is only expected to increase: more and more money is being invested to research and develop new tech tools to curb migration, including through Artificial Intelligence.

      In a context that is resistant to public scrutiny and accountability, and where the private military and security sector has a vested interest in expanding the surveillance architecture, it is crucial to keep monitoring and denouncing the use of these technologies, in the struggle for a humane migration policy that puts the right of people on the move at the centre!

      Read our reports here:

      - Artificial Intelligence: the new frontier of the EU’s border externalisation strategy: https://euromedrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Euromed_AI-Migration-Report_EN-1.pdf
      - Europe’s Techno-Borders: https://euromedrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/EuroMed-Rights_Statewatch_Europe-techno-borders_EN-1.pdf

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/the-human-cost-of-artificial-intelligence-and-surveillance-technology
      #rapport #EuroMed_rights

  • A #Chypre, la #détresse de migrants syriens séparés de leurs enfants

    « Je suis dévastée, ma famille aussi ». Kawthar, une jeune Syrienne, berce son nourrisson dans un camp pour migrants à Chypre, où elle a été emmenée par les autorités après avoir été séparée en pleine mer de son mari et ses jeunes enfants.

    Avec des dizaines d’autres migrants syriens, Kawthar Raslan a quitté Beyrouth le 22 août sur une embarcation pour rallier clandestinement l’île méditerranéenne, située à quelque 160 kilomètres de là.

    Cette femme de 25 ans qui voyage avec son mari et ses deux enfants, âgés d’un et trois ans, est alors sur le point d’accoucher. A une dizaine de kilomètres des côtes chypriotes, l’embarcation est encerclée par des garde-côtes, venus renvoyer le bateau vers le Liban.

    Sur une vidéo filmée à bord et visionnée par l’AFP, on entend des passagers crier « Aidez-nous ! ».

    Voyant l’état de Kawthar, les garde-côtes l’emmènent avec eux mais laissent le reste de la famille dans l’embarcation, contrainte de repartir vers le Liban, où plus d’un million de Syriens ayant fui la guerre ont trouvé refuge.

    Le Liban étant plongé dans une grave crise économique, des centaines de Syriens ont tenté depuis un an la traversée vers Chypre. Mais ce pays de l’Union européenne, avec le plus grand nombre de primo-demandeurs d’asile par habitant, a signé en 2020 un accord avec le Liban pour renvoyer tout clandestin essayant d’atteindre l’île par bateau.

    – « Ni au Liban, ni en Syrie » -

    « J’ai failli mourir quand j’ai appris le renvoi de ma famille vers le Liban », raconte à l’AFP Kawthar, qui vit dans un préfabriqué dans le camp de Kofinou (sud).

    « Les (garde-côtes) savaient que mon mari et mes enfants m’accompagnaient et ils les ont empêchés de me suivre », dit la jeune femme, qui accouché le lendemain de son arrivée à Chypre. Son bébé dort paisiblement à côté d’elle dans un berceau.

    Originaire d’Idleb, dans le nord-ouest de la Syrie, Kawthar exhorte Chypre d’accepter sa demande de regroupement familial, affirmant ne pouvoir « vivre ni au Liban ni en Syrie ».

    Selon la loi chypriote, seuls les migrants ayant le statut de réfugié ont droit au regroupement familial. Mais, sur les quelque 7.700 demandeurs d’asile syriens arrivés sur l’île depuis 2018, moins de 2% ont obtenu ce statut, indique l’Agence de l’ONU pour les réfugiés (UNHCR).

    « Les enfants sont traumatisés, ils répètent sans fin :+Maman+ », confie le mari de Kawthar, Hassan al-Ali, rencontré par l’AFP à Aïn El-Tefaha, un village près de Beyrouth, où il loue une chambre.

    Et de se rappeler la tragique journée du 22 août, quand le bateau est resté immobilisé « des heures » lors de l’intervention des garde-côtes. « Il y avait un soleil de plomb, les enfants avaient très soif (...) Ma fille ne bougeait plus, je pensais qu’elle allait mourir », dit-il, la voix brisée par l’émotion.

    Issa Chamma, un autre Syrien dans l’embarcation, se trouve aussi à Kofinou. Comme Kawthar, il a été séparé de sa famille après avoir perdu connaissance sur le bateau.

    Originaire d’Alep, ce migrant de 37 ans qui souffre de problèmes pulmonaires affirme à l’AFP que sa femme et ses trois enfants, âgés de deux à onze ans, ont « passé deux jours en prison à leur retour à Beyrouth ».

    – « Des vies en danger » -

    Selon l’UNHCR, le refoulement des migrants en mer est contraire aux lois internationales. « Cette pratique doit cesser parce qu’elle met des vies en danger », souligne Emilia Strovolidou, porte-parole de l’UNHCR à Chypre, appelant les autorités à réunir les familles de Kawthar et de Issa.

    EuroMed Droits, un réseau de 65 organisations méditerranéennes de défense des droits humains, lancera d’ailleurs lundi une campagne pour sensibiliser sur cette affaire, appelant l’UE à « enquêter sur les violations commises par les forces frontalières chypriotes ».

    Le 21 septembre, lors d’une audience au Parlement chypriote, plusieurs députés ont critiqué la politique migratoire de leur pays : « Le gouvernement doit appliquer les lois internationales et réunir Kawthar avec sa famille maintenant », a dit à l’AFP la députée Alexandra Attalides, du Parti vert.

    Le ministre de l’Intérieur, Nicos Nouris, qui n’a pas répondu aux sollicitations de l’AFP, avait argué récemment que son pays était « en droit de refuser l’arrivée illégale de migrants ».

    En visite fin août à Nicosie, la Commissaire européenne aux Affaires intérieures, Ylva Johansson, a toutefois affirmé que cette opération de refoulement « pos(ait) question ».

    En attendant, Kawthar dit « penser constamment » à ses deux autres enfants : « Je ne fais que pleurer (...) Rien ne peut compenser leur absence ».

    https://information.tv5monde.com/info/chypre-la-detresse-de-migrants-syriens-separes-de-leurs-enfant

    #réfugiés_syriens #migrations #asile #réfugiés

    • Cyprus: no to #pushbacks, yes to family reunification!

      EuroMed Rights, KISA, Access Centre for Human Rights, the Lebanese Centre for Human Rights and 12 other partner organisations call on the Republic of Cyprus to immediately end the practice of pushbacks, to facilitate family reunification procedures and increases legal pathways and humanitarian corridors through the use of humanitarian visas. We also call on the Lebanese authorities to immediately halt all deportations of refugees to Syria. We also call upon the European Union to investigate the misconducts perpetrated by Cypriot police and border forces. 

      Another tragic story in the East Mediterranean

      On 22 August 2021, a boat left Lebanon for Cyprus with 69 refugees on board. The Access Centre for Human Rights and KISA interviewed witnesses and it is their testimony which this press statement relies upon. According to these witnesses, Cypriot coast guards forcefully stopped the boat by throwing an item on its engine and for several hours denied food and water to refugees – including a man with serious health problems, children and a pregnant woman close to her due date.  

      After the destruction of the boat’s engine, several refugees jumped into the sea to swim towards the Cypriot shore. Two of them tried for several hours to avoid the police speedboats that were trying to force them to return back to the boat. One of them was lost at sea and to this day is still missing.

      After the Cypriot coast guards pulled the immobilised boat far away from the coast, they transferred the pregnant woman to a police boat and she was taken to hospital. The police refused to take along with the woman her two children (aged 1.5 and 3 years old) and her husband. At the hospital doctors did not admit her since in their assessment she was not ready to give birth. The police then transferred her to a port and gave her a plastic chair. She spent the night laying down on wooden pallets at the port. The next morning, she was transferred back to hospital where she gave birth. 

      On the same day, 23 August, the Cypriot coastguards placed all the individuals on a boat and sent them back to Lebanon – this included the woman’s husband and children. Three other people on the boat were later deported from Lebanon to Syria where they were held in detention.  

      Violations in chain

      Since March 2020, under a controversial agreement with Lebanon which is still to be signed by the Lebanese Parliament, the Cypriot authorities have repeatedly resorted to pushing back boats to Lebanon and have denied individuals access to the asylum procedure. By refusing to offer basic care to refugees, denying  them entry and pushing  them back illegally to Lebanon, Cyprus is violating several articles of the European Convention on Human Rights and the 1951 Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees, thus contributing to the chain refoulement of Syrian refugees to Syria, and putting them at risk of torture, ill-treatment, detention, enforced disappearance and death.  This practice must end immediately.

       Please direct any questions or requests for interview to: Maxence Salendre, Communication Team Coordinator – msa@euromedrights.net

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/cyprus-no-to-pushbacks-yes-to-family-reunification%e2%80%af%e2%80%af
      #push-backs #refoulement

  • Turkey’s return policies to Syria & their impacts on migrants and refugees’ human rights

    –-> Chapitre 7 de ce rapport intitulé « Return Mania. Mapping Policies and Practices in the EuroMed Region » :

    https://euromedrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/EN_Chapter-7-Turkey_Report_Migration.pdf

    #renvois #expulsions #Turquie #réfugiés #asile #migrations #réfugiés_syriens #retour_au_pays #droits_humains #rapport #EuroMed_Rights

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur les « retours au pays » des réfugiés syriens :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/904710

    ping @isskein @karine4 @rhoumour @_kg_

  • #Plainte contre l’Europe complice des horreurs perpétrées en Libye

    L’UE a violé ses obligations financières en soutenant sa gestion migratoire par la Libye selon plusieurs ONG. Dans une plainte déposée ce 27 avril, celles-ci réclament un audit de la #cour_des_comptes_européenne.

    Détention arbitraire, torture, viol, esclavage, etc. Les sévices dont sont victimes migrants et réfugiés dans la Libye en guerre sont largement documentés. Et la complicité de l’Union européenne qui externalise sa gestion migratoire, fortement dénoncée.

    Les ONG de défense des droits humains ont choisi un nouvel angle d’attaque pour contester la politique européenne de soutien aux autorités libyennes pour qu’elles interceptent en mer et maintiennent coûte que coûte sur leur sol les demandeurs d’asile. Elles ont décidé de frapper au porte-monnaie.

    Trois ONG portent plainte

    Trois organisations spécialisées dans l’expertise juridique et politique des migrations, le #Global_legal_action_network (réseau mondial d’action juridique, #GLAN), l’association pour les études juridiques sur l’immigration (#ASGI) et l’association italienne des loisirs et de la culture (#ARCI) ont déposé une plainte auprès de la cour des comptes européenne ce lundi 27 avril.

    La plainte est étayée par une déclaration de douze ONG de défense des droits humains, tels Amnesty International et la FIDH. Elle porte sur « les infractions aux #règles_financières de l’UE ». Les trois organisations estiment illégal le #soutien_financier européen à la gestion migratoire libyenne et réclament que la cour des comptes lance un audit sur la coopération de l’UE avec la Libye.

    Une plainte « révolutionnaire »

    « Les #lois_budgétaires de l’UE donnent mandat à l’UE de veiller à la bonne utilisation des #fonds_européens_de_développement, notamment en contrôlant et en évaluant en permanence leur impact sur les droits de l’homme. Sans garanties en matière de droits de l’homme, le programme de l’UE en Libye est en violation flagrante des lois européennes et internationales et se rend complice des souffrances humaines causées par le retour des migrants en Libye », fait valoir Valentina Azarova, conseillère juridique pour le GLAN.

    En s’appuyant sur le soutien matériel apporté à la Libye, cette plainte est « révolutionnaire », estime Leslie Piquemal du CIHRS, l’Institut d’études des droits de l’homme du Caire, cosignataire de la déclaration.

    Le respect des droits de l’homme transféré à la Libye

    L’UE a alloué, en juillet 2017, 91,3 millions d’euros au programme « #Gestion_intégrée_des_frontières_et_des_migrations_en_Libye » (#GIF) qui doit durer jusqu’à la fin de 2021. Ce programme a pour objectif « d’améliorer la capacité de la Libye à contrôler ses frontières et à assurer le sauvetage en mer, d’une manière pleinement conforme aux obligations et aux normes internationales en matière de droits de l’homme. » Ces #fonds ont été engagés par le biais du #Fonds_fiduciaire_d’urgence_de_l’Union_européenne_pour_la stabilité_et_la_lutte_contre_les_causes_profondes_des-migrations_irrégulières_et_des personnes_déplacées_en_Afrique (#EUTFA), lui-même principalement financé par le #Fonds_européen_de_développement.

    Si le Fonds européen de développement est soumis à des règles de bonne gestion financière - les projets soutenus doivent notamment être assortis d’un système visant à évaluer, atténuer et contrôler leur impact sur les droits de l’homme - l’EUTFA, lui, en est affranchi. Cette compatibilité avec les droits de l’homme a été transférée aux bénéficiaires des fonds.

    « L’absence de programmes de surveillance des droits et le risque que les fonds de développement soient détournés au profit de programmes de sécurité, comme le montre le #Fonds_fiduciaire_pour_l’Afrique, sont des préoccupations flagrantes que les institutions et les États membres de l’UE devraient chercher à corriger », fait valoir la plainte.

    En 2018, la cour des comptes avait elle-même pointé les faiblesses de l’EUTFA - manque de précision et risque d’#inefficacité -, et soulignait la nécessité de les revoir.

    https://www.la-croix.com/Monde/Migrants-plainte-contre-lEurope-complice-horreurs-perpetrees-Libye-2020-04
    #justice #EU #UE #Europe #Libye #externalisation #asile #migrations #réfugiés #droits_humains

    ping @karine4 @isskein @_kg_

    • Complaint to the European Court of Auditors Concerning the Mismanagement of EU Funds by the EUTrust Fund for Africa’s ‘Support to Integrated Border and Migration Management in Libya’ (IBM) Programme Submitted by Global Legal Action Network (GLAN), Association for Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI), and Italian Recreational and Cultural Association (ARCI)

      https://c5e65ece-003b-4d73-aa76-854664da4e33.filesusr.com/ugd/14ee1a_ae6a20e6b5ea4b00b0aa0e77ece91241.pdf

    • EU: Time to review and remedy cooperation policies facilitating abuse of refugees and migrants in Libya

      One year after the resumption of the armed conflict in Tripoli, and at a time when the humanitarian situation in Libya continues to deteriorate due to further military escalation and the spreading of the Covid-19 virus, Amnesty International, the Italian Recreational and Cultural Association (ARCI), Association for Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI), Avocats Sans Frontières (ASF), Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS), Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network (EuroMed Rights), the Global Legal Action Network (GLAN), Human Rights Watch (HRW), International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), Lawyers for Justice in Libya (LFJL), Oxfam International, Migreurop, and Saferworld are calling on EU institutions to stop any actions trapping people in a country where they are in constant, grave danger.

      EU institutions should review and reform the bloc’s policies of cooperation with Libya on migration and border management and control. During the past three years, these have facilitated the containment of tens of thousands of women, men and children in a country where they have been exposed to appalling abuse.

      The call coincides with the submission by GLAN, ASGI and ARCI of a complaint before the European Court of Auditors (ECA). In their complaint, the three organisations are requesting the body to launch an audit into EU’s cooperation with Libya. Such an audit would seek to determine whether the EU has breached its financial regulations, as well as its human rights obligations, in its support for Libyan border management.

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/eu-time-to-review-and-remedy-cooperation-policies-facilitating-abuse-

    • Stop cooperation with and funding to the Libyan coastguard, MEPs ask

      The EU should stop channeling funds to Libya to manage migration and to train its coastguard, as the violation of human rights of migrants and asylum-seekers continues.

      In a debate in the Civil Liberties Committee with representatives of the Commission, Frontex, UNHCR, the Council of Europe and NGOs, a majority of MEPs insisted that Libya is not a “safe country” for disembarkation of people rescued at sea and demanded that the cooperation with the Libyan coastguard stops.

      Most of the speakers acknowledged the challenges faced by front line countries receiving most of the migrants and asylum-seekers fleeing Libya, namely Italy and Malta, and underlined that the European common asylum system needs to be reshuffled, with a focus on solidarity among member states and respect of international legislation. Others made clear that member states are entitled to protect their borders, especially in the middle of a health crisis such as the current one. Some instead criticised the closure of ports due to the COVID-19 pandemic and stressed that letting people drown cannot be a solution.

      Background

      According to UNHCR, the human rights situation inside Libya is extremely complicated, in the context of intensifying combat, the coronavirus crisis and the high number of economic migrants, refugees and internally displaced people needing material and humanitarian assistance. Around 1,500 people remain in detention centers in appalling conditions, arbitrary detentions continue to take place and resettlement schemes of the most vulnerable people to neighbouring countries have been suspended.

      Since the beginning of the year, 3,277 persons have arrived in Italy by sea and 1,135 in Malta. On 1 April, the EU naval Operation Irini succeeded Operation Sophia, with a focus on enforcing the arms embargo to Libya, in an attempt to contribute to the pacification of the country.

      You can watch the debate again: https://multimedia.europarl.europa.eu/es/libe-committee-meeting_20200427-1600-COMMITTEE-LIBE_vd

      https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20200427IPR77915/stop-cooperation-with-and-funding-to-the-libyan-coastguard-meps-ask

    • EU : Time to review and remedy cooperation policies facilitating abuse of refugees and migrants in Libya

      One year after the resumption of the armed conflict in Tripoli, and at a time when the humanitarian situation in Libya continues to deteriorate due to further military escalation and the spreading of the Covid-19 virus, Amnesty International, the Italian Recreational and Cultural Association (ARCI), Association for Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI), Avocats Sans Frontières (ASF), Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS), Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network (EuroMed Rights), the Global Legal Action Network (GLAN), Human Rights Watch (HRW), International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), Lawyers for Justice in Libya (LFJL), Oxfam International, Migreurop, and Saferworld are calling on EU institutions to stop any actions trapping people in a country where they are in constant, grave danger.
      EU institutions should review and reform the bloc’s policies of cooperation with Libya on migration and border management and control. During the past three years, these have facilitated the containment of tens of thousands of women, men and children in a country where they have been exposed to appalling abuse.
      The call coincides with the submission by GLAN, ASGI and ARCI of a complaint before the European Court of Auditors (ECA)*. In their complaint, the three organisations are requesting the body to launch an audit into EU’s cooperation with Libya. Such an audit would seek to determine whether the EU has breached its financial regulations, as well as its human rights obligations, in its support for Libyan border management.

      The EU cooperation with Libya on border control and its consequences

      EU Member States and Institutions have long responded to the arrival of refugees and migrants, crossing the central Mediterranean on unseaworthy and overcrowded boats, by cooperating with Libyan authorities to stop departures and ensure that people rescued or intercepted at sea would be disembarked in Libya. In recent years, this policy has been pursued through new and numerous means, including the provision of training, speedboats, equipment and various forms of assistance to Libyan authorities such as the Libyan Coast Guard and Port Security (LCGPS, under the Ministry of Defence) and the General Administration for Coastal Security (GACS, under the Ministry of Interior), both under Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA).

      EU institutions have played a key role in the definition and execution of this strategy. While significant resources have been invested in projects aimed at alleviating the suffering of refugees and migrants stranded in Libya and remain central to EU public communications on the topic, EU actions have nonetheless facilitated and perpetuated this policy of containment. The contained people have become victims of human rights violations and abuse, including indefinite, arbitrary detention and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, which such cosmetic measures have not remedied.

      Indeed, the overall policy of cooperation with the Libyan authorities on border control and management has been designed and consistently implemented at the EU level. It started with the launch of the EU Border Assistance Mission in Libya (EUBAM) in 2013, with the goal to support the Libyan authorities in improving and developing the security of the country’s borders. [1] It continued with the modification of the mandate of naval operation EunavforMed Sophia, tasked since June 2016 [2] to train members of the Libyan Coast Guard. It expanded with the Joint Communication by the European Commission and the High Representative for Foreign Affairs, dated 25 January 2017, indicating action to step up the capacity of the Libyan Coast Guard as a key priority. [3]] The strategy was completed through the Malta Declaration [4], of 3 February 2017, which explicitly indicated “training, equipment and support to the Libyan national coast guard and other relevant agencies” as its first priority. Crucially, this declaration also affirmed the intention to strengthen the mainstreaming of migration within the EU’s official development assistance for Africa, including through the mobilization of resources under the EU Emergency trust fund for stability and addressing root causes of irregular migration and displaced persons in Africa (EUTFA).

      The EU has then concretely implemented this strategy through the funding of specific projects, in particular the project “Support to Integrated border and migration management in Libya” (IBM project), launched in July 2017 and funded by the EUTFA with a total of €91.3m. [5] The project has focused almost entirely on enhancing the operational capacity of Libyan authorities in maritime surveillance : assisting with the supply and maintenance of speedboats ; setting up basic facilities to coordinate operations and planning the establishment of fully-fledged operational rooms ; and supporting the definition of a Libyan Search and Rescue Region, declared by Libya in December 2017. This, notwithstanding the fact that the country cannot be considered a place of safety for the disembarkation of people rescued at sea, a fact that even the Libyan authorities admitted earlier this month. It should also be noted that, despite the assistance provided, Libya has been unable to attend to this rescue area and has benefited from extensive and decisive support from Italy to coordinate maritime operations, including many triggered following sightings by EU assets. [6]

      While this strategy has achieved its objective of drastically reducing the number of people reaching Europe via the central Mediterranean – as well as the absolute number of deaths at sea, given the plummeting departures – it has also led to dramatic human consequences. Following disembarkation in Libya, since 2016 tens of thousands of women, men and children have been transferred to detention centres nominally under the control of the Libyan Ministry of Interior, where people have been detained arbitrarily for an indeterminate period of time, and where inhumane conditions and overcrowding are accompanied by the prevalence of torture and other ill-treatment. Cases of beatings, sexual violence, exploitation, forced labour, unlawful killings, and deaths in custody due to inadequate medical treatment or lack of adequate food, have been widely documented. Even outside of detention centres, refugees and migrants are constantly exposed to the risk of kidnappings, robberies, trafficking and exploitation. [7]

      The already dire humanitarian situation has been compounded, in recent weeks, by newly escalating violence in Tripoli as well as by the spreading of Covid-19 disease. All parties to the conflict, including the GNA and the Libyan National Army (LNA), have committed serious violations of international humanitarian law. Indiscriminate attacks have resulted in deaths among civilians, including dozens of refugees and migrants killed in the bombing of the detention centre of Tajoura, near Tripoli, in July 2019. [8] The risk of an escalation of violence in Libya due to the fragile political situation should have been foreseen by EU decision-makers.

      Many risks were well-known by EU Member States’ and institutions’ officials when designing the cooperation with Libya. In particular, the systematic human rights violations in detention centres – the very centres where Libyan authorities detain people who, with EU support, they intercept at sea – have been documented widely for a number of years, including by UN agencies who have also attempted to respond to such risks through human rights due diligence steps and the adoption of restrictive measures on their programmes. [9]

      While fully conscious of the horrific violations and abuses experienced by refugees and migrants taken to Libya, EU institutions have undertaken to implement the above-mentioned strategy for the past four years.

      The EU has thus contributed to the disembarkation in Libya and transfer to detention centres of tens of thousands of women, men and children. What is more, taking into account the 2012 European Court of Human Rights decision in the case Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy, ruling that maritime pushbacks towards Libya breach the European Convention on Human Rights – this strategy has been designed to circumvent responsibility under international and EU laws, in multiple ways. [10] First, the focus on the capacity-building of the LCGPS is meant to ensure that people are intercepted at sea and subsequently disembarked in Libya by non-European actors – since both international and EU law prohibit the transfer of anyone to a country where their rights and freedoms are at serious risk. Second, EU institutions have tried to minimise the EU’s direct involvement and deflect attention from their responsibility for the serious abuses they have contributed to by focusing on funding projects implemented primarily by Member States. Finally, by transferring European
      development and other aid resources into the EUTFA, a fund that can be used with reduced transparency and limited supervision, and then using those funds to realize projects such as IBM, they have reduced avenues for holding decision-makers to account for the harmful contributions made by such actions.

      The complaint before the European Court of Auditors

      On 27 April 2020, GLAN, ASGI, and ARCI submitted a complaint before the European Court of Auditors, the EU body responsible for auditing the use and management of the EU budget.

      The complaint was drafted based on an expert opinion by academic experts on EU budget and development laws, Prof Dr Phillip Dann and Dr Michael Riegner of Humboldt University and Ms Lena Zagst of Hamburg University, published alongside the complaint. Following close to a year’s efforts to obtain information from various EU institutions about the use of EU funds, the complaint argues that EU funds used to implement the EU’s migration policy have been mismanaged, in breach of EU laws governing the EU budget, and with consequences for the EU and its Member States under international law. The complaint claims that the European Commission has failed to uphold its obligations under EU law to ensure that it is not acquiescing or contributing to serious human rights violations. In particular, it argues that provision of financial means to implement projects resulting in return to and containment in Libya of people at risk of human rights abuse, with knowledge of these consequences and in the absence of any legally required measures to mitigate such risks, engages the responsibility of the EU institutions. The complaint is unique insofar as it specifically addresses the responsibilities of EU institutions relevant to the use of EU funds in such projects, linking their financial disbursements and human rights obligations. Crucially, it is filed in the context of several previous and ongoing litigation efforts before domestic and regional courts and international bodies, including the European Court of Human Rights and the UN Human Rights Committee.

      The complaint calls on the ECA to launch an audit into the IBM programme for the misuse of EU funds and for its harmful impacts on human rights. The complaint argues, based on EU financial legislation, the illegality of the IBM programme due to inconsistency with the permissible funding objectives for development and other underlying funds disbursed by the EUTFA. Specifically, the use of EU funds in the IBM programme contravenes the obligation to follow legal requirements for the use of such funds, to ensure that use ‘does no harm’, and is compliant with EU law regarding sound financial management principles of effectiveness, efficiency and transparency. The arguments are based on the appended legal opinion and supported by information specific to the IBM programme researched and analysed by the groups.

      The human rights impact of the funding is particularly severe due to the fact that the IBM programme, now in its second phase, which is set to last until late 2021, is being implemented without any conditionality or restriction on the use of funding or review of funded activities, and without a human rights review or monitoring of the human rights impact. EU and international law, the complaint argues, requires that the EU and its Member States make the implementation of the programme conditional on the closure of detention centres and the enactment of asylum laws by Libyan authorities, amongst other concrete and verifiable steps.
      The programme should also provide for robust and effective review mechanisms that could result in its suspension if conditions are not respected.

      There is no doubt that EU institutions have been long aware of the risks involved in cooperating with Libyan authorities on border control and management. A recent investigation by The Guardian revealed how in early 2019 the Director of Frontex, Fabrice Leggeri, wrote to Paraskevi Michou, the Director-General of the Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs in the European Commission, outlining issues arising from sharing information about the position of boats in distress with Libyan authorities, highlighting how “the Commission and in general institutions may face questions of a political nature as a consequence of the SAR related operational exchanges of information.” [11] Indeed, questions about the lawfulness of the cooperation have previously been asked, not only by members of civil society. As early as March 2017, a review by the UK Independent Commission for Aid Impact noted that the UK and EU work efforts to build the capacity of the LCGPS aimed at increasing the likelihood that refugees and other irregular migrants were intercepted by the LCGPS, and that those intercepted were placed in detention. The body, which reports its findings to the British Parliament, expressed concern that “the programme delivers migrants back to a system that leads to indiscriminate and indefinite detention and denies refugees their right to asylum”, and concluded that the risk of UK aid causing unintended harm to vulnerable migrants, or preventing refugees from reaching a place of safety, had been inadequately assessed. [12] Subsequently, both the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe expressed deep concern about the consequences of European cooperation with Libya on border control. [13]

      In 2018, the ECA opened a first, general audit on the EUTFA, leading to the Special Report “European Union Emergency Trust Fund for Africa : Flexible but lacking focus”. [14] In its conclusions, the ECA found that the fund’s more general established objectives were too broad to efficiently steer action and measure impact ; that the Commission did not comprehensively analyse needs nor the means at its disposal to address them ; that the selection of projects had been fast but not fully consistent and clear ; and that, while projects have started to deliver outputs, their monitoring was deficient. Among other weaknesses, the report highlighted the lack of a specific risk assessment framework, or – in the case of projects for the North of Africa – of any documented criteria for selecting project proposals. The funding of the IBM programme reveals that these concerns have now materialised.

      The “action fiche” for the first phase of the IBM programme – i.e. the document summarizing its objectives and relevant plans and activities – acknowledges that “Under the existing Libyan legislation, once rescued, irregular migrants generally end up in detention centres which generate international concerns.” [15] The action fiche for the second phase of the programme expands on this : “The treatment of migrants in Libyan detention centres is of great concern : there is a lack of food, hygiene is abhorrent and there is a situation of total despair. Equally important is the absence of a clear and verifiable system of the rule of law, which meets the international and human rights standards. Migrants in detention centres have often no access to legal process and cannot address any misuse of power. This situation has led to criticism on the current programs financed by the EU in Libya and influenced the design of this action.” [16]

      Despite such references to human rights and international law, the programme has not provided for any measure adequate to address the role of such funding in contributing to the dire situation of refugees and migrants trapped in Libya. Other measures supposedly adopted to mitigate the human rights impact of the programme, such as trainings and political demarches, either depend on the good will of Libyan authorities, or are tokenistic. While EU officials express concern that the continuation of abuse against refugees and migrants in Libya may “further damage the narrative and reputation of the EU”, the risk of actively facilitating this abuse is not considered in the brief risk analysis provided in the action fiche for the second phase . Notably, most of the project’s impact monitoring is outsourced to the Italian Ministry of Interior, which is also in charge of implementing many of the planned actions and has repeatedly refused to disclose information or even discuss related concerns.

      As the IBM project is set to last until end 2021, it is high time to reassess this project, as well as the implications of the wider strategy adopted by the EU and its Member States to stop irregular crossings in the central Mediterranean. Human rights violations should be stopped and remedied, not encouraged and enabled. At a time when refugees and migrants stuck in Libya, as a result of EU decisions and projects, are exposed not only to serious abuse but also to the risks emerging from intensifying conflict and spreading disease, Europe should ensure the accountability of its own institutions and that any migration cooperation programmes are devised in line with its international obligations, not least in terms of their financial dimension.

      http://www.migreurop.org/article2987

  • Cyprus pushes Syrian refugees back at sea due to #coronavirus

    About 200 Syrian refugees are stranded in northern Cyprus after a harrowing standoff with authorities on the sea.

    Nearly 200 Syrian asylum seekers are stranded in northern Cyprus after they were pushed back in the middle of the sea by authorities in the government-controlled south.

    Quarantined and under threat of deportation, they have become the latest victims of a multiplying border shutdown as countries grapple with the advance of coronavirus.

    On Friday, March 20, several Greek Cypriot patrol vessels approached a vastly overcrowded boat several miles of the coast of Cape Greco.

    A police translator with a megaphone informed the passengers in Arabic that they could not enter Cyprus and would have to turn back. The craft was holding 175 people including 69 children.

    According to authorities in northern Cyprus, all are Syrian.

    Al Jazeera spoke to three Syrians who were on board. Their names are being withheld to not invite reprisals by authorities.

    One mother in her twenties from Aleppo said: “It was very crowded, the waves were high and the boat was moving a lot. I held my children tight. The police said you cannot enter because of the coronavirus, we said we were joining our husbands and families and if you are scared about coronavirus you can put us in a camp alone or quarantine. But they refused and then the boats started to circle.”

    On March 15, Cyprus shut its borders to all except Cypriots, European workers and those with special permits for a period of two weeks.

    As of Sunday, the country had recorded 214 confirmed cases and six have died.

    In a statement given to Al Jazeera, Cypriot police spokesman Christos Andreou said: “The police acted on the ministerial decrees concerning the prohibition of entry ... to protect against the distribution of coronavirus. The police made it clear that they will not allow anyone including immigrants to enter in violation of these decrees.”

    A man from Idlib told Al Jazeera: "A bigger boat came after an hour with a cannon and weapons on top. They had personnel with guns on board who said, ’If you want water, food and fuel we will give it to you but entry to Cyprus is not allowed’.

    “We asked even for them just to take the women and children. They threw us a small bottle of diesel and drove behind us for an hour and we continued to the Turkish side. A storm came and waves started to hit the boat.”

    After a standoff of several hours the boat, that had begun its journey in Mersin in southern Turkey, turned around and eventually upturned near the shore of northern Cyprus.

    Local authorities rescued the passengers from the shoreline, and they are now being housed in apartments.

    The Mediterranean island has been divided since 1974 when Turkey invaded the north following a Greek-backed military coup by forces seeking to unify the country with Athens.

    Although Cyprus is an EU member, the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) is recognised only by Turkey and the territories are separated by a 120-mile long UN-monitored buffer zone which cuts through the nation’s capital, Nicosia.

    Gulfem Verizoglu-Sevgili of the TRNC ministry of foreign affairs told Al Jazeera in a statement: “In the early hours of March 21, a rescue mission took place off the eastern coast of TRNC by the Karpaz Peninsula. The refugees were primarily taken to a sports hall where they underwent medical examinations and were provided with clothes and food. They have now been moved into flats.”

    The refugees received a warm reception by Turkish Cypriot authorities, but their fate is uncertain and local NGOs say they have been denied access to the apartments.

    A partial curfew is in place with movement largely restricted to essential businesses.

    Fezile Osum from Refugee Rights Association, an NGO based in northern Cyprus, told Al Jazeera: “The situation is complicated because the south closed their asylum system and here we don’t have one. Normally we would be able to conduct interviews but because of the curfew we are not allowed to do anything, and we don’t how they are being treated.”

    All crossing points that connect the Greek and Turkish Cypriot territories are currently closed.

    A man from Aleppo living in the Republic of Cyprus told Al Jazeera that his wife and children were among those stranded in the north. They are treated well, he said, but lack information.

    “Nobody is telling them anything. They should at least let us be together. If we knew about the border closures, they wouldn’t have come,” he said.

    UNHCR spokeswoman Emilia Strovolidou confirmed that deportation orders had been issued by the TRNC, but Turkey had refused the request.

    “Authorities in the north have placed them in 14-day quarantine in apartments and afterwards they will try again to deport them to Turkey.”

    Andrew Gardner, Amnesty International’s senior researcher on Turkey, told Al Jazeera he was concerned by cases of refoulement from Turkey to Syria.

    “Turkey has punished misdemeanour offences by arbitrarily sending people back to Syria, either those living there for a while or potentially those deported back from Northern Cyprus. There is definitely a problem with independent oversight of returns and people in detention.”

    Osum, of Refugee Rights Association, believes a dangerous precedent has been set.

    “I am afraid that Cyprus will continue to push back people and we will have more arrivals or even deaths in the sea.”
    ’Extremely saddened’

    UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi recently said that while everyday life for many has stopped, “war persecution have not.”

    He advised that screening and quarantine arrangements can be put in place “to enable authorities to manage the arrival of asylum seekers and refugees in a safe manner, while respecting international refugee protection standards designed to save lives.”

    Despite being relatively untouched during the height of Europe’s refugee crisis in 2015-2016, Cyprus is now the top recipient of first-time asylum seekers in the EU per capita registering 12,695 in 2019, the majority Syrian.

    Even pre-coronavirus the Cypriot government has taken an increasingly strident tone against irregular immigration, pr opagating the idea that refugees and migrants crossing over the porous buffer zone from north to south have been encouraged or sent by Ankara as an orchestrated attempt to alter the country’s demographics.

    Aside from the pandemic, the Cypriot asylum system may prompt yet more treacherous boat journeys.

    Corina Drousiotou from the Cyprus Refugee Council told Al Jazeera that almost all Syrians in Cyprus receive subsidiary protection status, which does not allow them to bring over family members legally.

    “We are extremely saddened by the pushback as until now the Cypriot authorities had taken every step to ensure refugees arriving on boats were able to reach our shores safely. We are contacted every day by devastated fathers desperate to be reunited with their families.”

    The woman from Aleppo who was on board the boat, said: “We didn’t go to Cyprus as tourists. We went to become refugees there.”

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/cyprus-pushes-syrian-refugees-sea-due-coronavirus-200330091614066.html
    #refoulement #refoulements #Chypre #asile #migrations #réfugiés #réfugiés_syriens

    ping @thomas_lacroix

    • Syrian refugees in Cyprus pushed back to Turkey

      On 15 May 2020, the administration of the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) forcibly sent 100 Syrian refugees, including unaccompanied children, to Mersin, Turkey. They have been transferred to Kilis, near the Syrian border, where they are now. Most of the 100 Syrian refugees – 56 – are children and women and girls are in the majority.

      On 24 April 2020, the TRNC had already forcibly sent 75 Syrian refugees, including unaccompanied children, to Mersin, Turkey, from where they have been reportedly moved to a camp in the province of Kahramanmaraş. All 175 Syrian refugees have expressed their intent to apply for asylum and find protection in an EU member state. Syrians forcibly returned to Turkey face a risk of onward refoulement to Syria.

      This group of 175 refugees arrived by boat on 20 March and were pushed back to the sea by the coastguard of the republic of Cyprus as the boat was approaching the southern part of the island, which is under the jurisdiction and control of the government of the Republic of Cyprus. Many of these refugees were trying to join their families already settled in the Republic of Cyprus, which is a member of the European Union. The boat went north, capsized and the refugees were rescued by the “Turkish Cypriot administration” which has effective control over the northern part of the island. The refugees were housed in an apartment complex for a 14-day quarantine period due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At the end of the quarantine period, they continued to be detained – this time arbitrarily, in violation of the law of the “Turkish Cypriot administration” which authorises the detention of irregular migrants for eight days extendable only by a court order.

      We, the undersigned organisations condemn the push-back of the vessel from Cypriot waters by the government of Cyprus, which amounts to refoulement in violation of the prohibition of non-refoulement set out under the 1951 Geneva Convention and EU law on asylum, and infringes Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights

      We, the undersigned organisations also condemn the return of 175 refugees to Turkey and the arbitrary detention of these persons by the “Turkish Cypriot administration”. These acts also violate the 1951 Refugee Convention and Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The detention of minors additionally violates the Convention on the Rights of the Child, in particular Articles 9, 10, 22 and 37 on detention of children, the right to reunification with members of the family and the right of every child to be with both parents. States are obliged to provide appropriate care to unaccompanied children. On April 13, UNICEF said that all governments should impose a moratorium on detaining children and urgently release children where alternatives are possible, due to heightened risks of Covid-19 in detention.

      Recommendations

      We call on the “Turkish Cypriot administration” and Turkey to:

      Respect the principle of non-refoulement and international human rights law, including the European Convention on Human Rights, by stopping the forced return of refugees and asylum seekers to Turkey and/or Syria;

      We call on the government of the Republic of Cyprus to:

      Abide by EU and international obligations to respect the right to seek asylum and the principle of non-refoulement, and provide assistance to boats in distress at sea by carrying out search and rescue operations;
      Cooperate with the UN and the “Turkish Cypriot administration” with a view to allowing the asylum seekers access to territory under control of the government of the Republic of Cyprus to apply for asylum and reunify with their families;
      Terminate the suspension of access to asylum by those arriving by sea to the territory of the Republic of Cyprus in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/syrian-refugees-in-cyprus-pushed-back-to-turkey

  • EU-Egypt migration cooperation : where are human rights ?

    The new EuroMed Rights study “EU-Egypt migration cooperation: at the expense of human rights,” published today, maps EU and Member State cooperation with Egypt in migration and border management. The study highlights the impact of this cooperation on the rights of refugees and migrants in Egypt and offers concrete recommendations for action. This publication follows the second meeting of the Migration Dialogue between the European Union and Egypt, which took place in Cairo on 11 July.

    While Egypt does not constitute a major country of departure for migrant movement towards Europe, the report finds that attention towards EU-Egypt cooperation on migration is predominately driven by Egypt’s attempts to strengthen its image as a regional leader, gain European support for its counter-terrorism policy and obtain funds for its domestic projects. If EU-led cooperation programmes in Egypt have stalled, certain Member States have stepped up bilateral cooperation on migration, going so far as to increase deportations of Egyptians back to Egypt where they could face severe human rights violations.

    “EU support to Egypt on migration has served to reinforce Egypt’s policing capacities and harsh border management policies, legitimising and strengthening the violence of the authoritarian Egyptian regime,” said Wadih Al-Asmar, President of EuroMed Rights. “We urge the EU to consult independent NGOs, inside and outside Egypt, on migration cooperation, assess the human rights impact of EU-Egypt agreements and funding, report to the European Parliament on cooperation between Frontex and the Egyptian authorities, and reject any proposals for a readmission agreement with Egypt.”

    https://euromedrights.org/publication/eu-egypt-migration-cooperation-where-are-human-rights

    #droits_humains #Egypte #UE #EU #Europe #migrations #asile #réfugiés #frontières #contrôles_frontaliers #Italie #Allemagne #externalisation #coopération

    –--------
    Reçu via la mailing-list Migreurop avec ce commentaire :

    Le dernier rapport d’EuroMed Droits (disponible en anglais, recommandations disponibles en arabe aussi) porte sur la coopération entre l’UE et l’Egypte relativement à la question dite de la « gestion des flux migratoires ». Peu documentée, cette coopération s’est pourtant intensifiée depuis la fin 2016 au niveau de la Commission européenne, mais aussi à l’appui notamment d’une coopération bilatérale fournie entre l’Egypte et l’Italie, d’une part, et l’Allemagne d’autre part. Le faible contrôle démocratique et le manque de transparence sur la réalité de cette coopération ajoute aux inquiétudes fortes d’une coopération qui ne fait ni guère cas de l’impact de cette coopération sur les droits humains (des personnes en migration et des Egyptien.nes).

    Le rapport met aussi en lumière des éléments d’analyse qui contredisent la thèse d’une « externalisation des politiques européennes » au sens classique du terme : les auteurs avancent que l’UE ne bénéficie que très peu d’une coopération qui, à l’inverse, profite véritablement à l’Egypte qui voit dans la coopération migratoire un canal de financement & de légitimité diplomatique fort utile, dans un contexte plus général de politique anti-terroriste qui s’accommode assez bien d’un amalgame politiquement utile entre migration irrégulière, criminalité transfrontalière et terrorisme.

    Au vu des enjeux en matière de droits humains particulièrement prégnant en Egypte, des recommandations sont émises aux institutions européennes, ainsi qu’aux autorités italiennes et égyptiennes pour tirer la sonnette d’alarme sur une coopération dangereuse qui se poursuit loin des regards.

    Ajouté à la métaliste sur l’externalisation, et plus précisément sur l’externalisation en Egypte :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/731749#message767801

  • Migrants subsahariens/ Début des expulsions aujourd’hui

    Après des semaines d’expectative, le gouvernement passe à l’acte. Il a décidé d’expulser les migrants subsahariens qui se trouvent de « manière irrégulière » en Algérie. La décision entré en application à partir d’aujourd’hui.


    http://www.algerie-focus.com/2017/08/migrants-subsahariens-debut-expulsions-a-partir-daujourdhui
    #Algérie #migrations #asile #réfugiés #migrants_sub-sahariens #expulsions #renvois

    • A Alger, les nouveaux migrants fragilisés par le départ des anciens

      Alors que de nombreux Subsahariens ont rallié l’Italie via la Libye, les derniers arrivés se retrouvent sans réseau.

      Par Zahra Chenaoui (Alger, correspondance) LE MONDE Le 31.10.2017 à 15h05 • Mis à jour le 31.10.2017 à 19h10

      Sur la photo, elles posent près d’une belle fontaine au cœur d’un jardin. Désirée, Hélène et Grace sont en Italie et elles le font savoir sur les réseaux sociaux. Ces Camerounaises ont vécu entre deux et six ans en Algérie, dans le même quartier. « Presque tous ceux qu’on connaissait dans le quartier sont en Europe désormais », affirme Josiane, une de leurs amies, Camerounaise elle aussi (à sa demande, son prénom a été changé).

      Depuis deux ans, la route de la Libye « passe ». Les migrants installés en Algérie qui souhaitaient aller en Europe ont, en très large majorité, réussi à le faire. Ceux qui hésitaient ont fini par être convaincus par les photos publiées par leurs amis. Résultat : en Algérie, les nouveaux arrivants se retrouvent seuls ou presque, sans réseau communautaire pour les soutenir ou les conseiller, et ce, alors même que l’attitude des autorités à leur égard s’est durcie.

      « Les anciens sont partis »

      Alger, périphérie ouest. Dans son logement, Luc, Camerounais, a fait de la place. Une cousine de sa compagne doit arriver dans la journée avec son fils de 10 ans. « Elle a de la famille en France qui est passée l’année dernière », explique le jeune homme.

      Assis sur le bord d’un matelas, un adolescent regarde des vidéos des manifestations au Cameroun anglophone sur son téléphone portable. « Je suis venu pour prendre la mer, dit-il. Là-bas, ce sera mieux pour moi, l’école est meilleure. » Son père, installé en Europe depuis un an après plusieurs années passées en Algérie, a payé le voyage pour qu’il quitte Douala. L’adolescent, arrivé seul il y a six mois, devait prendre la route de la Libye, mais les combats à Sabratha ont suspendu les départs. Luc résume : « Les anciens sont partis. Et de petits jeunes arrivent. Comme on ne peut plus partir, ils attendent là. »

      Alger toujours, mais banlieue sud. Le long des trottoirs d’une série d’immeubles en construction, des matelas jonchent le sol. De jeunes hommes sont en train de se teindre les cheveux. Ils viennent de Guinée. « Je suis arrivé il y a trois mois », explique le premier.

      Ce jour-là, aucun d’entre eux n’a trouvé de travail, alors ils patientent. « Je ne savais pas que ce serait difficile de travailler en Algérie », regrette Mohamed, 17 ans. Chaque matin, ils sont des dizaines, comme lui, postés sur le bord de la route en espérant qu’un particulier vienne leur proposer une tâche à la journée. Mais, sans réseau ni connaissance de quelques mots d’arabe, ces migrants sont dans une situation précaire. Mohamed et ses amis dorment dans la rue. « Est-ce qu’il y a des associations qui peuvent nous aider ? », interroge l’un. « Vous savez comment je peux retourner chez moi ? Je suis fatigué », ajoute un autre.

      « Les Guinéens sont de plus en plus nombreux à Alger, explique Kader, un Ivoirien installé en Algérie depuis six ans. Ils ne connaissent pas le pays et réagissent très mal dès qu’un Algérien leur parle mal ou les insulte. Ça finit en bagarre et il y a des blessés. »

      « J’ai peur des arrestations »

      La précarité touche aussi les femmes. Dans la ville d’Oran, à 400 km à l’ouest d’Alger, Adamo, un Camerounais, a rendez-vous à l’hôpital. Il fait les cent pas devant le mur d’enceinte en tentant d’expliquer où il se trouve. Une jeune femme, fine, le ventre arrondi, finit par le rejoindre. « Elle est arrivée de Tamanrasset [dans le sud du pays] il y a quelques jours. Elle est enceinte de cinq mois, elle n’a pas vu de médecin depuis le début de sa grossesse », explique Adamo.

      La jeune femme était hébergée par un autre migrant. Elle partageait quelques mètres carrés, sous un toit de tôle, avec trois autres personnes, sans sortir. « Il faut du temps aux femmes pour connaître la ville, apprendre à se déplacer. Celles qui viennent d’arriver sont très vulnérables face aux plus anciens, qui tentent de les effrayer sur le contexte algérien pour mieux les contrôler », soupire Adamo.

      Dans la ville, les quelques acteurs associatifs qui travaillent avec les migrants savent qu’ils risquent d’avoir moins d’impact s’ils ne reprennent pas le travail de sensibilisation qu’ils pensaient acquis. « On travaillait avec une quinzaine de femmes, elles sont toutes parties », explique une militante qui demande à rester anonyme.

      Parallèlement, la présence de migrants nigériens organisés en filière de mendicité dans les grandes villes du pays a sensibilisé une partie de l’opinion publique. Un collectif de jeunes étudiants a organisé un repas de solidarité pendant le mois de ramadan, le chanteur Sadek Bouzinou a réalisé un clip pour appeler à la tolérance.

      Mais ces initiatives, limitées, ont peu d’impact sur le quotidien des migrants. Et, depuis quelques semaines, l’opération d’arrestation lancée à Alger a tendu l’atmosphère. « Je connais un migrant qui s’est fait arrêter dans le bus, en allant au travail le matin. Ma voisine a été arrêtée en sortant de l’hôpital avec son nouveau-né. J’ai peur des arrestations, alors je dis à ma femme de ne pas sortir », raconte Amara, un Libérien qui vit en Algérie depuis deux ans.

      Selon Amnesty International, les forces de l’ordre ont arrêté plus de 2 000 migrants subsahariens depuis le 22 septembre. Une fois interpellés, ils ont été envoyés à Tamanrasset puis expulsés au Niger ou au Mali. Deux amis d’Amara ont été arrêtés alors qu’ils étaient en train de travailler sur un chantier. Il soupire : « J’ai choisi l’Algérie pour pouvoir travailler. Ici, je gagne mieux ma vie comme manœuvre que si j’étais employé dans mon pays. Alors je serre les dents et j’attends que ça passe. »

      http://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2017/10/31/quand-l-europe-renvoie-la-crise-migratoire-de-l-autre-cote-de-la-mediterrane

    • Algeria: Illegal Arrests, Detention and Forced Removal of Hundreds of Migrants

      Several hundred people of sub-Saharan origin were arbitrarily arrested in Algiers between late September and early October 2017 by the police and the National Gendarmerie. Without any regard for procedural safeguards and their fundamental rights, these people were arbitrarily detained at the centre in #Zeralda (a western suburb of Algiers) and forcibly collectively transported to #Tamanrasset where they were confined to a detention centre.

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/algeria-illegal-arrests-detention-forced-removal-hundreds-migrants

    • “They put us on a truck and left us there, in the middle of nowhere. We were in the desert for the next 45 days.”

      “I left Sierra Leone because I wanted to go to Italy. My friend told me to pass through Algeria first so we could make some money. On the way there, the driver sold us to some Arab men and took all of our valuables, including phones and personal documents.

      As soon as we reached Tamanrasset in Algeria, they put us in some sort of prison. The worst thing was that the prison was managed by fellow Africans who had bought us from Arabs. I was there for 15 days with no food or water, and there were more than 70 other people in the same room. The captors gave me a phone and wanted me to call my family, but my mother lives in a very small village - she doesn’t even own a phone.

      One day, they brought in another group of migrants and among them was a man from Sierra Leone so we became friends. He had a friend that had been helped by IOM to go back to Sierra Leone, so he suggested we got in touch with them.

      It was the youth vigilantes in Algeria that rescued us. They had heard about the human trafficking situation in the region; they found us and set us free. They took us to the police station and told us to call our families so they could help us get back home. At the police station, there was a huge group of migrants, including plenty of women and children.

      We asked the police to call IOM, but they said we should do that once in Niger. We asked for a human rights volunteer to assist us, but the police officers said there was no such thing. They put us in a truck, took us past Assamaka, Niger and left us in the middle of nowhere. There were more than 200 people there from all over West Africa. A big group of Nigerians decided to head back to Assamaka, but we stayed. We were in the desert for the next 45 days.

      While there, I asked a soldier to let me make a phone call so I managed to get in touch with IOM. However, soon after, the authorities moved us to another area so we feared that IOM staff wouldn’t be able to find us anymore. We walked and walked for days until we reached #Assamaka again but once we got there, we saw the IOM staff. They had come to assist us. We told them everything that had happened and they took us to their centre in #Arlit. After a week there, we came here, to the centre in #Agadez. There are now more than 50 migrants here from that group. We couldn’t be more grateful for the help.”

      http://iamamigrant.org/stories/niger/mohamed