person:joel millman

  • Renvoyé dans un centre de détention libyen, un migrant somalien s’immole par le feu
    https://www.nouvelobs.com/monde/migrants/20181026.OBS4533/renvoye-dans-un-centre-de-detention-libyen-un-migrant-somalien-s-immole-p

    L’homme, qui aurait moins de 30 ans, aurait pris la décision de se suicider après s’être vu expliquer par des officiels du Haut Commissariat des Nations unies pour les réfugiés (UNHCR) qu’il avait très peu de chances d’être évacué hors de Libye. L’UNHCR serait actuellement en train de vérifier cette information.

    Joel Millman, de l’Organisation internationale pour les migrations (IOM), a expliqué :

    « Il a été admis à l’hôpital, à Tripoli, pour des soins médicaux intensifs. Notre équipe médicale lui a rendu visite et a informé la direction qu’elle est prête à apporter son aide si nécessaire. »

    En février dernier, un an après les accords passés entre l’Italie et la Libye, de nombreuses ONG avaient à nouveau dénoncé les « conditions terribles » des centres de détention libyens vers lesquels sont renvoyés les migrants interceptés lors de leurs tentatives de rejoindre l’Europe. Iverna McGowan, directrice du bureau d’Amnesty international auprès des institutions européennes, expliquait notamment :

    « Ils endurent la torture, la détention arbitraire, les extorsions et des conditions inimaginables dans les centres de détention gérés par le gouvernement libyen. »
    "Les autorités libyennes ne reconnaissent le droit à la protection internationale qu’à une poignée de nationalités et la Libye a, par ailleurs, refusé de signer la Convention de 1951 relative au statut des réfugiés, qui protège les personnes fuyant les persécutions et les conflits", soulignait, à l’époque, l’Oxfam.

    De son côté, l’UNHCR a indiqué en septembre dernier que la Libye n’était désormais plus considérée comme un pays capables d’assurer la sécurité des migrants ayant échoué à rejoindre l’Europe.

  • Somali returned to Libya under Italian policy sets himself on fire

    A Somali man set himself on fire in a Libyan detention centre on Wednesday, according to fellow detainees and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

    The man, who is in his late 20s, reportedly doused himself in petrol from a generator in the centre and lit it, after telling friends he had lost hope of being relocated to a safe country.

    Sources told The Irish Times the man carried out the action after being told he had little chance of evacuation by visiting officials from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). The UNHCR said it was trying to verify this.

    IOM spokesman Joel Millman said the detainee had set himself on fire as an “act of protest”.

    “He was admitted into the hospital yesterday in Tripoli in the burn centre for intensive medical care. Our medical team visited him and informed the management that they are willing to support if it is needed,” he said.

    However, a fellow detainee said he believed the Somali man had died. “All refugees have [a] very bad feeling. Today [we’re] not eating at all because so many people have died.” This would be the eighth death in Triq al Sikka centre this year, according to the detainee.

    Tens of thousands of refugees and migrants have been returned to Libya since February 2017, when the country’s UN-backed government entered into a deal with Italy to prevent migration to Europe. Italian politicians have called the deal a success, because it has reduced the number of people arriving on their shores.
    Rife with abuse

    However, for the men, women and children returned to Libya, the situation is bleak. More than a dozen detainees across Tripoli contacted by phone have described detention centres rife with abuse, where they’re fed once a day at most, forced to work, and sometimes beaten or raped. Overcrowding has led to the spread of infectious diseases like tuberculosis.

    A Somali man set himself on fire in a Libyan detention centre on Wednesday, according to fellow detainees and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

    The man, who is in his late 20s, reportedly doused himself in petrol from a generator in the centre and lit it, after telling friends he had lost hope of being relocated to a safe country.

    Sources told The Irish Times the man carried out the action after being told he had little chance of evacuation by visiting officials from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). The UNHCR said it was trying to verify this.

    IOM spokesman Joel Millman said the detainee had set himself on fire as an “act of protest”.

    “He was admitted into the hospital yesterday in Tripoli in the burn centre for intensive medical care. Our medical team visited him and informed the management that they are willing to support if it is needed,” he said.

    However, a fellow detainee said he believed the Somali man had died. “All refugees have [a] very bad feeling. Today [we’re] not eating at all because so many people have died.” This would be the eighth death in #Triq_al-Sikka centre this year, according to the detainee.

    Tens of thousands of refugees and migrants have been returned to Libya since February 2017, when the country’s UN-backed government entered into a deal with Italy to prevent migration to Europe. Italian politicians have called the deal a success, because it has reduced the number of people arriving on their shores.

    Rife with abuse

    However, for the men, women and children returned to Libya, the situation is bleak. More than a dozen detainees across Tripoli contacted by phone have described detention centres rife with abuse, where they’re fed once a day at most, forced to work, and sometimes beaten or raped. Overcrowding has led to the spread of infectious diseases like tuberculosis.

    Those detained include pregnant women and children of all ages.

    Sources in #Zintan, a detention centre 180km southwest of Tripoli, said that four detainees have died there within the past month. They say the poor conditions, including a lack of sanitation, have caused or contributed to the deaths.

    In Tripoli, detainees in two centres said their families at home are being forced to send money for them to buy food because managers in the Libyan department for combating illegal immigration (DCIM)-run centres say there is no other way for them to eat.
    Cross the Mediterranean

    Many detainees’ families have already paid ransoms of more than $2,000 to smugglers who held them prisoner, regularly torturing them, before allowing them to attempt to cross the Mediterranean.

    One man said the manager in his centre withholds food depending on his mood and whims. “If the leader of the detention centre gets happy by something in his own personal situation he tries to serve us food, if [he] not get happy he tries to stop it.”

    In September, the UNHCR updated its policy to say Libya is no longer a safe country to return people to. The organisation is currently registering detainees from countries including Eritrea, Somalia, Sudan and Ethiopia, who cannot return home or are unwilling to because of conflict or fear of persecution. Many are hoping for evacuation from Libya, but the number of resettlement places currently offered by other countries is very limited.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/africa/somali-returned-to-libya-under-italian-policy-sets-himself-on-fire-1.367
    #décès #mort #asile #migrations #réfugiés #réfugiés_somaliens #Italie #expulsions #renvois Libye #détention #centre_de_détention #suicide

  • La route des #Balkans fermée, l’Italie se prépare
    http://www.tdg.ch/monde/route-balkans-fermee-italie-prepare/story/16141098

    Pour les autorités italiennes, cette recrudescence des arrivées de #migrants est évidemment très préoccupante. Elle pourrait annoncer que la route du sud – dite aussi de la #Méditerranée centrale – est en train de se substituer à celle des Balkans, désormais quasi fermée depuis la signature de l’accord de réadmission entre l’Union européenne et la #Turquie.

    « Le fait qu’il n’y ait presque aucun Syrien, mais surtout des Africains parmi ces 4000 réfugiés arrivés en Italie ces derniers jours semble indiquer que le phénomène ne s’est pas encore produit », tempère Joel Millman, porte-parole de l’Organisation internationale pour les #migrations (OIM), dont le siège est à Genève.

    « Toutefois, poursuit Joel Millman, les Syriens connaissent cette route qui relie la Libye à l’#Italie. En 2014, 42 000 d’entre eux l’ont empruntée pour chercher refuge en Europe. L’an dernier, du fait de la situation en #Libye, ils n’étaient plus que 7000. »