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Dear Magnus Brunner and Dubravka Šuica,

CC: Ursula von der Leyen, António Costa, and Roberta Metsola, 

 

On 24 August, the Libyan Coast Guard opened fire without warning on rescue ship Ocean Viking, operated by humanitarian maritime organization SOS MEDITERRANEE in international waters. 

Coastguards fired a significant number of rounds in an assault which endangered the lives of over thirty crew members and eighty-seven survivors rescued from distress at sea. Analysis of the attack indicates that it was carried out from a boat transferred by Italy to the Libyan Coast Guard under the EU-funded SIBMMIL programme.

The attack is part of a long pattern of violence against people in distress at sea as well as humanitarian workers for which the perpetrators have remained unaccountable in Libya.  While the European Commission stated that Libyan authorities are investigating the incident, weeks after the attack, there is no indication that cooperation, or technical and financial assistance, has been suspended during the course of this investigation.

The Libyan Coast Guard does not comply with the standards required to make it a legitimate search and rescue (SAR) actor, and is involved in violent attacks on people in distress during interceptions, as found by the Italian judiciary. Eight years of EU support has not improved this actor’s human rights records, but enabled and legitimised abuses, in violation of Article 29 of the NDICI regulation - which excludes activities that may result in human rights violations from EU funding. 

While the EU and Member States’ cooperation with Libya are officially motivated by the need to save lives closer to Libyan shores, in reality, it  prevents people seeking safety from reaching Europe. This involves steps by Libyan actors receiving EU funding and support to return people by force to a place where relevant UN mechanisms and many others have found evidence of inhumane acts at a scale amounting to crimes against humanity. This system leaves people seeking protection with two choices: risking death at sea or arbitrary detention, torture and extortion in Libya. 

Despite overwhelming evidence, the Commission has denied that support to Libyan forces directly enables the perpetration of said human rights violations. Yet, it has committed maladministration by refusing to disclose the “do-no harm” assessments of its Libya projects, according to the EU Ombudsman.

This disastrous strategy has persisted for over a decade. It has cost lives, and it is high time that EU institutions stop tolerating unjustifiable attacks against people in distress at sea, and European citizens carrying out humanitarian work, by Libyan authorities funded by European taxpayers. This culture of impunity for violence has led to an erosion of respect for human rights and international and maritime law, and an escalation of aggression.

This year’s State of the EU address underlined the EU’s intention to seek a greater geopolitical role, as the bearer of values and standards in a turbulent world. To be taken seriously internationally in such an endeavour, words must match actions, starting near home.

Human lives must not be disregarded in the name of border control. The European Commission must restore the rule of law at its maritime border; suspend cooperation with Libya without further delay; urge Italy to terminate its 2017 Memorandum of Understanding with Libya; and urge other Member States to refrain from similar agreements. It must finance and coordinate a state-led European search and rescue programme in the Central Mediterranean. It must support states in opening safe routes for refugees and migrants to escape Libya, and reduce their reliance on dangerous routes. Finally, it must ensure that victims of the gross human rights abuses committed by EU-backed Libyan actors can access justice and reparation.

Yours, 

 

SOS MEDITERRANEE

Refugees in Libya

EMERGENCY

Médecins Sans Frontières

MEDITERRANEA Saving Humans

SOS Humanity

SARAH-SEENOTRETTUNG

CompassCollective

Sea-Watch e.V.

Convenzione dei diritti nel Mediterraneo 

Gruppo Melitea

Stop Border Violence 

Border Violence Monitoring Network

No Name Kitchen

Missing Voices (REER)

M.V Louise Michel project

Maldusa project 

Centre for Peace Studies 

Queer Without Borders

From the Sea to the City 

Grupa Granica (Border Group)

Egala Association

Nomada Association

Association for Legal Intervention, PL (Stowarzyszenie Interwencji Prawnej)

The Tunisian Forum for Social and Economic Rights (FTDES)

No To Ci Pomogę Association 

Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS)
United4Rescue – Gemeinsam Retten e.V.

Seebrücke

European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR)

Channel Monitoring Project

Statewatch

Equinox Initiative for Racial Justice

Weaving Liberation 

Volt Europa 

Watch the Med AlarmPhone 

EuroMed Rights

Europe Cares e.V.

ActionAid International

Amnesty International
RESQSHIP

United Against Inhumanity