By Ebi Kesiena
United Nations investigators says there is evidence that crimes against humanity have been committed against Libyans and migrants stuck in Libya,
According to the investigators commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council, the European Union is also faulted for sending support to Libyan forces that they say contributed to crimes against migrants and Libyans, including women being forced into sexual slavery.
Also, investigators said they are deeply concerned by the deteriorating human rights situation in war-scarred Libya, noting there are grounds to believe a wide array of war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed by state security forces and armed militia groups.
These findings was revealed in an extensive new report, based on interviews with hundreds of people, including migrants and witnesses, that wraps up a fact-finding mission created nearly three years ago to probe rights violations and abuses in the North African country.
The investigators said they collected at least 2,800 items of information documenting numerous cases of arbitrary detention, murder, torture, rape, enslavement, sexual slavery, extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances that confirmed their widespread practice in Libya.
“It is clear that there was a pattern of violation of human rights and international humanitarian law. Particularly in places of detention as well as in relation to migrants,” investigator Chaloka Beyani told Al Jazeera.
Libya has in recent years emerged as the dominant transit point for refugees and migrants from Africa and the Middle East who are seeking to reach Europe. Human rights groups and activists have long decried the horrible conditions these people are facing.
During the probe into alleged human trafficking and smuggling, the investigators found “there are reasonable grounds to believe that migrants across Libya are victims of crimes against humanity and that acts of murder, enforced disappearance, torture, enslavement, sexual violence, rape and other inhumane acts are committed in connection with their arbitrary detention”, the report said.
It specifically cited the Libyan coastguard, which has been supported by the EU over the years.
“The support given by the EU to the Libyan coastguard in terms of pull-backs, pushbacks, (and) interceptions led to violations of certain human rights,” said Beyani. “You can’t push back people to areas that are unsafe, and the Libyan waters are unsafe for the embarkation of migrants.”
However, Beyani insisted that the European bloc and its member states were not found to be responsible for war crimes, but the support given has aided and abetted the commission of the crimes in Libya.