Libyan coastguardians intercepted migrants after traffickers' gunfire

11.05.2017 - 10:31 #Libya, #migrants, #Coastguards, #Skirmish
The 493 migrants included 277 from Morocco and many from Bangladesh

Libya’s coastguard on Wednesday intercepted a wooden boat packed with almost 500 migrants after duelling with a German rescue ship and coming under fire from traffickers, the navy said. The migrants, who were bound for Italy, were picked up off the western city of Sabratha, said navy spokesman Ayoub Qassem.

The German non-governmental organization “Sea-Watch tried to disrupt the coastguard operation... inside Libyan waters and wanted to take the migrants, on the pretext that Libya wasn’t safe,” Qassem told AFP. Sea-Watch posted a video on Twitter of what it said was a Libyan coastguard vessel narrowly cutting across the bow of its ship.

“This EU-funded Libyan patrol vessel almost crashed (into) our civil rescue ship,” read the caption. Qassem also said the coastguard had come under fire from people traffickers, without reporting any casualties.

Several nationalities

The 493 migrants included 277 from Morocco and many from Bangladesh, said Qassem, and 20 women and a child were aboard the boat. All were taken to a naval base in Tripoli. There were also migrants from Syria, Tunisia, Egypt, Sudan, Pakistan, Chad, Mali and Nigeria, he added.

According to international organizations, between 800,000 and one million people, mostly from sub Saharan Africa, are currently in Libya hoping to make the perilous Mediterranean crossing to Europe.

Between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants are being held in Libyan detention centers after entering the country illegally, an immigration official said on Tuesday.

Read this article in russian.

Source: Al Arabiya

Поділитися публікацією:
Головні новини
Різне
ГУР: Російський суховантаж Sparta пройшов Гібралтар та прямує до Сирії
Різне
В ході операції ГУР та МЗС із Сирії евакуювали 34 людини
Дипломатія
У Києві урочисто відзначили Національний день Катару
Шукайте нас на Twitter

© Ukraine in Arabic, 2018. All Rights Reserved.