World

Libya jails 38 over deaths in Mediterranean sea smuggling case


Five get life in jail over human trafficking case in which 11 people died trying to cross Mediterranean Sea to Europe.

A court in eastern Libya sentenced five people to life in prison after they were convicted of human trafficking over the deaths of 11 people who were on a rickety boat trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe, the office of Libya’s chief prosecutor said.

The court in the city of Bayda also sentenced nine other defendants to 15 years in prison each on Monday, the office of General Prosecutor al-Sediq al-Sourr said in a statement. Another 24 suspects were jailed for a year, the statement added.

The defendants were part of a network smuggling people from Libya to Europe, it said. The statement did not say when the 11 died at sea or provide further details.

The court ruling was the latest in Libya to target traffickers.

On Friday, the chief prosecutor’s office said another court in the capital, Tripoli, sentenced one defendant to life in prison and two others to 20 years each for human trafficking.

In recent years, Libya has become a major transit point for Middle Eastern and African people fleeing conflict and poverty to seek a better life in Europe.

Libya descended into chaos following a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 that toppled and killed long-time ruler Muammar Gaddafi. Human traffickers have benefited from the instability in Libya since, including the smuggling of people across borders from six nations, including Egypt, Algeria and Sudan.

Smugglers pack desperate people into ill-equipped rubber boats and other vessels for the risky voyage across the central Mediterranean, primarily to reach Italian shores 290 km (180 miles) to the north and across the world’s deadliest migratory sea route.

For years, the United Nations and rights groups have decried the inhumane conditions faced by those smuggled across the Mediterranean by trafficking gangs and the deplorable treatment inside state-run detention centres in Libya.

In a March report, a UN fact-finding mission on human rights in Libya found that some smuggled people were trapped in Libya and had been subject to sexual slavery – a crime against humanity – among other abuses.



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