Yahoo – AFP,
14 Sep 2015
Brussels (AFP) - EU member states approved on Monday plans for military action against people smugglers in the Mediterranean, seizing and if necessary destroying boats to break up the networks operating out of Libya.
![]() |
Libyan
coast guards escort a boatload of migrants, who had hoped to set off to
Europe with the help of people smugglers from the coastal town of Garabulli, on
June
6, 2015 (AFP Photo/Mahmud Turkia)
|
Brussels (AFP) - EU member states approved on Monday plans for military action against people smugglers in the Mediterranean, seizing and if necessary destroying boats to break up the networks operating out of Libya.
"This
important transition will enable the EU naval operation against human smugglers
and traffickers in the Mediterranean to conduct boarding, search, seizure and
diversion (of vessels)," the EU's council of ministers said in a
statement.
The
European Union launched a first, intelligence gathering phase of its EU NavFor
Med operation in July and with that objective met, ministers agreed it was time
to move on to the next step, the statement added.
The
decision comes as EU interior ministers meet in Brussels to try and agree
quotas for the redistribution of the massive flood of migrants fleeing war and
upheaval across the Middle East and North Africa.
Many member
states were reluctant to step up action against the traffickers for fear of
getting embroiled in Libya, where rival factions have been fighting it out for
control since the overthrow of longtime strongman Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.
EU leaders
agreed however that there had to be a much tougher response, including the use
of force, after more than 700 migrants drowned off southern Italy in April.
The second
phase of the operation approved Monday still restricts EU NavFor Med to action
in international waters.
A third
phase involves military action against people smugglers inside Libyan
territorial waters, aiming to destroy their boats and networks before they set
sail.
This step
is more controversial given the increased risks and requires at a minimum a UN
Security Council resolution and preferably Libyan government agreement.
![]() |
A French
Navy patrol ship rescues migrants aboard a fishing boat in the
Mediterranean
Sea, on May 20, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
EU efforts
to help establish a national unity government in Libya which could grant such
approval have so far failed but special UN envoy Bernardino Leon reported at
the weekend that progress was being made.
Russia,
current president of the UN Security Council, has said a resolution could be
adopted this month but it would only apply to action on the high seas.
More than
350,000 people have risked their lives crossing the Mediterranean this year,
according to the International Organization for Migration, with nearly 3,000
losing their lives.
EU NavFor
Med currently comprises four ships -- one Italian, one British and two German
-- and sources said it will likely need several more vessels for the enlarged
mission which is expected to begin next month.
The EU,
which has no central armed force of its own, has taken part in a whole series
of peacekeeping and civilian emergency missions, among them anti-piracy
operations off the Horn of Africa, and military training in Somalia and Mali.


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