Refugees directly flown from Libya to Italy in 'historic' first

Sudanese refugees identified in Africa under an overhauled asylum policy arrive in France on December 18, 2017. Italy has also accepted its first group of 162 "vulnerable" refugees who were flown directly from Libya to Italy on December 22, 2017. PHOTO | JACQUES DEMARTHON | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Those evacuated came from Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia and Yemen. They comprised families, single mothers, unaccompanied children and handicapped people.
  • Libya has long been a transit hub for migrants seeking a better life in Europe, but people smugglers have stepped up their lucrative business in the chaos since the 2011 revolution.
  • Libyan authorities have come under fire over migrant abuses since the airing last month of CNN footage of a slave market in the North African country.

ROME

A group of 162 "vulnerable" refugees were flown directly from Libya to Italy on Friday for the first time, a day hailed as "historic" by Interior Minister Marco Minniti.

"For the first time a humanitarian corridor has been opened from Libya to Europe. It's a start," Minniti said, adding: "Today is a historic day."

SUFFERED

Those evacuated came from Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia and Yemen. They comprised families, single mothers, unaccompanied children and handicapped people, who were flown on a military jet.

Vincent Cochetel, the UNHCR's special envoy for the central Mediterranean, said: "For the first time, we have been able to evacuate extremely vulnerable refugees from Libya directly to Italy.

"Many of those evacuated spoke of great suffering and were kept prisoners by traffickers in inhuman conditions."

SMUGGLERS

Libya has long been a transit hub for migrants seeking a better life in Europe, but people smugglers have stepped up their lucrative business in the chaos since the 2011 revolution.

Libyan authorities have come under fire over migrant abuses since the airing last month of CNN footage of a slave market in the North African country.

The United Nations has urgently appealed for countries to take in 1,300 "extremely vulnerable" refugees stranded in Libya.