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After Gaddafi: Hope for African migrants in Libya?

50 people came to a screening in Sheffield of the documentary “Like A Man On Earth” which shows the brutal reality of life for African migrants in Libya under Gaddafi. With an official from the

50 people came to a screening in Sheffield of the documentary “Like A Man On Earth” which shows the brutal reality of life for African migrants in Libya under Gaddafi. With an official from the new Libyan Embassy at the discussion which followed, we asked “will life improve for Libya’s 1.5 million migrants now?”
November 14, 2011

Stuart Crosthwaite
Stuart is campaigner, writer and researcher in Sheffield. He is currently Secretary of the South Yorkshire Migration and Asylum Action Group (SYMAAG) and has worked extensively with migrant communities in the area. He has published work on anti-deportation campaigns and social movements and researched and campaigned against cashless asylum support. He has used oral history methods to study aspects of South Yorkshire social and labour history, particularly the role of migrant communities in the steel industry and histories of solidarity between “host” and migrant communities in South Yorkshire.
“Like A Man On Earth” was made in 2008 by an Italian and Ethiopian film team. The same year as the $5 billion “Friendship and Cooperation” deal between Gaddafi and Berlusconi, with European Union (EU) support, to control migration from sub-Saharan Africa to Europe. In effect, Libya became an “external frontier” of Europe, a concept integral to the operation and title of the European Border Agency, Frontex.

“Like A Man On Earth”,
Available to buy on DVD
Bought and Sold
The human cost of the 2008 deal is spelled out in this poignant but pointed film. Dagmawi, an Ethiopian migrant who eventually reached Rome, films nine others as they reflect on their experiences in Libya and of what became of the friends they lost. They explain how they were bought and sold like commodities between Libyan police and smugglers. This deal involved extorting money from the migrants, desperate to continue their onward desert journey in overcrowded container trucks. “The prison had become a business centre” says Fikirte about Kufra detention centre in south-eastern Libya, near the Sudanese border. John describes the “going rates” of different racketeers – bought for 15 dinars, sold on for 30.
Over a map of Libya, Mimi traces seemingly endless journeys, back and forth between prisons in Libyan towns and cities on a map that is now more familiar to Europeans: Kufra-Ajdabiya-Benghazi-Tripoli, back to the start at Kufra again, to a hellish detention centre built with Italian funds. Sad but dignified, they tell of beatings, starvation, rape and racism at each point. “Nobody lives through the experience and stays normal” says Tighist.
The film ends with Fikirte saying “I don’t want to remember all this but I want it to be exposed in the hope that solutions can be found for everyone who’s there going through this ordeal”.
“Most Libyans would be ashamed”
The screening of the film and following panel discussion was organised jointly by the South Yorkshire Migration and Asylum Action Group (SYMAAG) and the African Affairs Network, based at the University of Sheffield. Representatives from these groups were joined by Bereket Kahsai of the Eritrean Community Organisation of Sheffield and Dr Abdelbasit Gadour, recently appointed Cultural Attaché of the Libyan Embassy in the UK.
Dr Gadour, clearly moved by seeing “Like A Man On Earth”, said that “most Libyans would be ashamed of what was in the film” and that it reminded him of the brutality of the Gaddafi years. Bereket Kahsai explained why people were prepared to go through so much pain in order to escape the prison-state of Eritrea. He hoped that the new Libyan government would stop the practice of deporting Eritrean migrants back to face persecution. “Eritrean people don’t have bad feelings towards Libyans” he said, reminding us that both Eritrea and Libya had suffered under Italian colonialism.
The “structure of abuse”
A number of speakers drew attention to the role of the Gaddafi-Berlusconi-EU deal in forming the “structure of abuse” and asked if the new Libyan authorities, the National Transitional Council (NTC), would treat migrants any better.
Would the NTC – unlike Gaddafi – sign the 1951 Geneva Convention on refugees?
Dr Gadour: “I’m sure it will”.
Why did Mustafa Abdeljalil, the head of the NTC, re-affirm the old 2008 Gaddafi/Berlusconi deal on March 28th 2011, again on June 16th and once again on September 30th?
Dr Gadour: “He’ll maybe regret what he said”, qualifying his answer by stressing the “transitional” nature of the NTC.
I quoted from the 2008 deal, reaffirmed by Mustafa Abdeljalil and former NTC Prime Minister Mahmud Jibril, that Italy would provide “equipment and facilities” in “combating illegal migration”. These were the very same shipping containers that were shown in the film, packed with 110 people locked in and left in the Sahara desert waiting for the next racketeers to arrive.
Dr Gadour: “Libyans would not accept these inhumane things”, suggesting that the apparent agreement with Italy on migrants would not necessarily be the policy of an incoming Libyan Government. Perhaps Mustafa Abdeljalil’s words had been misquoted or taken out of context Dr Gadour suggested.
“Mercenaries”?
This timely chance to question a representative of the new Libyan Government was taken up by many students, refugees and activists. There were questions about the NTC’s relationship to NATO and western oil companies; anti-semitism towards Ethiopian people in Libya, the nature of the NTC’s proposed Sharia laws.
Replying to the many reports of victimisation of sub-Saharan migrants and other black people on the basis that they served as mercenaries for Gaddafi, Dr Gadour claimed that Gaddafi “used Africans to kill his own people” and that this perception could make it difficult for Libyans to accept black African migrants.
Concerns were raised about Libya’s vast migrant population – around a quarter of the total population – would they be targeted as “mercenaries”? Would they enjoy full workers’ and citizenship rights in the new Libya? Despite acknowledging their key role in the Libyan economy, Dr Gadour gave no particular assurances regarding their safety or status in Libya.
Fortress Europe
Points were made about Frontex, the European Border Agency: the UK Government’s complicity in its operation and funding (€92.4 million in 2010); Frontex’s claim that up to 1.5 million migrants were “ready to risk anything” to reach Europe from Libya (in fact only around 30,000 have this year) and the growth of “Fortress Europe” with its external border controls, as in Libya.
Mention was made of the audacious “Boats For People” project which aims “to strengthen Euro-African solidarity with regard to migration and the defense of migrants”.
In the film, Frontex (who declined an invitation to attend the meeting) explain that “we have to act before the border where the problems are”.In September 2011 they received an extra €24 million from the EU to “manage migration and refugee flows started by events in the southern Mediterranean”. In October, the European Parliament voted to give Frontex unprecedented powers to buy or lease its own military equipment.
Guarantors of Stability
Summing up, Bereket Kahsai reminded us that the Eritrean dictatorship was still untouched by the revolts in the Arab world, though Eritrean president Isias Afewerki would have watched with fear as his ally Gaddafi lost everything. But while Afewerki held power many Eritreans would continue to look for safety and a better life outside their country. Bereket added that UK and Canadian mining companies felt free to continue to exploit Eritrea’s mineral reserves, relying on the dictatorship as a “guarantor of stability”.
For Frontex and the EU, Gaddafi was their brutal “guarantor of stability” until this year. Will the new Libyan Government accept this role too?

Source:Migrants Rights Network

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
23 COMMENTS
  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    The worthlessness of the Kidan/commission gangs is just begining. The young activist Daniel Tewelde left the comfort of USA against the advice
    1. Young Eritrean political activists are suffering in Addis Ababa in the hands of the so called kidan/commission. Stay away from the bankrupted and fossilized old Jebha political gangs. The young activist Daniel Tewelde not only left the comfort of USA but was also their main cadreand spokesman in the United States and Addis. He was a bit nave who forgot the Ghedli lessons in the last fifty years. Ato Berket Kahsay was not that different though he learnt his lessons at the end.
    Read to learn what happened to Daniel Tewelde who left America to Addis against the advice of many young Eritreans “ab’a ktreKba iKa: kab tseba zeytereKbes kab jebha Ede?”
    መራሕቲ ኮሚሽን አብ ግርጭት አትዮም፡ ዳንኤል ካብ ሓላፍነቱ ከም ሓላፊ ዜናን: ፈጻሚት ሽማግለ ኮሚሽንን ከልግስ ተገዲዱ::
    ሩባዓነሰባ.ኮም
    Wed, 16 Nov 2011 22:20:37 -0500

    መራሕ ኮሚሽን ኣምሃ ዶመኒኮን ሓላፊ ዜናፈጻሚት ሽማግለ ኮሚሽን ዳኒኤል ተወልደን አብ ግርጭት አትዮም፡ ዳንኤል ካብ ሓላፈንቱ ተባሪሩ:: አብ አዲስ አበባ፡ ንምድላው ጉባኤ አኼባ ዝጀመሩ መራሕቲ ኮሚሽን ነንሕድሕዶም አብ ግርጭት አትዮም። … 2

    • Zekhtam Eritrawi November 17, 2011

      Barentu,

      They say, if it ain’t dirty, it ain’t politics. And in the murky world of politics, if one is committed to a cause, one is expected to go through trials and tribulations where one ultimately fosters a steeled character where true leaders are made of. It would be hard for me to comment on this particular incident however, we are all at liberty to speculate. What if he is what he is accused of? Are you suggesting that, he can not possibly be a PFDJ simply because he left for Addis from the US? Is it because he sent out emails? Is it because, he denounced PFDJ in paltalk rooms his lungs out? Remember, the people who are accusing him have been around for a long while where one is duly expected to pause and see things rationally bereft of emotionally charged tantrums. I must say, your political maturity is not so impressive where the forum is inclined not to take you serious.

      • Barentu November 17, 2011

        Daniel Tewelde is innocent until proven guilty. Daniel is not ” a spy, jasus or hgdef agent” until he appears in front of an independent judge. If this is how the cowards dressed in “democracy” act, what makes them them different from the Hgdef regime holding Eritreans in EraEro.
        If you are not brave enough to defend Daniel Tewelde’s democratic rights, you are not good enough to defend the poor Eritrean peasant jailed in Prima country Barentu.
        This proves the old generation of the stinking old Jebha-shabia camp are not a positive alternative to Eritrea. Worthless people create other worthless organizations.

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    2.

    2. እቶም መራሕቲ ኮሚሽን: ሰኑይ ዕለት 14 /2011 አብ ዝጀመሩዎ አኼባ፡ ነናቶም ጸብጻብ ዘረከቡሉ/ ዘቅረቡሉ ዝነበሩ ጊዜ: አብ መንጎ አቦ-ወንበር ኮሚሽን ዝኾነ አይተ/ እመሃጽዮን ዶመኒኮን ናይ ሚድያ ሓላፊ ዝኾነ አይተ/ ዳንኤል ተወልደን ግርጭት ተጀመረ።
    ጸብጻባት ካብ አዲስ አበባ ከምዝሕብሩዎ፡ ዳንኤል ተወልደ እመሃጽዮን ዶመኒኮ ብጋህዲ ክነቅፎ ዝለዝጀመረ፡ ደመኒኮ ድማ ንነቀፌታ ዳንኤል ክጻወር ስለዘይከአለ፡ ሓይልታት ጸጥታ ኢትዮጵያ ጸዊዑ “አብዚ ልኡኽ ህግደፍ አሎ” ኢሉ ከጥቅዖ ከምዝፈተነ ይሕበር፡፡
    ሓይልታት ጸጥታ ኢትዮጵያ ንዳንኤል ክአስሩዎን ንብረቱ ክህግርዎ ምስ ፈተኑ፡ ዳንኤል “ንብረት ዋዕላ ውሰዱዎ፡ ንብረተይ ግን አይትወስዱዎን” ከምዝበሎም ተገሊጹ።
    ብተወሳኺ እውን ሓይልታት ጸጥታ ኢትዮጵያ ምስኦም ክወስዱዎ አብ ዝፈተኑሉ እዋን፡ “መጀመርያ ናብ ሃገረይ አሜሪካ ክድውል አለኒ” ስለዝበለ፡ ንገዝኡ ክከይድ ከምዝገደፉዎ ተገሊጹ።

    • Barentu November 17, 2011

      For your information: who was Daniel Tewelde?
      “Eritrean intellectuals are invited to a seminar organized by Ethiopian government on the first week of Sept 2011. According to an invitation E-mail sent by Mr. Daniel Tewelde, a member of the Eritrean National Commission for Democratic Change-ENCDC, and Head of Media and information Department, the seminar will begin on Sep 05, 2001 and will last bout 5 days.

      “In his invitation E-mail, Mr. Tewelde, wrote: ‘ the Ethio gov is planning to hold seminar for Eritrean intellectuals, opinion makers, political & human right activist, leaders of civic organizations, media personalities and elders as it did for political organization just few days ago. The commission is asked to help in facilitating and making the seminar possible.’

      • ahmed Saleh November 17, 2011

        Barentu
        I am sorry, I tried hard to read your thinking. You couldn’t get close to my imagination.
        But I know you are here for something for no good reason. All your posts had some hidden
        agenda. To tell you the truth I was looking your posts last night always from last month.
        You are a dangereous smart person, I experienced with individuals like you, my friend.

    • Freeprisoners November 17, 2011

      ባረንቱ ዶ ባርያቱ ክብለካ!

      ንስኻ ሓደ ፈገር ለኽባጥ፤ ካባቶም ሰላም ዋዕላ ኤርትራውያን ደቐባት ንኸይሰምር ዝዘርጉ ዘለው ዕውር ደንቖሮ ሰብ ኢኻ።

      ብዝኾነ ምኽንያት ግን ዋዕላ ኣዲስ ብጀጋኑ ኤርትራውያ ተቓለስቲ ኣብ ሓደ ተጠርኒፉ ትዓዊቱ ክወጽእ ኢዩ። ንኸማኻ ተበለጽቲ ከሕጉሱ ኣይፈላለዩን ኢዮም። ሓንቲ ምስላ ከዘኻኽረካ፤

      ተግባራት ህግደፍ ዘይፈልጥ ኣይኤርትራውን፤ ሽሕጣን ህግደፍ ዘይርዳ ኣይተቓዋምን።

      ዓወት ንሃገራዊ ዋዕላ።
      ኤርትራ ብቕዋም ትምሓደር
      እሱራት ይፈትሑ።

      • Barentu November 17, 2011

        Where is Daniel Tewelde? If you care for justice and fairness, why do you deny Daniel justice? If you do not care about Daniel Tewelde, you do not care about the Eritreans suffering under Arab doctors and beduines in Egypt, nor do you care about Sherifo or Drue in Era Ero.
        Stop lies. The old fossilized Jebha will bring no positive change at all, it needs to change itself first.

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    If there are young nave Eritreans who think the old Jebha-shabia gangs will bring any positive change in Eritrea, then they are dreaming. Nothing good will come of these fossilized souls. Nobody is surprised that the old jebha is accusing daniel as “hgdef agent” these are the same people who tortured hundreds as “jasus” or “menkae”.
    Worth people create worthless political organizations. lets go back and read Eritrea’s 50 years of upheaval. It is good young eritreans are learning, they are opening their eyes. they will not be used as condoms of few others again.

    • ahmed Saleh November 17, 2011

      Barentu
      Your mentality is not different than the old politics of the so called Jebha and other political
      leaders. You look you have some grudge you hold inside of you, let it go for benefit of own
      health concern. If you are in this movement for political change please forget the past and
      refresh yourself with young progressive spirit unless you are that old to understand me.
      And stop preaching those negatives.

      • Barentu November 17, 2011

        You wrote “forget the past” .. How can I forget the past when cowards are ashamed to speak up the truth. Why are you ashamed to speak up against Arab racism against Eritreans and Africans in Egypt Sinai, Sudan and Libya?
        Why are you ashamed to speak up against the kidan/commission on the way daniel was treated with out due legal process? hypocrites, open your eyes …

  • PFDJ(Popular Front for Dictatorship and Jail) November 17, 2011

    http://asmarino.com/news/1255-eritrea-pulls-out-of-regional-soccer-tourney
    of course these players will seek asylum if they go to play

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    Some cowards are accusing me here of “bigotry” because I used the word “racism against black Africans” in my writings. If there is any idiot or coward out there trying to hide his head like an ostrich, I challenge him to write:
    “In his study titled, ‘Perceptions of Race in the Arab world’, Mark Perry says: “The past and present trade in African slaves to the Arab world has left a long and bitter memory in African society to this day. Black Africa was the earliest source for slaves and the last great reservoir to dry up; already in the 640s slaves were part of the ‘non-aggression pact’ between Arab conquerors and Nubian rulers, while as late as 1910 slave caravans were still arriving in Benghazi from Wadai (in Chad).”
    Actually, slavery ended officially by law in the early 1960s in Saudi Arabia. The British administration in Eritrea had reported of several boats intercepted on their way to Saudi Arabia across the eastern Red Sea coast. Young boys and girls have sold many times in Sudan in the last ten years.

    “As the world marks the 2011 International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, which has been dubbed the ‘International Year for People of African descent’, uprisings sweeping the Arab region should include a social transformation to shift perceptions of dark-skinned Arabs and non-Arabs to put an end to racial discrimination and xenophobia, experts say.”

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    “Though most will deny its existence, in Libya discrimination is common not only against migrant Black Africans, but also against darker-skinned Libyans, especially from the south of the country.
    “This is not the first time Libya’s most vulnerable immigrant population has fallen victim to racist attacks. In 2000, dozens of migrant workers from Ghana, Cameroon, Sudan, Niger, Burkina Faso, Chad and Nigeria were targeted during street killings in the wake of government officials blaming them for rising crime, disease and drug trafficking.

    “In response, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) expressed concern over Libya’s practices of racial discrimination against dark-skinned migrants and refugees. In 2004 it accused the country of violating Article 6 of the 1969 International Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (ICERD), and for failing to implement proper mechanisms safeguarding individuals from any racial acts that circumvent human rights.”

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    The racism and discrimination against dark skinned people in the Arab world is common but very few brave people speak about it. It is common everywhere but nobody speaks about it. What is happening to Eritreans in Egypt Sinai, Libya and Sudan is part Arab racism against black people.
    Watch the video clips below. I urge Eritreans to speak up and to teach the public about this taboo subject. There is no doubt that the coward volunteer “Abeeds” in denial will shout and scream.
    Learn from the video clips about racism in Iraq, there are many documents, just start with what the Arabised blacks say:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5w6Goigl10

  • Barentu November 17, 2011

    The brave Egyptian human rights activist calls this barbaric act “… more than slavery” in a CNN documentary. While the cowards within the Eritrean opposition are afraid to call this a spade is a spade.
    The cowards are afraid to call this by its proper name “slavery and racism” against Eritreans and many black Africans. If you think you are brave enough to speak against Hgdef, why are you ashamed to speak against the racism and barbarism being committed in Egypt, Libya and Sudan against Eritreans and other Africans? Why are you afraid to defend Daniel Tewelde until proven guilty.
    What a disgrace!
    Worthless people create worthless organizations.

  • Cicero-Paradiso November 17, 2011

    Why are some people here afraid or should I say ashamed to say what they see. These crimes are not happening in Tanzania, South Africa, South Sudan or Uganda. This is happening in the heart of the Arab world in Egypt, Libya and north Sudan. All the victims are Eritreans and other black Africans, while the people committing these crimes are rich Arab Egyptians buying the human organ, such a kidney or eye cornea of Africans, the medical surgeons are all Arab Egyptians and the criminals in charge kidnapping, torturing and selling are all Arab Bedouins. All the top level security officials of the Arab republic of Egypt from the general to the jail guard know about this. But none of them want to speak against this genocide of poor Eritreans and Africans.
    If this is not Arab racism and xenophobia toward black Africans and Eritreans, then what is racism? Was slavery worse than this crime?
    Without a shame, you want to use a different yard stick to define Arab racism and discrimination against black Africans.
    This is Arab racism and discrimination.

  • Semhar November 18, 2011

    SHAME ON US!
    To let one mercenary destroy our land, our people and our culture.

    SHME ON US!
    To let one mercenary dissolve our heroic national liberation fronts
    ELF 1980, EPLF 1993.

    SHME ON US!
    To let one mercenary turn us against one another and against all our neighbors, Ethiopia, Sudan, Djibouti, Somalia and Yemen.

    SHME ON US!
    To let the dictator kill our heroes, our disable veterans, jail our parents and our religion leaders and members.

    The dictator must go!
    – His boss (Mubarak of Egypt) is thrown out of power in jail.
    – His adored brother (Gaddafi) was killed like a rat.
    – The international community’s talking peace and carrying big stick [sanctions] is having an effect.
    – The Eritrean people are beginning to realize that there is no point in waiting for the regime to reform itself – that it needs to be overthrown.
    We must apply
    TUNISIA style
    or
    LIBYA style!
    This is the moment we must come together to save our land and our people.

    Let freedom ring in ERITREA!

    • Stuart November 22, 2011

      Dear Friends

      I’m honoured that you have published the article I wrote: “After Gaddafi: Hope for African Migrants?” As a white European my first duty is to oppose racism in Europe – whichever group is the victim.

      But, in my reasearch about Libya and in conversations with Eritrean exiles in the UK, I became aware of a history of Arab racism towards black people, particularly in north Africa. I also became aware that – since the the days of the Turkish Ottoman empire – European governments have colluded with Arab enslavement of black African people. That was the context in which I wrote about the deals between Gaddafi and European governments (not just the Italians either). And – as you say Semhar – Gaddafi was the “adored brother” of Afewerki. So, Eritrean people have suffered persecution from all these powerful forces. But powerful forces can be overcome, as we see in Egypt, Libya and soon Syria I hope.

      I would be interested to know what people’s opinions of the new Libyan Government are.

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