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Libya migrant rescue centre set to open despite rights abuses

The EU-funded centre would coordinate rescues in the Med, but will it give Libya a free pass for violations?

Libya migrant rescue centre set to open despite rights abuses
People board a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) ship after being rescued from a small boat in the Libyan search and rescue zone in March | Simone Boccaccio/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images. All rights reserved
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Speaking to a delegation of journalists in July, the head of the Libyan Coast Guard (LCG) told the room that his crews have rescued more than 9,300 people from the Mediterranean Sea this year. Masoud Abdul Samad praised the group’s professionalism, and said it will continue to fulfil its duties from Libya’s new, EU-funded Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre once it becomes operational in October.

There was no mention of the masked armed men who intercepted a recent NGO rescue operation off the Libyan coast, nor of the video footage showing the LCG attacking a dinghy in the Mediterranean with dozens on board. The widespread and well-documented abuse and killings in migrant detention centres on Libya’s shores were not touched upon either.

This was a PR exercise, not an honest accounting of the coast guard’s activities or impact.