MSF write to leaders in war with Libya not 'shirk responsibilities' towards victims
The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders - Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) published an open letter today in 13 newspapers across Europe, addressed to the leaders of European Union member states involved in the war in Libya.
In the letter, MSF criticizes contradictory European policies, which claim to be executing a war to protect civilians, while closing borders to the victims of that same war on the pretext of preventing a massive influx of illegal immigrants.
“The European states involved in the war in Libya are shirking their obligations, both legal and moral, and are neglecting the victims of the war to which they are a party,” said Unni Karunakara, international president of MSF. “The words and the actions of our leaders, presented against a backdrop of the battle against illegal immigration, actually restrict access to Europe for the victims of war. This political cynicism is shameful.”
There is a discrepancy between the reception offered by Tunisia and Egypt—which have accepted nearly 630,000 people fleeing neighboring Libya—and that provided by European states, which have turned back boat people risking their lives to reach Europe.
“The people we are seeing in Lampedusa tell us about the threats and violence they have been subjected to in Libya: some have been beaten or have seen their friends die in front of their eyes,” said Loris De Filippi, MSF’s director of operations. “They arrive exhausted, often suffering from hypothermia, after travelling for long hours and risking their lives. What they find when they reach Europe are unacceptable reception conditions and total uncertainty regarding their future.”
The open letter also notes the legal obligation to protect the rights of victims of war by “guaranteeing their non-refoulement (i.e. not being returned to places where their lives may be under threat) from Europe’s territorial waters and lands to a war zone, and by ensuring that they are received properly in Europe and have access to asylum procedures when they so request.”