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Libya teems with 'inhuman' migrant camps, UN says, as Italy sees fewer refugees

The UN human rights chief says the European Union policy of helping Libyan authorities intercept migrants on the Mediterranean and return them to Libya is "inhuman."

Italy, EU have helped Libya bolster maritime patrols of dangerous Mediterranean crossings

Migrants look out of a barred door at a detention centre in Gharyan, Libya on Oct. 12. The UN said it inspected four camps in Libya recently, decrying the conditions they found. (Hani Amara/Reuters)

The UN human rights chief says the European Union policy of helping Libyan authorities intercept migrants on the Mediterranean and return them to Libya is "inhuman."

Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein decried "unimaginable horrors" faced by 19,900 migrants now detained in the North African country, more than 2½ times the number in mid-September.

He appealed Tuesday to the international community to face up to the "unimaginable horrors" the detained migrants are facing.

UN rights monitors this month visited four facilities in Tripoli operated by Libya's Department of Combating Illegal Migration.

Zeid, a Jordanian prince, said the monitors were shocked at the sight of "thousands of emaciated and traumatized men, women and children piled on top of each other, locked up in hangars with no access to the most basic necessities."

While UN agencies and other humanitarian groups have access to them and seek to provide health care and some food, Zeid said it was not enough because "the EU and its member states have done nothing so far to reduce the level of abuses suffered by migrants."

Migrants gather at a detention centre in Gharyan, Libya on Oct. 12. Sudan, Eritrea and Ethiopia are quite represented at camps in Libya, but many would-be migrants from other parts of Africa as well as the Middle East try to reach Europe through Libya. (Hani Amara/Reuters)

Just a day ago, European and African ministers repeated a pledge to try to improve conditions for migrants in Libya, and last week Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni hailed Italian immigration policy.

"Italy is the only country in Europe with a decent migration policy," Gentiloni said. "We're proud because we don't build walls or close ports." 

But it was Italy that struck a deal with the UN-backed Tripoli in February, which was endorsed by the whole of the EU, aimed at blocking migrants in Libya, much as the EU deal with Turkey did last year.

The EU anti-trafficking mission Sophia has helped train Tripoli's coast guard, while Italy has supplied Libya with four patrol boats and sent millions and a navy repair shop to fix Libya's marine fleet.

The agreement has brought migrant sea arrivals down dramatically in recent months.

This year there have been 115,000 sea arrivals in Italy, down 31 per cent from last year, official data from Italy's Interior Ministry show. In October alone arrivals dropped by 76 per cent from a year earlier. 

Sudanese citizens represent the largest proportion at Libyan camps, according to a UN report, their numbers reflecting both those who sought to work in Libya for a limited period of time and those who aimed to cross into Europe. Eritrea and Ethiopia citizens are also heavily represented at the camps.

With files from Reuters