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Wednesday 12 July 2017

EU naval mission has failed to end people smuggling - peers


An EU naval mission has failed to achieve its main 
objective of disrupting people smuggling, a Lords committee report has concluded.

Operation Sophia, which the UK supports, appears to have done little to deter migration and its mandate should not be renewed, peers said.

However, they said search and rescue work in the Mediterranean had saved many lives and should continue.

The government said UK ships had led to "fewer children
drowning".

Operation Sophia, an initiative undertaken by 25 EU 
member states, including the UK, was launched in 2015 
in the wake of disasters in which hundreds of migrants drowned attempting to reach Europe.

Its aim was to help disrupt organised criminals involved in human smuggling and trafficking networks in the southern central Mediterranean.

But in 2016, detections of migrants in the central Mediterranean were at their highest point yet, the EU 
External Affairs sub- committee found.

Some 181,436 people arrived in Europe by this route - an
increase of 18% on 2015 when the figure was 153,842.

An unintended consequence of the destruction of smugglers'
boats has been that they are now sending migrants to sea in
unseaworthy vessels, resulting in more deaths at sea, the
committee said.

Baroness Verma, chairman of the committee, said a naval
mission was the wrong tool for tackling people smuggling
because it begins onshore.

And she said that while Operation Sophia had failed in its 
main objective, it had been a "humanitarian success".

She added: "Future UK and EU action should focus on 
tackling people smuggling in source and transit countries, 
and supporting sustainable economic development and good governance in these countries.

"Italy has found itself on the front line of a mass movement 
of people into Europe, and deserves credit for its efforts to
respond."


'Saving lives'

Other findings from the report included:

Operation Sophia vessels have rescued more than 33,000
people since the mission's inception

Recorded drownings on the central Mediterranean route
increased by about 42% in 2016 - some 4,500 compared to
3,175 in 2015

There have been 2,150 recorded deaths to date in 2017

A unified government in Libya is a precondition for 
mean onshore EU action against people smuggling 
networks onshore

The operation's figures show 110 suspected smugglers 
and traffickers have been apprehended and 463 boats prevented from being re-used since it started.

A UK government spokesman said: "Operation Sophia, 
and the UK's contribution to it, is saving lives and helping to disrupt the activities of smugglers who continue to exploit migrants trying to reach Europe.

"UK ships mean fewer children drowning and dangerous
smuggling boats destroyed before they can be reused.

"The operation is part of the UK government's wider 
approach to tackling irregular migration at source."

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