The Bani Walid detention camp is a secret prison in northwest Libya near the town of Bani Walid operated by human traffickers since at least 2009. Prisoners at the center often come from subsaharan Africa en route to Europe, and include adolescents and women. In order to extort their families, detention guards reportedly torture, rape, or threaten prisoners, who face similar conditions in other camps in the region. In May 2018, many Bani Walid prisoners attempted to escape, with most being shot or recaptured.
Agence France Presse has reported that there are approximately 20 detention centers in and around the town of Bani Walid.[1]
Origins
editThe Geneva nonprofit agency Global Detention Project has reported that the Bani Walid Immigrant Detention Centre has been in operation since 2009.[2] After the 2011 fall of the government of Muammar Gaddafi, Libya became a major site of transit for migrants desperate to reach Europe, and Bani Walid is an important node in the migration route.[1] As of 2018 there were approximately 700,000 migrants in Libya.[3]
Conditions
editReuters and Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontières, or MSF), which has worked in the region around Bani Walid since 2017, have stated that migrants are often kidnapped or tortured for extortion.[4][5] The BBC have reported that migrants are forced to call home while being tortured, in order to extort money from families.[6] The World Socialist Web Site has reported that the Ben Walid camp is privately operated and that the United Nations does not have access to it.[3]
In October 2017, a former guard at the Bani Walid camp, Osman Matammud, was convicted in Milan, Italy of murder, abduction, and sexual violence against female detainees at the Bani Walid detention camp.[7] At the trial, witnesses to torture and abuse in the camp said that young women were repeatedly raped, and that plastic bags were placed on the backs of migrants and set on fire.[7] Others said that migrants died from torture, starvation, thirst or lack of medical treatment.[8]
Ilda Boccassini, an Italian prosecutor who has spent her career prosecuting the Mafia, stated that conditions in Bani Walid were similar to those in transit camps throughout the region.[9]
MSF have stated that they provide 50 body bags each month to an organization in Bani Walid that attempts to bury migrant dead in the area, and that 730 migrants were buried in 2017.[10]
2018 escape
editOn May 25, 2018, MSF reported that over 100 detainees held at the camp were shot as they attempted to escape.[4] At least 15 were killed and 40 were left behind at the camp, with those remaining mostly women.[4] Residents, elders, and doctors of the town of Bani Walid attempted to defend the escapees who reached the town against detention camp staff pursuing them.[4]
MSF doctors treated 25 of the escapees at Bani Walid General hospital, where victims suffered from serious gunshot wounds and fractures.[4] Many had scars from old wounds sustained from up to three years of captivity, which included electric burns.[4] Some survivors said that they had left and been sold back to the camp numerous times.[3] Survivors of the escape attempt were primarily adolescents from Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia, some seeking asylum in Europe.[4] The survivors were moved to a security facility in Bani Walid and then to detention camps in Tripoli.[4]
In February 2020, Kidane Habtemariam Zekarias was arrested in Addis Abeba, head of Bani Walid detention camp, but in 2021 he managed to escape by bribing guards. Also, Tewelde Goitom was arrested in March 2020.[11]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Over 100 migrants escape from Libya trafficking camp". News24. AFP. 26 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Bani Walid Detention Centre". Global Detention Project. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ a b c Arens, Marianne (4 June 2018). "Libyan militias shoot 15 dead after mass escape from migrant torture camp". World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Medical Group Says Many Migrants Killed in Libya Escape". New York Times. Associated Press. 25 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ Lewis, Aidan (27 April 2018). "Suffering for migrants in Libya 'worse' since fall-off in sea crossings". Reuters. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ Guerin, Orlda (7 September 2017). "Libyan migrant detention centre: 'It's like hell'". BBC. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ a b Squires, Nick (10 October 2017). "Sadistic people smuggler who raped and murdered migrants in Libyan desert sentenced to life in prison". The Telegraph. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Torturing migrants gets Somali man life sentence in Italy". The Local IT. Agence France Press.
- ^ Squires, Nick (18 January 2017). "Refugees tortured and raped in squalid desert camps, arrest of Somali 'sadist' reveals". The Telegraph. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Libya: Caring for Migrants and Refugees "Enduring Hell" in Detention". doctorswithoutborders.org. Medecins San Frontieres. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Eine Frau gegen die brutalsten Menschenhändler der Welt - Die Jägerin (3/4) - Der Prozess". Deutschlandfunk/NDR 2022 (in German). Retrieved 2023-05-19.