Human Rights Watch trok deze week opnieuw aan de bel voor de schrijnende taferelen die zich afspelen op de smokkelroutes naar Europa. Zo rapporteert Human Rights Watch dat vluchtelingen regelmatig te maken krijgen met seksueel geweld, marteling en moord. De huiveringwekkende... gebeurtenissen tonen aan waarom mensen hun toevlucht zoeken tot Europa. Maar het geeft ook aan waarom het werk van Human Rights Watch zo belangrijk is: om met ooggetuigen te praten, hun verhalen te verifiëren en ze wereldkundig te maken. Onafhankelijkheid is daarbij haar belangrijkste kracht: zij is niet gebonden aan enige regering en kan zich daarom objectief inzetten voor alle vormen van schendingen van mensenrechten. Het werk van Human Rights Watch is zwaar, veelzijdig en niet zonder risico. Medewerkers van Human Rights Watch interviewen slachtoffers, daders en ooggetuigen. Ze werken tussen puinhopen, zien veel leed en horen gruwelijke verhalen. Zo rapporteert Human Rights Watch over de taferelen op de smokkelroutes naar Europa: “In June, Human Rights Watch interviewed 47 people in Sicily, 23 women and 24 men, who had recently travelled from Libya to Italy on smugglers’ boats. Those interviewed – from Cameroon, Eritrea, Gambia, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Senegal, and Sudan – said they had left their homes to flee persecution, including abusive military service, to escape forced marriage, or to seek education and work. They described severe abuses in Libya by government officials, smugglers, and members of militias and criminal gangs, and at times collaboration between officials and smugglers. Rampant lawlessness and violence across Libya convinced those who had gone there for work to attempt the perilous sea crossing to Europe.” “Five women interviewed said smugglers or criminals had raped them in Libya. A sixth said that smugglers had sexually abused her there and that she saw men take other girls away. Three Eritreans, including a 16-year-old girl, said smugglers had raped them in Sudan, and a fourth said smugglers had sexually abused her there. Another Eritrean woman said criminals had raped her in Chad.” “Migrants and asylum seekers in Sicily described extreme violence in Libyan immigration detention centers, including beatings and deadly shootings. “Medhane,” a 21-year-old Eritrean, said he was detained twice during his 18 months in Libya: It was terrible, really awful. The guards were scaring us with their guns…. There were around 300 people already there, and more came after us. We stayed in the cells. I don’t know how many of us were in there, but we couldn’t lie down to sleep. Just had to sleep sitting…. They beat us, always looking for money, always searching our clothes.” De getuigenissen en het veldwerk vormen een belangrijk onderdeel van de werkwijze van van Human Rights Watch:
Wil je meer weten over het werk en de werkwijze van Human Rights Watch? Kijk dan de indrukwekkende documentaire “E-Team” op Netflix, over het Emergencies Team van Human Rights Watch. Wil je meer weten over de Europese aanpak van de vluchtelingencrisis in Libië? Kijk dan op: https://www.hrw.org/news/2016/07/06/eu/nato-europes-plan-endangers-foreigners-libya. |