65 migrants’ bodies found in Libya mass grave

65 migrants’ bodies found in Libya mass grave

UN agency warns of more tragedies if dangers of ‘deadliest migratory route’ are not addressed

Migrants crossing the Sahara desert into Libya ride on the back of a pickup truck outside Agadez, Niger in 2016. Libya is a major transit route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty as they attempt to reach the Mediterranean to travel onward to Europe. (Reuters File Photo)
Migrants crossing the Sahara desert into Libya ride on the back of a pickup truck outside Agadez, Niger in 2016. Libya is a major transit route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty as they attempt to reach the Mediterranean to travel onward to Europe. (Reuters File Photo)

The bodies of at least 65 migrants have been discovered in a mass grave in southwestern Libya, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

In a statement on its X account on Friday, the IOM said the circumstances of the migrants’ deaths and nationalities was unknown “but it is believed that they died in the process of being smuggled through the desert”.

Libya has turned into a transit route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty to Europe across the Mediterranean following the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.

In an unverified message on Facebook, the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the interior ministry in Tripoli on Monday posted drone video of a desert area, showing white markings and yellow tape around the remains of bodies with numbers on them.

The CID said the bodies were found in al-Jahriya valley in Al Shuwairf town, about 420 kilometres south of Tripoli.

Reuters could not independently verify the footage.

The department said that after taking DNA samples, all the bodies were buried in a cemetery on instructions from the attorney-general of the appeals chamber in Gharyan town.

According to the IOM, at least 3,129 deaths and disappearances of migrants were recorded in 2023 along the Mediterranean route, which it described as “the deadliest migratory route”.

“Without regular pathways that provide opportunities for legal migration, such tragedies will continue to be a feature along this route,” it said.

The organisation has called on all governments and authorities along the route “to enhance regional cooperation to ensure the safety and protection of migrants”.

Oil-rich Libya is home to a total of 704,369 migrants from over 43 nationalities, according to data collected in 100 Libyan municipalities in mid-2023, United Nations figures show.

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