The
Last Country We “Liberated” from an “Evil”
Dictator Is Now Openly Trading Slaves
By
Carey Wedler
April
18, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-It
is widely known that the U.S.-led NATO
intervention to topple Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi
in 2011 resulted in a power vacuum that has
allowed terror
groups like ISIS to gain a foothold in the
country.
Despite the destructive consequences of the 2011
invasion, the West is currently taking a similar
trajectory with regard to Syria. Just as the
Obama administration excoriated Gaddafi in 2011,
highlighting his human rights abuses and
insisting he must be removed from power to
protect the Libyan people, the Trump
administration is now pointing to the repressive
policies of Bashar al-Assad in Syria and
warning his
regime will soon
come to an end
— all in the name of protecting Syrian
civilians.
But as
the U.S. and its allies fail to produce legal
grounds for their recent air strike — let alone
provide concrete evidence to back up their
claims Assad was responsible for a deadly
chemical attack last week — more hazards of
invading foreign countries and removing their
heads of state are emerging.
This week, new findings
revealed
another unintended consequence of “humanitarian
intervention”: the growth of the human slave
trade.
The Guardian
reports that
while “violence, extortion and slave labor” have
been a reality for people trafficked through
Libya in the past, the slave trade has recently
expanded. Today, people are selling other human
beings out in the open.
“The
latest reports of ‘slave markets’ for migrants
can be added to a long list of outrages [in
Libya],” said Mohammed Abdiker, head of
operation and emergencies for the International
Office of Migration, an intergovernmental
organization that promotes “humane and
orderly migration for the benefit of all,”
according to
its website. “The situation is dire. The more
IOM engages inside Libya, the more we learn that
it is a vale of tears for all too many migrants.”
The
North African country is commonly used as a
point of exit for refugees fleeing other parts
of the continent. But since Gaddafi was
overthrown in 2011, “the vast, sparsely
populated country has slid into violent chaos
and migrants with little cash and usually no
papers are particularly vulnerable,” the
Guardian explains.
One
survivor from Senegal said he was passing
through Libya from Niger with a group of other
migrants attempting to flee their home
countries. They had paid a smuggler to transport
them via bus to the coast, where they would risk
taking a boat to Europe. But rather than take
them to the coast, the smuggler took them to a
dusty lot in Sabha, Libya. According to Livia
Manente, an IOM officer who interviews
survivors, “their driver suddenly said
middlemen had not passed on his fees and put his
passengers up for sale.”
“Several
other migrants confirmed his story,
independently describing kinds of slave markets
as well as kinds of private prisons all over in
Libya,” she said, adding IOM Italy had
confirmed similar stories from migrants landing
in southern Italy.
The Senegalese survivor said he was taken to a
makeshift prison,
which the Guardian notes are common in
Libya.
“Those held inside are forced to work without
pay, or on meager rations, and their captors
regularly call family at home demanding a
ransom. His captors asked for 300,000 west
African francs (about £380), then sold him on to
a larger jail where the demand doubled without
explanation.”
When
migrants were held too long without having a
ransom paid for them, they were taken away and
killed. “Some wasted away on meager rations
in unsanitary conditions, dying of hunger and
disease, but overall numbers never fell,”
the Guardian reported.
“If the number of migrants goes
down, because of death or someone is ransomed,
the kidnappers just go to the market and buy one,”
Manente said.
Giuseppe Loprete, IOM Niger’s chief of mission,
confirmed these disturbing reports. “It’s
very clear they see themselves as being treated
as slaves,” he said. He arranged for the
repatriation of 1,500 migrants just in the first
three months of this year and is concerned more
stories and incidents will emerge as more
migrants return from Libya.
“And
conditions are worsening in Libya so I think we
can also expect more in the coming months,”
he added.
As the United States government continues to
entertain regime change in Syria as a viable
solution to the many crises in that country, it
is becoming ever-more evident that ousting
dictators — however detestable they may be — is
not effective. Toppling Saddam Hussein led not
only to the deaths of civilians and
radicalization within
the population, but also the
rise of ISIS.
As Libya, once a beacon of stability in the
region, continues to devolve in the fallout from
the Western “humanitarian” intervention – and as
human beings are dragged into emerging slave
trades while
rapes and kidnappings
plague the
population — it
is increasingly obvious that further war will
only create even further suffering in unforeseen
ways.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
This article was first published
at
AntiMedia