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A Rohingya family sits under a makeshift tent at a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. Photographer: Ismail Ferdous/Bloomberg

Migrants Released Amid Fighting In Libyan Capital Seek Refuge With UN

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Wednesday, October 30th, 2019
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Hundreds of migrants were released on Tuesday from a detention centre in the Libyan capital Tripoli as heavy gunfire rang out across the city, witnesses and the United Nations said.

At least 200 of the migrants made their way to a centre for processing resettlement cases set up in Tripoli by U.N. refugee agency UNHCR, where they were seeking access, the agency said.

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Reuters reporters saw the migrants near the centre surrounded by guards and covering their heads from heavy rains, about two hours after residents started posting photos of the migrants walking through the streets.

The International Organisation for Migration (IOM), another U.N. agency, said 600 had been released from the Abu Slim centre. “Their safety is of major concern as armed clashes continue in Tripoli,” it said.

Tripoli has been hit by renewed violence since April, when the eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) began battling forces aligned with the internationally recognised Tripoli government for control of the capital.

Migrants have been repeatedly caught in the crossfire during clashes in Tripoli, and Abu Slim is located in the south of the capital, close to the front lines. Heavy artillery fire could be heard from centre of the city on Tuesday.

It was unclear why the migrants had been released or where they might be transferred. Officials could not be reached and journalists were not allowed to speak to the migrants.

Several thousand migrants are held in detention centres officially run by the Tripoli government. In practice, the centres are controlled by armed groups and there is widespread abuse inside them, according to migrants, aid works and rights defenders.

Libya, with an estimated migrant population of 640,000, has been one of the main departure points for migrants trying to reach Europe. Boatloads of migrants leave frequently from Libya’s north-western coast, though the number attempting the crossing has dropped sharply since mid-2017.

Recently, several detention centres have been closed following international pressure, and migrants intercepted at sea by Libya’s EU-backed coastguard have been freed rather than being taken to detention centres.

The UNHCR centre, known as the Gathering and Departure Facility (GDF), has been plagued by problems since opening late last year.

More than half of the 880 migrants at the GDF entered “informally”, some after fleeing another Tripoli detention centre hit by an airstrike that killed more than 50 in July, UNHCR Special Envoy Vincent Cochetel told Reuters last week.

“Recently, the GDF has been severely over-capacity, leaving us unable to utilise it for its original purpose of evacuating people of out harm’s way,” he said.

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