Doctors Without Borders, known as Médecins Sans
Frontières (MSF) in French, is an international humanitarian medical
non-governmental organisation of French origin, best known for its projects in
conflict zones and in countries affected by endemic diseases.
According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), human
rights groups have repeatedly documented cases of abuse and torture in Libyan
migrant prisons, and a two-month-old conflict around the capital Tripoli has
worsened the situation.
Sam Turner, MSF head of mission in Libya, yesterday,
said: “There are no safe places in Libya to take these migrants and refugees in
order to remove them from the risk of conflict. This is why we are urgently
calling for their humanitarian evacuation.”
Julien Raickman, MSF head of mission in Misrata and
Khoms, added: “The situation remains very, very worrying and this has to stop
as soon as possible. This human suffering is too high.”
MSF also called on EU states to stop supporting the
Libyan coastguard, which intercepts migrants at sea and returns them to
detention camps.
The migrants who need rescuing from detention are no
more than 5,500-5,800, or about 1 per cent of the estimated total number of
foreigners in Libya, said Turner.
Preempting European concerns about the risk of a
mass inflow of asylum-seekers from Libya, he said the vast majority of migrants
who live in the country have no plans to migrate to Europe.
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