Passage through Libya has long been the main route from
Africa to Europe. Sabha is one of Libya’s most lawless towns, where
deep-running tribal divisions mean large parts of the city are inaccessible to
residents, depending on their tribal background. “Nobody controls Sabha and no
one feels safe here,” The Third Force [a ‘peacekeeping’ force from Libya’s
third city of Misrata] say they are in control, but they actually only control
one neighbourhood. Today, the main path for sub-Saharan Africans to reach the
Mediterranean coast is organised between several regional tribes and runs from
the city of Agadez in central Niger to Sabha. Migrants told IRIN the arrival in
Sabha heralded the worst part of their journey to the eastern Mediterranean.
When we arrived, we were immediately taken to a kind of
prison, a house where there were about 200 other migrants,” said 19-year-old
Bouba from Senegal. “They made us call our families back home and demanded that
they sent 2,000 Libyan dinar ($1,458) for each person.”
Jens, 24, from Guinea Bissau showed scars on his arms and
back, which he said were from brutal beatings inflicted by his captors. “They
beat me and kept saying: ‘What’s wrong with you? Why don’t your parents send
the money? Don’t they love you?’ It was horrible, but my family has so little
money that it took them two months to borrow enough to pay for my release.”
“Sabha is just a terrible place,” said Nigerian electrician
Sammy, 35, now working in Tripoli. “When I arrived there, the Nigerian
middleman said I owed him money for the journey he helped organise. I had my
passport taken and was imprisoned. They demanded $2,000 and I had to phone my
mother and ask her to sell all my possessions, including the family’s
generator. But that only made the equivalent of 300 dinar ($219).” He described
how he was forced to work for eight months in Sabha to make enough money to pay
the outstanding balance. “I worked like a slave in a house for African
prostitutes, where I cleaned, cooked for the women and washed their clothes,”
he said. “They were prisoners too, but captured migrant women are forced to be
prostitutes in Sabha. Some of them were from Nigeria, like me. Imagine: I had
to watch my sisters being used in this way. They were paid $10 to have sex with
disgusting old men. It made me feel sick, but I could do nothing to help them.”
A young Nigerian woman, Marie, 23, said she narrowly escaped
this fate after the woman who arranged her journey to Libya, with the false
promise of a retail job in Europe, turned on her in Sabha. “Her Libyan
boyfriend came to meet us and they told me I had to pay 2,000 dinar ($1,458) if
I wanted to continue my journey. When I said I couldn’t pay, he said: ‘you will
use your body to get the money’. But I refused,” she said. “They made me call my mum and put the phone
on speaker and beat me so my mum could hear me screaming.” Her captors
eventually accepted a smaller sum, which a distant relative brought, in person,
from Tripoli.
The desert route is worked almost exclusively by the Tabu, a
semi-nomadic Saharan tribe populating harsh and inhospitable terrain with few
opportunities in Libya, Chad and Niger. With other powerful Arab tribes
dominating the smuggling of goods, people smuggling is one of few lucrative job
prospects. Sabha resident Ahmed showed IRIN the location of several huge
warehouses where he claimed migrants, especially women, were kept. At night, he
said, the warehouses became ‘dens of inequity,’ where alcohol and prostitutes
were available, and music blasted out across the town. “One tribe runs that
area and no one from any other tribe can enter,” Ahmed said. ”Even the army
cannot go there.”
A senior police officer in Sabha, who spoke to IRIN on
condition of anonymity. “Even to leave the house wearing a police or military
uniform puts you in immediate danger,” he explained, adding that for the last
two years he has slept in a different place every night, to avoid being killed.
Underfunded, ill-equipped and with staff too afraid to work, the local
Department for Combatting Illegal Immigration has not functioned properly for
several years. Sabha’s migrant detention centre, eight kilometres outside the
town, stands empty, only reachable with a heavily-armed escort. The police
officer said controlling the people-smuggling operations in Sabha was
impossible. “Even the migrants know we are powerless,” he said. “Before, when
they saw us, they ran away. But now they just stand there and stare at us.”
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