Visit the new AsenaTv Website

https://asenatv.com

Concerns over Eritrea’s role in efforts by Africa and EU to manage refugees

Martin Plaut, Senior Research Fellow, Horn of Africa and Southern Africa, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study Early in 2019 the Eritrean government will take over the chair of the key Africa and European

Martin Plaut, Senior Research Fellow, Horn of Africa and Southern Africa, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study

Early in 2019 the Eritrean government will take over the chair of the key Africa and European Union (EU) forum dealing with African migration, known as the Khartoum Process.

The Khartoum Process was established in the Sudanese capital in 2014. It’s had little public profile, yet it’s the most important means Europe has of attempting to halt the flow of refugees and migrants from Africa. The official title says it all: The EU-Horn of Africa Migration Route Initiative. Its main role is spelled out as being:

primarily focused on preventing and fighting migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

Chairing the Khartoum Process alternates between European and African leaders. In January it will be Africa’s turn. The steering committee has five African members – Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Sudan. A number of others nations, such as Kenya to Tunisia, have participating status.

The African countries chose Eritrea to lead this critical relationship. But it’s been heavily criticised because it places refugees and asylum seekers in the hands of a regime that is notorious for its human rights abuses. Worse still, there is evidence that Eritrean officials are directly implicated in human trafficking the Khartoum Process is meant to end.

That the European Union allowed this to happen puts in question its repeated assurances that human rights are at the heart of its foreign policies.

The Khartoum Process

The Khartoum Process involves a huge range of initiatives. All are designed to reduce the number of Africans crossing the Mediterranean. These include training the fragile Libyan government’s coastguards, who round up migrants at sea and return them to the brutal conditions of the Libyan prison camps.

The programme has sometimes backfired. Some EU-funded coastguards have been accused of involvement in people trafficking themselves.

The EU has also established a regional operational centre in Khartoum. But this has meant European officials collaborating with the security forces of a government which has regularly abused its own citizens, as well as foreigners on its soil. President Omar al-Bashir himself has been indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

The centre requires European police and other officers to work directly with the security officials who uphold the Sudanese government. According to the head of the immigration police department,

The planned countertrafficking coordination centre in Khartoum – staffed jointly by police officers from Sudan and several European countries, including Britain, France and Italy – will partly rely on information sourced by Sudanese National Intelligence.

The centre also receives support from Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces, which grew out of the Janjaweed: notorious for the atrocities it committed in Darfur.

These initiatives are all very much in line with the migration agreement signed in the Maltese capital in 2015. Its action plan detailed how European institutions would co-operate with their African partners to fight

irregular migration, migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

Europe promised to offer training to law enforcement and judicial authorities in new methods of investigation and to assist in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units.

It is this sensitive relationship that will now come under Eritrean supervision. They will be dealing with some of the most vulnerable men, women and children who have fled their own countries. It is here that the process gets really difficult, because Eritrean government officials have themselves been implicated in human trafficking. UN researchers, working for the Security Council described how this took place in 2011.

More recently, survivors of human trafficking interviewed by a team led by Dutch professor Mirjam van Reisen, described how the Eritrean Border Surveillance Unit ferried refugees out of Eritrea, at a price.

The danger is that implicated Eritrean officials will play a critical role in the development of the Khartoum Process.

Europe’s commitment to human rights

The EU has repeatedly stressed that its commitment to human rights runs through everything it does. Yet the Eritrean government, with which the EU is now collaborating so closely, has been denounced for its human rights abuses by no less than the Special Rapporteur for Eritrea to the UN Human Rights Council as recently as June 2018.

As Mike Smith, who chaired the UN Commission Inquiry into Eritrea in 2015, put it:

The many violations in Eritrea are of a scope and scale seldom seen anywhere else in today’s world. Basic freedoms are curtailed, from movement to expression; from religion to association. The Commission finds that crimes against humanity may have occurred with regard to torture, extrajudicial executions, forced labour and in the context of national service.

The EU itself has remained silent. It is difficult to see how the EU can allow its key African migration work to be overseen by such a regime, without running foul of its own human rights commitments. European leaders need to reconsider their relationships with African governments implicated in gross human rights abuses if they are to uphold these values.

The Khartoum Process may have reduced the flow of refugees and asylum seekers across the Mediterranean. But it hasn’t eliminated the need for a fresh approach to their plight.

Source: Reliefweb

 

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
3 COMMENTS
  • rezen November 29, 2018

    LET US BE HONEST
    .
    First, the raison d’etre of the meeting – and of such hundred and one meetings, in general – are NOT meant for the benefit of the AFRICAN PEOPLE. And NEVER have been – and will never be, unless the African People are free to determine their own destiny >>> which will NOT happen.

    Second, we must admit that African Leaders are 99% corrupt and self-centered for Life >>> even if they have Doctor of Philosophy Degrees.

    Third, we must be frank that those who organize such meetings, behind the scene, are 99% dedicated to themselves as a source of Employment at the expense of the ordinary African People. Putting it bluntly, they are MODERN DAY sophisticated COLONIZERS, which means, in reality, Africa was NEVER LIBERATED and it will take a long time (I am being magnanimous) for Africa to be liberated in the true meaning of the word “LIBERATION”. THE END

    • Asmara Eritrea November 29, 2018

      I would not have thought the regime in Asmara has anyone left who knows how to sit on a chair properly let alone chair a meeting.

      As Martin says, this forum is a money making machine for those criminals who are already making millions by trafficking people directly from the Centre of Asmara to the Centre of Europe, and they will make even more money through this unethical forum. This is a waste of my income/corporation tax and indeed that of many millions of European tax payers.

      The EU would be better off flashing the money down the toilet than wasting it in such a useless forum – at least that way, the money won’t be used to kill people! For once I am Brexiter!

      Eritrea forever, death to dictatorship.

    • k.tewolde December 1, 2018

      You right on the money rezen,Africa needs bright,smart and selfless leaders with clear vision capable of extricating the dark continent from the post colonial rut it finds itself chronically,however start looking at the homegrown tyrant we have and go down the line,you see one,you see them all with one goal – maim,torture,murder,jail..their own people,rob and steal their nation’s resources and stash the loot and invest it abroad and refuse to abdicate their absolute lifetime power to the people.Access to the vast rich natural resources of this beleaguered continent is reserved to the foreign investors while the owners look outside of their nation for hope of a better living. Isn’t that ironic!! That is the reason why they said,>>Mother Africa is the worst enemy of her children- she eats them.

Post a Reply to rezen Cancel Reply