The EU is bankrolling a system that traps migrants in Libya's cycle of abuse, funding a coast guard that shoots at rescue boats and intercepts people fleeing war. Pouring money into armed groups with documented war crimes records isn't migration management — it's outsourcing brutality. Expanding that cooperation to eastern Libya, where thousands face mass arrests and forced deportations, makes the EU directly responsible for what happens next.
Libya's itselfconviction convictedof a prison director for torturing migrants, provingshows that accountability iscan possibleemerge from within. The EUE.U.'s engagement isn'tis blindnot a blanket endorsement —of itLibya's system, but one of the onlyfew levertools pushingavailable Libyato towardencourage more rights-based migration management andwhile awaycurbing from unchecked smuggling networks. PullingCutting fundingsupport and walking away abandonswould leave the roughly 900,000 migrants already therein toLibya awith vacuumeven whereless nooversight and fewer international standards apply at all.
There is a 61% chance that Libya will experience a successful coup d'etat before 2040, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
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