Posted by a far right. He read tweeted three videos posted by jade of france and the deputy leader of the Britain First Group earlier this month france and was convicted of abusing a muslim woman those are the headlines on aljazeera do stay with us inside story is coming up next ill have more headlines for you in just under half an hour thank you for watching. Whos to blame for african migrants being sold as slaves and European Countries rushed to help libyans get rid of gadhafi quickly abandon them help them and legal migration be controlled in a failed state this is inside story. Hello there and welcome to the program im laura kyle video of slaves apparently being auctioned in libya is causing widespread outrage politicians in europe are keen to stem the flow of african refugees and migrants but they often drowned in the mediterranean or left stranded in transit countries like libya where they were torture right and forced labor even by governments and libya is promising to increase
During a visit to the Tarik al-Sikka detention centre in Tripoli, Libyan Interior Minister Imed Trabelsi announces the deportation of over 250 undocumented migrants from sub-Saharan African nations and Asia to their respective countries
Med: Tragedy Continues as Routes Change and Situation in Libya Deteriorates Even Further | European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) ecre.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ecre.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Libyan security forces raided and violently broke up a protest sit-in by migrants outside a shuttered U.N. community center in the capital of Tripoli, activists and migrants said Monday.
Image: Hokyoung Kim for NPR
Stuck on a stalled motorized inflatable raft in the open sea, 15-year-old Tsedal began to panic.
She and the other passengers, more than 60 migrants from the African countries of Eritrea and Sudan, had set off from neighboring Libya, where their lives had become unbearable. They were trying to cross more than 100 miles of the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe.
Repeated distress calls brought no help. The passengers were suffering from dehydration and sunstroke. Two babies on board cried with such anguish that Tsedal could feel their wails deep in her chest. Everyone kept screaming, We are all going to die! says Tsedal, an Eritrean whose last name NPR is withholding because she s a minor whose life is often in danger. The raft seemed to be sinking. We believed we would disappear with it under the water.