{"id":1118,"date":"2022-12-10T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-12-10T10:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/?post_type=proposition&#038;p=1118"},"modified":"2024-01-18T13:13:27","modified_gmt":"2024-01-18T13:13:27","slug":"the-human-despite-all","status":"publish","type":"proposition","link":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/positions\/the-human-despite-all\/","title":{"rendered":"The human despite all"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h2>From the abyss of Libyan detention to the forging of commonality through struggles<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>Charles Heller,&nbsp;9<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;of&nbsp;December&nbsp;2021 <sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"1\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">1<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"1\">I would like to express my gratitude to Manuela Honegger, Itamar Mann, Omar Somi, Eyal Weizman, Bridget Anderson, Sandro Mezzadra, Deanna Dadusc, Bernd Kasparek, David Yambio and all the comrades of the Unfair campaign for feeling and thinking with me as I worked through this text.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img src=\"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/app\/uploads\/2022\/12\/IMG_20211206_094820_Original-1024x461.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-1124\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p><em><em>Why&nbsp;am&nbsp;I joining&nbsp;a demonstration in solidarity with migrants and refugees in Libya in front of the UNHCR in Geneva on the 9<\/em><sup><em>th<\/em><\/sup><em>&nbsp;and 10th&nbsp;of December?<\/em>&nbsp;<em>What may seem like the simplest of questions conjures&nbsp;a series of far more challenging ones.&nbsp;At stake are nothing less than the recognition of the depth of the wounds born by those who have been denied their humanity in Libya, how and why this should concern us all, and what humans might become in struggling together against and across the boundaries that cut across our life in common.<\/em><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>Segen and me<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Why&nbsp;do I believe it is essential that&nbsp;I, and others, join a demonstration in solidarity with&nbsp;migrants and&nbsp;refugees in Libya in front of the UNHCR in Geneva&nbsp;on the 9<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;and 10<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;of December? As I ponder answers to this question,&nbsp;the mental image of&nbsp;Segen&nbsp;imposes itself on me.&nbsp;I never met&nbsp;Segen, but his photograph circulated in the press and is still imprinted on my memory several years after. His dark and&nbsp;emaciated&nbsp;face is portrayed in the shade, but his&nbsp;eyes&nbsp;stand out.&nbsp;His&nbsp;gaze feels&nbsp;empty&nbsp;and yet&nbsp;I feel&nbsp;him&nbsp;staring at me.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Segen&nbsp;(whose real name was&nbsp;Tesfalidet&nbsp;Tesfom) was a&nbsp;22 year old&nbsp;Eritrean man. He crossed the sea from Libya, where he had spent 19 months in detention. He was disembarked from the ship of the Spanish NGO Open Arms on the 12<sup>th<\/sup>&nbsp;of&nbsp;March&nbsp;2018 in&nbsp;Pozzallo, Sicily. Upon his arrival, he weighed only 30 kilos.&nbsp;The day after he set foot in Italy, he&nbsp;died of malnutrition and from an advanced state of tuberculosis which had perforated his lung.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I would like to know more about who Segen was, about his trajectory of life before arriving in Libya, about what made him happy or sad, what he aspired to. To date, the work of journalists has mostly focused on the ordeal he faced in Libya. Merawy, a friend of Segen who saw him in hospital just before he passed away, recalled to Alessandro Puglia Segen\u2019s last words. \u201cHe barely had a whisper of voice and in those brief moments he confessed that it was Libya that had killed him. He told me that all the migrants were crammed in a room in the detention camp of Bani-Walid, they urinated and emptied their bowels in the same room, the women were sexually abused, the men were beaten, nobody could wash and he was fed once or twice a day. Then the doctors told me to go away and Segen died shortly after\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"2\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">2<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"2\">Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan inferno in Segen\u2019s poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/span>. In a cruel twist of fate, Segen had survived and escaped captivity, crossed the deadly sea, arrived finally on European soil where he may have hoped to find some degree of protection and safety, only to be caught up by the lasting effects of the violence he had been subjected to for too long.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I never met Segen and yet I will never forget him. As I stared at the photograph picturing his emaciated face and in his empty gaze, I \u2013 and others such as Eritrean priest Father Mussie Zerai &#8211; recognized the faces of the survivors of Nazi death camps. Maybe because the Holocaust has become the paradigm of absolute evil in Europe and North America, and maybe because I recognize that as a result of my partly Jewish family, at another time, that emaciated face could have been mine, I was moved to tears. That shock of recognition, despite the privileges I have today as result of the whiteness of my skin and Swiss citizenship, and the difficult questions it spurs, have stayed with me since, and I feel the need to write and reflect upon them today. At stake are nothing less than the recognition of the depth of the wounds born by those who have been denied their humanity in Libya, how and why this should concern us all, and what humans might become in struggling together against and across the boundaries that cut across our life in common.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>The ambivalent politics of comparison<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Do I and others need to see the faces of yesterday\u2019s Jewish survivors in the faces of today\u2019s migrants, and of black people in particular, to be able to recognize their humanity? Is this projection and comparison necessary to recognize the scale of the violence that those seeking to escape Libya are subjected to? If so, for who and why is it necessary? Whether I like it or not, from the perspective of my position and personal history, I cannot deny that the photograph of Segen and the flash of the connection across people, places and times it crystalized for me, led me to see his face in a different light \u2013 a terrifying one.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Is the comparison between Libya\u2019s migrant detention camps and Nazi death camps a justified one? What are the risks and problems that arise in the process? As horrifying as it may be, the violence inflicted upon migrants in Libya today does not aim at extermination. But comparison does not amount to simple equation. It rather involves the careful assessment of similarities and differences towards the understanding of distinct situations. Beyond this however, comparing Libya\u2019s migrant detention camps with Nazi camps risks reinstating the Holocaust as the single paradigm of absolute evil against which all past and present crimes should be measured.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"3\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">3<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"3\">See Enzo Traverso, <em>The End of Jewish Modernity<\/em>, Pluto Press, 2016. Yitzhak Laor, <em>The Myths of Liberal Zionism<\/em>, Verso, New York, NY, 2010.<\/span> This is a status I would refuse and resist, for the hierarchies of sufferings it establishes, and the way it can in turn be used to legitimize the dispossession and oppression of Palestinian people.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"4\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">4<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"4\">Gil Z. Hochberg, \u201cEdward Said: \u201cThe Last Jewish Intellectual\u201d\u201d, <em>Social Text<\/em> 87, Vol. 24, No. 2, Summer 2006.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Another historical connection was drawn \u2013 and felt viscerally \u2013 by black people across the world when, in November 2017, CNN broadcast a video showing the labour of black subjects being auctioned on the outskirts of Tripoli. The auction recalled tragically the fate of black people captured, shipped, sold and exploited as slaves across the Atlantic, but also across the Sahara and the Mediterranean, a trade for which Libyan ports had operated as important nodes.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"5\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">5<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"5\">For a discussion of the genealogies of slavery and race across the Mediterranean, see Gabriele Proglio et al., <em>The Black Mediterranean: Bodies, Borders and Citizenship<\/em>, Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.<\/span> These images, which gave a new visibility to a reality that had been documented since several years, spurred public outrage and demonstrations led by black people across the world.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"6\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">6<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"6\">Jo\u00e3o Gabriell, \u201cFree Our Brothers!\u201d: On the Politicization of Slavery in Libya within the French Context. <em>South Atlantic Quarterly<\/em> 2019 118 (3): pp. 686\u2013693.&nbsp;<\/span> Was this historical comparison and connection more accurate and relevant then that with the fate of Jews? I would not want to choose one over the other, but rather, as Michael Rothberg has suggested, emphasize instead the possible multidirectionality of entangled relations with the past.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"7\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">7<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"7\">Michael Rothberg, <em>Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization<\/em>, Stanford University Press, 2009.<\/span> I would further consider that any comparison or genealogy connecting past and present must be assessed carefully for what it reveals and conceals. If the comparison with Nazi camps may shed light on the striping of rights and inhuman practices detained migrants are subjected to in the exclusionary architectural and political form of the camp, the comparison with historical forms of slavery rather brings to the fore the dimensions of objectification, domination and exploitation. What both revealed in common was the role of race in shaping the extreme dehumanization migrants trapped in Libya are subjected today.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>Words beyond words<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Is the comparison with past crimes against humanity the only way we can see \u2013 and acknowledge deep in our conscience \u2013 the horrendous crime that is being perpetrated in Libya against our fellow humans? How can we take the measure of the horror and come together to do everything that is in our power to bring to an end the violence migrants are subject to in Libya \u2013 as well as the EU\u2019s outsourcing of border control to the Libyan coast guard that channel migrants into it? Historical comparison may be a necessary experience and strategy at a time when the quantity and public availability of information on violence in Libya has been dissociated from any reaction strong enough to bring it to an end. The multiple and widespread forms of inhuman treatment Segen described and which Libyan state actors as well as armed groups, criminal gangs and militias perpetrate against migrants were already well documented at the time of his death.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"8\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">8<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"8\">For the extent of available knowledge at the time see Amnesty International, \u2018Libya\u2019s Dark web of Collusion: Abuses Against Europe-Bound Refugees&nbsp;and Migrants\u2019, 11 December 2017, Index: MDE 19\/7561\/2017, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/docu-ments\/mde19\/7561\/2017\/en\/\">https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/docu-ments\/mde19\/7561\/2017\/en\/<\/a>&nbsp;, p.56.<\/span> In 2017 the humanitarian organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) interviewed 70 migrants who had been pulled-back by the Libyan coast guard at least once. Among them, 19 (27%) had experienced violence during the interception, and 39 (56%) experienced violence, torture, or other ill-treatment in the place they were taken to upon arrival in Libya.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"9\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">9<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"9\">MSF 2017 data shared with the author and included in Forensic Oceanography\u2019s \u201cMare Clausum\u201d report. <a href=\"https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf\">https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> The findings were echoed by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, who denounced on 11 September 2017 the \u201chorrific abuses migrants face after being intercepted and returned to Libya.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"10\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">10<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"10\">Human Rights Council, 36th session, Opening Statement by Zeid&nbsp;Ra\u2019ad Al Hussein, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, 11 September 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/EN\/NewsEvents\/Pages\/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22041\">http:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/EN\/NewsEvents\/Pages\/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22041<\/a><\/span> Even European government officials, such as Italy\u2019s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mario Giro, admitted on 6 August 2017, that bringing migrants back to Libya \u201cmeans taking them back to hell\u201d.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"11\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">11<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"11\">Marco Menduni, \u2018Giro: \u201cFare rientrare quelle persone vuol dire condannarle all\u2019inferno\u201d\u2019, <em>La Stampa<\/em>, 6 August 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.lastampa.it\/2017\/08\/06\/italia\/cronache\/giro-fare-rientrare-quelle-per-%20sone-vuol-dire-condannarle-allinferno-SXnGzVlzftFl7fNGFCMADN\/pagina.html\">http:\/\/www.lastampa.it\/2017\/08\/06\/italia\/cronache\/giro-fare-rientrare-quelle-per- sone-vuol-dire-condannarle-allinferno-SXnGzVlzftFl7fNGFCMADN\/pagina.html<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> Crimes against migrants in Libya have been documented in further detail since. No later than June 2022 the UN Human Rights Council\u2019s Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Libya concluded that there were \u201creasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity are being committed against migrants in Libya\u201d.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"12\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">12<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"12\">Human Rights Council, Fiftieth session, 13 June\u20138 July 2022, Report of the Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Libya <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/sites\/default\/files\/documents\/hrbodies\/hrcouncil\/regularsession\/session50\/2022-06-29\/A_HRC_50_63_AdvanceUneditedVersion.docx\">https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/sites\/default\/files\/documents\/hrbodies\/hrcouncil\/regularsession\/session50\/2022-06-29\/A_HRC_50_63_AdvanceUneditedVersion.docx<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> <em>Crimes against humanity<\/em>. Crimes that not only violate their direct victims, but, because of their gravity and the groups they target, cut through the very fabric that binds humans together.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"13\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">13<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"13\">David Luban, \u201cA Theory of Crimes Against Humanity\u201d, <em>Yale Journal of International Law<\/em>, 29 (2004): 85-167. Itamar Mann, Border Crimes as Crimes against humanity, in Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster, and Jane McAdam (eds), <em>The Oxford Handbook for International Refugee Law<\/em>, 2021.&nbsp;<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Neither the meticulous factual analysis of violence against migrants in Libya or the use of the strongest normative language to qualify these crimes seem to lead to the electrifying realization of the scale and gravity of the violence being perpetrated. What may be the cause of this apparent numbness to accounts of migrants\u2019 suffering? Are we desensitized by the multiplication of accounts of brutal situations across the world? Do the racial, class and citizenship hierarchies that shapes public perception in the global north lead to the relegation of migrants in Libya within an infrahumanity that is not worth grieving and thus not worth saving?<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"14\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">14<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"14\">Judith Butler, <em>Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable?<\/em>, Verso, London, 2009.<\/span> Do the political imperatives of European states seeking to prevent migrants from the global south from accessing Europe exceed any and all human cost? Is there any way to break through the boundaries that have been drawn across humanity or tilt the scales of political calculations?&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It certainly appears that the careful piecing together of facts by human rights actors in and of itself is no longer up to the task. But the methodologies of human rights investigations are not the sole modalities of truth production. Michel Foucault believed that while scientific truth could be patiently assembled as the fragmented pieces of a puzzle, truth production had operated differently in the past. For ancient oracles or doctors, truth could also impose itself as ruptural event, one that cut through reality and our perception as lighting striking, illuminating the world through its flash.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"15\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">15<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"15\">Michel Foucault, 23 january 1974 lecture in Psychiatric Power, Lectures at the Coll\u00e8ge de France, 1973\u201374, (G. Burchell, Trans.). Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. I thank Mathieu Potte-Bonneville for flagging out this lecture.<\/span> Today, we may see this evental rather than demonstrative truth at work in art and poetry. This is certainly the effect I feel reading writers such as Edouard Glissant or Patrick Chamoiseau, who connect the abyss of the Atlantic that swallowed the bodies of yesterday\u2019s slaves to that awaiting migrants crossing the Mediterranean today.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"16\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">16<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"16\">Patrick Chamoiseau, \u201cLampedusa: ce que nous disent les gouffres\u201d, <em>Mediapart<\/em>, 11 Octobre 2013, <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.mediapart.fr\/patrick-chamoiseau\/blog\/111013\/lampedusa-ce-que-nous-disent-les-gouffres\">https:\/\/blogs.mediapart.fr\/patrick-chamoiseau\/blog\/111013\/lampedusa-ce-que-nous-disent-les-gouffres<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> It is also the effect of the poetry written on scraps of paper by migrants detained in Libya such as Segen himself,<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"17\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">17<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"17\">For Segen\u2019s&nbsp;poems, see&nbsp;Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan&nbsp;inferno in Segen\u2019s&nbsp;poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018,&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/span> or Abdel Wahab Yousif, a Sudanese poet also known as &#8216;Latinos&#8217; who died crossing the sea in Summer 2020.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote\"><p><em>In Vain<\/em><br><br><em>You are destined to meet your fate, Today, tomorrow, or the day after.<\/em><\/p><p><em>No one can stop the wheel of destruction<\/em><\/p><p><em>Crushing over the body of life.<\/em><\/p><p><em>It is all in vain, nothing, no salvation will come,<\/em><\/p><p><em>To rescue the world\u2019s corpse.<\/em><\/p><p><em>All in vain, no flicker of light to scare the darkness. In vain, everything is dying:<\/em><\/p><p><em>Time, Language, screams, dreams, songs<\/em><br><em>Love and music.<\/em><\/p><p><em>In vain, everything is gone,<\/em><\/p><p><em>Except the vacuous hustle of violence<\/em><\/p><p><em>Of dead bodies wrapped in dismal silence<\/em><\/p><p><em>And of a hellish destruction pouring from the throat of heaven.<\/em><sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"18\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">18<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"18\">This poem was translated by the WatchTheMed Alarm Phone. For Abdel Wahab Yousif\u2019s poems, see&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/abdalwahablatinos.blogspot.com\/?fbclid=IwAR1H9HqUxfDRUrzOD12aRBNj9OxC6zZx5yAKzF3j_20AykAtQDvHiFA7pUs\">https:\/\/abdalwahablatinos.blogspot.com\/?fbclid=IwAR1H9HqUxfDRUrzOD12aRBNj9OxC6zZx5yAKzF3j_20AykAtQDvHiFA7pUs<\/a><\/span><br><\/p><cite><em>Abdel Wahab Yousif<\/em><\/cite><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Segen and Latinos\u2019s words live on after they have left us. The courage and strength they mustered to rescue these words from the depth of the Libyan abyss and write them letter after letter on scraps of paper as frail as their bodies, imposes on us the courage to listen to and feel the weight of each one these sentences. It also imposes on us the effort to understand what political processes have led to the creation of this \u201cwheel of destruction\u201d crushing migrants\u2019 bodies and lives, so that it may be interrupted.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>Europe\u2019s multi-layered responsibility&nbsp;<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>The characterisation of Libya as a \u201chell\u201d risks contributing to the reproduction of the colonial division of the world between a civilized Europe and an uncivilized rest in which brutal violence is the norm. However, beyond the responsibility of Libyan actors who have been directly inflicting violence onto migrants, the EU and its member states have played a fundamental role in creating the conditions for these crimes to occur, and in perpetuating them.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Europe has a multi-layered responsibility for the violence migrants, and black people in particular, are being subjected to in Libya on a daily basis. One level is related to deep historical responsibility, as Tendayi Achiume has argued in a series of articles on \u201cmigration as decolonization\u201d.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"19\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">19<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"19\">Tendayi&nbsp;Achiume, \u201cThe Postcolonial Case for Rethinking Borders\u201d, <em>Dissent <\/em>2019, 66.3: pp.27-32. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dissentmagazine.org\/article\/the-postcolonial-case-for-rethinking-borders\">https:\/\/www.dissentmagazine.org\/article\/the-postcolonial-case-for-rethinking-borders<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> European empires have created the extractive and exploitative connections binding Europe to the global south, which the colonized subjects of yesterday follow today as illegalized migrants in seeking to access the \u201cspoils of empire\u201d the colonisers took with them.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"20\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">20<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"20\">Nadine El Nahny, \u201cBritain as the spoils of empire\u201d, <em>Migration Mobilities Bristol<\/em>, University of Bristol, 15 June 2021, <a href=\"https:\/\/migration.bristol.ac.uk\/2021\/06\/15\/britain-as-the-spoils-of-empire\/\">https:\/\/migration.bristol.ac.uk\/2021\/06\/15\/britain-as-the-spoils-of-empire\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> Colonization and the racial division of humanity at its core further involved practices of uninhibited violence which have left an enduring legacy in postcolonial states.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"21\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">21<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"21\">Achille Mbembe, <em>De la postcolonie. Essai sur l\u2019imagination politique dans l\u2019Afrique contemporaine<\/em>, Karthala, Paris, 2000.<\/span> In the wake of national independences, military strong men such as Kaddafi have perpetuated forms of authoritarian and extractive rule in which violence continues to be mobilised as regular modality of government.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"22\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">22<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"22\">For a useful summary, see Gilbert&nbsp;Achcar, <em>The People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising<\/em>, University of California Press, 2013.<\/span> It is hard not to see in the violence migrants\u2019 are subjected to in Libya\u2019s camps today the discontinuous legacy of the concentration camps fascist Italy erected in Eastern Libya nearly a century ago, in which several tens of thousands Libyans died.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"23\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">23<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"23\">According to Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, in 1929, over 110,000 Libyans, the total population of rural Eastern Libya, was interned in concentration camps. By 1934, only 40,000 were left alive amid widespread executions, suicide, starvation, and disease. Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, <em>Genocide in Libya: Shar, a Hidden Colonial History<\/em>. Routledge, 2020.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>More recently, along with the USA, European states have played a fundamental role in the NATO-led military intervention against the Kaddafi regime. The killing of Kaddafi and the fall of his regime sent Libya (and neighbouring countries) into a spiral of political turmoil and violence from which it has still not re-remerged. This has created a fragmented political landscape in which a range of actors compete for control over territory and resources \u2013 among which the bodies and lives of migrants.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"24\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">24<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"24\">Nancy Porsia, \u201cIrregular migration and Libya: is the crisis over?\u201d, in Navigating the Pandemic&nbsp;:&nbsp;The challenge of stability&nbsp;and prosperity in the Mediterranean, <em>ISPI<\/em>, 2020.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As a result of the EU\u2019s discriminatory migration policies \u2013 which allocate differentially the right to access EU territory according to a matrix of citizenship, class, and race \u2013 the majority of migrants from the global south are refused visas, which in turn deprives them of access to safe and legal means of transport.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"25\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">25<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"25\">For a discussion see Charles Heller, De-confine Borders: Towards a Politics of Freedom of Movement in the Time of the Pandemic, Mobilities, Volume 16, 2021.<\/span> To travel across borders irregularly, illegalized migrants have no other choice then to resort to traders in the commerce of illegalized passage. While these exist across a broad spectrum, in Libya smugglers and militias have come together to form a violent assemblage which deprives migrants of their freedom.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"26\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">26<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"26\">Mark Micallef, \u201cThe Human Conveyor Belt: trends in human trafficking and smuggling in post-revolution Libya\u201d, <em>Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime<\/em>, March 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf\">http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, a fundamental level of responsibility of the EU and its member states is the apparatus of outsourced border control it has created, and which has been the focus of several of our investigations within the Forensic Oceanography project and which we are continuing to document today through the Border Forensics agency.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"27\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">27<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"27\"><a href=\"http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf\"><\/a>See in particular, Charles Heller and Lorenzo Pezzani, \u201cMare Clausum, Italy and the EU\u2019s undeclared operation to stem migration across the Mediterranean\u201d, <em>Forensic Oceanography<\/em>, May 2018. <a href=\"https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf\">https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> Since 2016, the EU and its member states \u2013 Italy in particular \u2013 have outsourced border control to the Libyan Coast Guard so that they intercept migrants attempting to escape Libya. This has resulted in more than 100.000 people being captured at sea and brought back to violence and detention since 2017.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Crimes against humanity not only at Europe\u2019s doorstep, but, to a large extent, of Europe\u2019s own making. I can only imagine the responsibility of Libyan and European actors will be recognized one day \u2013 as one may hope from several ongoing complaints in front of different courts, and if not from the tribunal of history.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"28\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">28<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"28\">For a review, see Annick Pijnenburg and Kris van der Pas, Strategic Litigation against European Migration Control Policies: The Legal Battleground of the Central Mediterranean Migration Route, <em>European Journal of Migration and Law<\/em>, 24(3), 2022, pp. 401-429. A new communication to the ICC has been filed recently by the ECCHR: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ecchr.eu\/en\/case\/abfangen-von-migrantinnen-und-gefluechteten-auf-see-ein-verbrechen-gegen-die-menschlichkeit-istgh-muss-ermitteln\/\">https:\/\/www.ecchr.eu\/en\/case\/abfangen-von-migrantinnen-und-gefluechteten-auf-see-ein-verbrechen-gegen-die-menschlichkeit-istgh-muss-ermitteln\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> But future accountability is of no comfort for those who suffer torture today. The \u201cwheel of destruction\u201d described by Latinos \u2013 the mechanisms of which extend across both shores of the Mediterranean, must be blocked <em>now<\/em>.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>David against the UNHCR<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>I will never forget Segen, even though I never met him. But I did meet many other people who survived Libya\u2019s camps and the Mediterranean crossing EU policies have made so deadly. One of them, David Yambio, whom I encountered recently, made a lasting impression on me. David, a 25-year-old man from South Sudan, had only recently arrived in Italy \u2013 on his third attempt at the escaping Libya since 2019 \u2013 when we met at a conference in Bologna in Summer 2022. As we discussed the evolution of border violence and struggles across the central Mediterranean, David spoke eloquently of his involvement in the \u201cRefugees in Libya\u201d movement. Despite what he has gone through, he appeared to me at first remarkably calm and even joyful. After the conference, as we walked through the town in the night, he subtly revealed some of the darker sides of his experience. As I asked him about his personal plans and aspirations now that he was in Italy, he answered \u201cI don\u2019t know. In Libya I lost the capacity to dream \u2013 all I had were nightmares\u201d.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>David has told his story many a time.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"29\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">29<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"29\">In addition to our personal exchanges, I draw on Giansandro Merli, \u201cDai lager libici all\u2019Italia, parla il leader dei rifugiati di Tripoli\u201d, <em>Il Manifesto<\/em>, 24 June 2022, <a href=\"https:\/\/ilmanifesto.it\/dai-lager-libici-all-italia-parla-il-leader-dei-rifugiati-di-tripoli\">https:\/\/ilmanifesto.it\/dai-lager-libici-all-italia-parla-il-leader-dei-rifugiati-di-tripoli<\/a><\/span> He fled the civil war in South Sudan when he was 19. After spending two years in Chad, where his status as refugee was recognized, he left for Libya, where he registered at the UNHCR hoping to be resettled to another country. But despite the regular claims by EU officials that in conjunction with their support to border control in Libya they support humanitarian assistance as well, the UNHCR\u2019s capacity to protect the rights and lives of refugees is far from effective. Its office in Libya has a very limited capacity, and has restricted registration to only 9 nationalities (Oromo Ethiopians, Eritreans, Iraqis, Somalis, Syrians, Palestinians, and Sudanese from Darfur), thus excluding many migrants from being able to seek any sort of protection. Even those who do fall within these groups receive little to no support and face the prospect of years of waiting in limbo as the UNHCR has only resettled 2455 people since 2017.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"30\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">30<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"30\">The UNHCR\u2019s data on resettlements can be accessed here:&nbsp;https:\/\/rsq.unhcr.org\/en\/#z6IN. For an analysis of the limitations of and problems with the UNHCR\u2019s activities in Libya&nbsp;see MSF, \u201cOut of Libya: Opening Safe Pathways for Vulnerable Migrants Stuck in Libya\u201d, June 2022, p.19,&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/msf.or.ke\/en\/publications\/out-libya-opening-safe-pathways-vulnerable-migrants-stuck-libya\">https:\/\/msf.or.ke\/en\/publications\/out-libya-opening-safe-pathways-vulnerable-migrants-stuck-libya<\/a>&nbsp;and the website of the Unfair Agency campaign:&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/unhcr\/\">https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/unhcr\/<\/a>.<\/span> After three years of facing the cycle of interception, detention and violence in Libya, David, as many others, still had no answer from the UN agency. When, on the 1st of October 2021, Libyan police and military forces raided the Gargaresh neighbourhood in Tripoli, arbitrarily arresting and detaining thousands of migrants, David and others who narrowly escaped, gathered in front of the UNHCR in Tripoli. Together they claimed for their voices to be heard, for their live and rights to be respected, and demanded to be protected in countries of safety. Believing that whoever leaves their home is a refugee regardless of the reasons for doing so, the movement for which David became one of the spokespersons called itself \u201cRefugees in Libya\u201d.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"31\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">31<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"31\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.refugeesinlibya.org\/manifesto\">https:\/\/www.refugeesinlibya.org\/manifesto<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> During 100 days nearly 2000 people sat in front of the UNHCR, forming what became one of the most impressive recent self-organised mobilisation led by migrants.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"32\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">32<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"32\">Maurice Stierl and Martina Tazzioli, \u201cOne hundred days of refugee protest in Libya\u201d, <em>Open Democracy<\/em>, 3 March 2022. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.opendemocracy.net\/en\/beyond-trafficking-and-slavery\/one-hundred-days-of-refugee-protest-in-libya\/\">https:\/\/www.opendemocracy.net\/en\/beyond-trafficking-and-slavery\/one-hundred-days-of-refugee-protest-in-libya\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> During this time, the voices of the \u201cRefugees in Libya\u201d movement and David\u2019s in particular, resonated far beyond Tripoli, as they were amplified by the international press and several transnational migrant solidarity movements such as the WatchTheMed Alarm Phone and Mediterranea. Despite this, and several rounds of negotiation with the UNHCR, their demands were ignored. On the 10<sup>th<\/sup> of January 2022, the UNHCR decided to close its office.&nbsp;Shortly after the announcement, Libyan militias were deployed, brutally evicted the protesters and detained 600 of them. David narrowly escaped, but knowing that as a leader he was personally threatened, he remained in hiding until he managed to cross the sea. While the courageous protest of \u201cRefugees in Libya\u201d fell on the deaf ears of the UNHCR in Libya, David is continuing the struggle he led on European soil. On the 9<sup>th<\/sup> and 10<sup>th<\/sup> of December 2022, he is taking part of a sit-in in front of the UNHCR\u2019s headquarters in Geneva.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"33\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">33<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"33\"><a href=\"https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/call-to-geneva\/\">https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/call-to-geneva\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> Will the voices and demands of \u201cRefugees in Libya\u201d finally be heard? Will the UNHCR step up protection in and resettlement from Libya to match the needs of refugees and migrants trapped in Libya? Or will it at least acknowledge the limitations to its capacity to offer meaningful protection and stop allowing the EU to cover its policy of violent containment with a humanitarian varnish?&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3>Reclaiming our humanity through common struggles<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>In his 1950 Discourse on Colonialism, Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire did not oppose colonialism and slavery to Nazi crimes. Arguing that the Nazi regime\u2019s devasting violence in Europe was the \u201cboomerang effect\u201d of the violence of Europe\u2019s colonial expansion, he sought to account for how they were intertwined, a research agenda that has been reactivated in recent years.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"34\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">34<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"34\">Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire, <em>Discours sur le colonialisme<\/em>, Paris, Pr\u00e9sence africaine, 1955 (1st \u00e9d. 1950). Translated as \u201cDiscourse on Colonialism\u201d. Translated by Joan Pinkham. <em>Monthly Review Press, New York<\/em>. 1972. For a discussion of the colonial turn in Holocaust studies, see Rothberg, <em>Multidirectional Memory<\/em>, ibid, p.101. For recent debates turn has sparked, see Enzo Traverso, \u201cNo, Post-Nazi Germany Isn\u2019t a Model of Atoning for the Past\u201d, <em>Jacobin<\/em>, 6 June 2022, <a href=\"https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2022\/06\/post-nazi-germany-colonialism-holocaust-israel-atonement\">https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2022\/06\/post-nazi-germany-colonialism-holocaust-israel-atonement<\/a>&nbsp;<\/span> In his short book, C\u00e9saire describes how the colonized and the colonizer are mutually transformed by violence, arguing that \u201cthe colonizer, who [&#8230;] gets into the habit of seeing the other man as a beast, accustoms himself to treating him like a beast, tends objectively to transform himself into a beast.&#8221;<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"35\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">35<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"35\">Aim\u00e9&nbsp;C\u00e9saire, ibid. p. 41. I have kept the term \u201cbeast\u201d instead of \u201canimal\u201d used in the English translation to remain closer to the original French term \u201cb\u00eate\u201d.<\/span> It is not difficult to see the resonance of this mutually destructive process across many contemporary geographies of violence, including at Europe\u2019s disseminated borders \u2013 within, at and beyond the limits of EU territory. Can we not see the effects of the dehumanization of illegalized migrants on the rest of European societies and polities? As migrants are treated as beasts by border guards, it is these border guards themselves who turn themselves into beast-like beings. In the same breath as far-right politicians and groups attack migrants from the global south, they target as well other segments of society that do not fit their homogenous and patriarchal vision of nationhood. When the rights of some are treated with disregard, the denial of rights, arbitrariness and violence easily spreads. And if, even as distant \u2013 but in many ways implicated \u2013 observers, we fail to oppose the dehumanisation of migrants, we normalise it and get drawn into its spiral. For as Achille Mbembe has argued, there can only be humanity when one lets oneself affected by the face of the other.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"36\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">36<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"36\">Achille Mbembe, <em>Politiques de l\u2019inimiti\u00e9<\/em>, La D\u00e9couverte, Paris, 2016, p.162.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>How can we interrupt this process of dehumanization of racialised, classed and illegalised migrants that threatens to engulf us all? I certainly have no easy answer to this question. The only response I have found over the years to avoid despair and restore my own faith in humanity is engaging in common struggles against and across the boundaries that have been drawn between us.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cHumanity\u201d may be a deeply problematic concept, and this for a number of reasons. After all, it has a long been used precisely by white, bourgeois men to deny the humanity of most of the people populating the surface of the earth. Today benevolent calls to overcoming difference towards the recognition of a shared humanity (humanity as sameness we might call it) sound hollow and occlude continuing hierarchies, and different degrees of affectedness and responsibility this entails. This is the risk for example with the concept of the Anthropocene \u2013 understood as the period in which human activity started to have a significant impact on the planet&#8217;s climate \u2013 which occludes the reality of a segment of humanity \u2013 the global north (and the richest within it) &#8211; embedded within a particular economic system \u2013 capitalism \u2013 being the main cause of the ongoing environmental catastrophe, the effects of which are felt disproportionately by people of the global south.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"37\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">37<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"37\">Jason Hickel, <em>Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World<\/em>, William Heinemann, London, 2020.<\/span> Furthermore, even inclusive conceptions of humanity may entrench ontological separations that prevent the full recognition of the entanglements between human and non-human which is the condition for fostering new forms of care and repair.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But the human, as Sylvia Wynter has argued, is also a contested <em>practice<\/em>, which can be mobilised by the oppressed to affirm their human status and transforms the meaning and condition of the human in the process.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"38\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">38<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"38\">See Zimitri Erasmus, \u201cSylvia Wynter\u2019s Theory of the Human: Counter-, not Post-humanist\u201d, <em>Theory, Culture &amp; Society<\/em>, 2020, 0(0), pp. 1\u201319.<\/span> Like human rights, the categories of the human and humanity may constitute less existing realities than tools for struggle and transformation.&nbsp;When claims to humanity are voiced \u2013 as when we hear \u201cWe are human!\u201d resonate in demonstrations and protests of migrants and refugees \u2013 we have at work what Sandro Mezzadra calls an \u201cinsurgence of the human\u201d, which occurs \u201camid and against violence, insult, and destitution\u201d.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"39\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">39<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"39\">Sandro Mezzadra, \u201cAbolitionist Vistas of the Human. Border Struggles, Migration, and Freedom of Movement\u201d, <em>Citizenship Studies<\/em>, 2020, 24:4, pp. 424-440.<\/span> As important as it may be to critique the exclusionary and violent dimensions of western humanism and contest the boundaries between the human and non-human, it appears to me fundamental to support struggles against the boundaries that continue to be drawn within humanity itself. At best, these imperatives may work in tandem.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>How may we engage in these struggles of what we might call <em>insurgent humanism<\/em> together, despite the hierarchies in our positions? How may we work through our differences to foster new connections and commonalities and weave the fabric of a humanity to come? What is the role of shared grief in this process? For Achille Mbembe, to share the beauty of the world, we must also learn to be in solidarity with all its sufferings. It is this way that we may repair the fabric and face of the world.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"40\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">40<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"40\">Achille Mbembe, <em>Brutalisme<\/em>, Paris, La D\u00e9couverte, 2020, p. 56.<\/span> It is such a process I have sought to engage with by staying with the image of Segen, and giving space to the feeling of how his wounds cause mine to sore, despite the incommensurability of our experiences. Each one of us may find different paths to relate to the pain of others, and partly make it their own. But I am weary of limiting the basis for the forging of solidarity to shared grief. The feminist movement offers us a deep archive of theories and practices to acknowledge the intersection of different systems of oppression \u2013 of patriarchy, of race and class \u2013 but also to engage in the careful work of building alliances across different positions within them. Beyond the bonds born out of shared experiences of suffering, Bell Hooks teaches us, we can build bonds of shared struggle towards a common political horizon \u2013 or what she calls <em>political solidarity<\/em>.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"41\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">41<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"41\">Bel Hooks. \u201cSisterhood: Political Solidarity between Women.\u201d <em>Feminist Review<\/em>, no. 23, 1986, pp. 125\u201338.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is that feeling of commonality in difference and striving towards a shared horizon of freedom and justice that animates my participation in different struggles against the violence of borders, and for the equal right of all to move and stay \u2013 from documentation, litigation and advocacy to direct support to illegalised migrants in the exercise of their precarious mobility. It is that feeling that filled me in 2017 as I walked the streets of Geneva marching and shouting at the side of black people leading the protest against slavery in Libya. It is that feeling I have experienced again on the 9<sup>th<\/sup> of December 2022 standing in the cold in front of the UNHCR in Geneva, listening to the voices of refugees who have experienced the Libyan abyss and raising mine with them.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One of Segen\u2019s poems starts with these words: \u201cDon\u2019t panic, my brother\/ tell me, am I not your brother\/ why don\u2019t you ask about me?\/ Is it really that nice living alone if you forget your brother in the moment of need?\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote modern-footnotes-footnote--hover-on-desktop \" data-mfn=\"42\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\">42<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-0000000000000f980000000000000000_1118\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"42\">Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan inferno in Segen\u2019s poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/span> I, and many others, won\u2019t forget you Segen. I am sorry I was not able to be there for you, and many more brothers and sisters in need. The memory of your loss spurs me to continue as best I can to the struggle against the horrors you experienced in Libya. But no less essential to my determination is knowing that David and others live on to continue their struggle, and that I can stand by their side and raise my voice with theirs for the full recognition of the human dignity, rights, freedom, and equality of all.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/app\/uploads\/2022\/12\/Position_The-human-despite-all.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Download full PDF here<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Charles Heller is a Research Associate at the Graduate Institute, Geneva, co-director of the research and investigation agency Border Forensics and co-president of the Migreurop network.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<h3><strong>Footnotes<\/strong><\/h3>\n<ul class=\"modern-footnotes-list modern-footnotes-list--hide-for-print\"><li><span>1<\/span><div>I would like to express my gratitude to Manuela Honegger, Itamar Mann, Omar Somi, Eyal Weizman, Bridget Anderson, Sandro Mezzadra, Deanna Dadusc, Bernd Kasparek, David Yambio and all the comrades of the Unfair campaign for feeling and thinking with me as I worked through this text.<\/div><\/li><li><span>2<\/span><div>Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan inferno in Segen\u2019s poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>3<\/span><div>See Enzo Traverso, <em>The End of Jewish Modernity<\/em>, Pluto Press, 2016. Yitzhak Laor, <em>The Myths of Liberal Zionism<\/em>, Verso, New York, NY, 2010.<\/div><\/li><li><span>4<\/span><div>Gil Z. Hochberg, \u201cEdward Said: \u201cThe Last Jewish Intellectual\u201d\u201d, <em>Social Text<\/em> 87, Vol. 24, No. 2, Summer 2006.<\/div><\/li><li><span>5<\/span><div>For a discussion of the genealogies of slavery and race across the Mediterranean, see Gabriele Proglio et al., <em>The Black Mediterranean: Bodies, Borders and Citizenship<\/em>, Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.<\/div><\/li><li><span>6<\/span><div>Jo\u00e3o Gabriell, \u201cFree Our Brothers!\u201d: On the Politicization of Slavery in Libya within the French Context. <em>South Atlantic Quarterly<\/em> 2019 118 (3): pp. 686\u2013693.&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>7<\/span><div>Michael Rothberg, <em>Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization<\/em>, Stanford University Press, 2009.<\/div><\/li><li><span>8<\/span><div>For the extent of available knowledge at the time see Amnesty International, \u2018Libya\u2019s Dark web of Collusion: Abuses Against Europe-Bound Refugees&nbsp;and Migrants\u2019, 11 December 2017, Index: MDE 19\/7561\/2017, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/docu-ments\/mde19\/7561\/2017\/en\/\">https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/docu-ments\/mde19\/7561\/2017\/en\/<\/a>&nbsp;, p.56.<\/div><\/li><li><span>9<\/span><div>MSF 2017 data shared with the author and included in Forensic Oceanography\u2019s \u201cMare Clausum\u201d report. <a href=\"https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf\">https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>10<\/span><div>Human Rights Council, 36th session, Opening Statement by Zeid&nbsp;Ra\u2019ad Al Hussein, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, 11 September 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/EN\/NewsEvents\/Pages\/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22041\">http:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/EN\/NewsEvents\/Pages\/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22041<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>11<\/span><div>Marco Menduni, \u2018Giro: \u201cFare rientrare quelle persone vuol dire condannarle all\u2019inferno\u201d\u2019, <em>La Stampa<\/em>, 6 August 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.lastampa.it\/2017\/08\/06\/italia\/cronache\/giro-fare-rientrare-quelle-per-%20sone-vuol-dire-condannarle-allinferno-SXnGzVlzftFl7fNGFCMADN\/pagina.html\">http:\/\/www.lastampa.it\/2017\/08\/06\/italia\/cronache\/giro-fare-rientrare-quelle-per- sone-vuol-dire-condannarle-allinferno-SXnGzVlzftFl7fNGFCMADN\/pagina.html<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>12<\/span><div>Human Rights Council, Fiftieth session, 13 June\u20138 July 2022, Report of the Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Libya <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/sites\/default\/files\/documents\/hrbodies\/hrcouncil\/regularsession\/session50\/2022-06-29\/A_HRC_50_63_AdvanceUneditedVersion.docx\">https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/sites\/default\/files\/documents\/hrbodies\/hrcouncil\/regularsession\/session50\/2022-06-29\/A_HRC_50_63_AdvanceUneditedVersion.docx<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>13<\/span><div>David Luban, \u201cA Theory of Crimes Against Humanity\u201d, <em>Yale Journal of International Law<\/em>, 29 (2004): 85-167. Itamar Mann, Border Crimes as Crimes against humanity, in Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster, and Jane McAdam (eds), <em>The Oxford Handbook for International Refugee Law<\/em>, 2021.&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>14<\/span><div>Judith Butler, <em>Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable?<\/em>, Verso, London, 2009.<\/div><\/li><li><span>15<\/span><div>Michel Foucault, 23 january 1974 lecture in Psychiatric Power, Lectures at the Coll\u00e8ge de France, 1973\u201374, (G. Burchell, Trans.). Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. I thank Mathieu Potte-Bonneville for flagging out this lecture.<\/div><\/li><li><span>16<\/span><div>Patrick Chamoiseau, \u201cLampedusa: ce que nous disent les gouffres\u201d, <em>Mediapart<\/em>, 11 Octobre 2013, <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.mediapart.fr\/patrick-chamoiseau\/blog\/111013\/lampedusa-ce-que-nous-disent-les-gouffres\">https:\/\/blogs.mediapart.fr\/patrick-chamoiseau\/blog\/111013\/lampedusa-ce-que-nous-disent-les-gouffres<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>17<\/span><div>For Segen\u2019s&nbsp;poems, see&nbsp;Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan&nbsp;inferno in Segen\u2019s&nbsp;poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018,&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>18<\/span><div>This poem was translated by the WatchTheMed Alarm Phone. For Abdel Wahab Yousif\u2019s poems, see&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/abdalwahablatinos.blogspot.com\/?fbclid=IwAR1H9HqUxfDRUrzOD12aRBNj9OxC6zZx5yAKzF3j_20AykAtQDvHiFA7pUs\">https:\/\/abdalwahablatinos.blogspot.com\/?fbclid=IwAR1H9HqUxfDRUrzOD12aRBNj9OxC6zZx5yAKzF3j_20AykAtQDvHiFA7pUs<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>19<\/span><div>Tendayi&nbsp;Achiume, \u201cThe Postcolonial Case for Rethinking Borders\u201d, <em>Dissent <\/em>2019, 66.3: pp.27-32. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dissentmagazine.org\/article\/the-postcolonial-case-for-rethinking-borders\">https:\/\/www.dissentmagazine.org\/article\/the-postcolonial-case-for-rethinking-borders<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>20<\/span><div>Nadine El Nahny, \u201cBritain as the spoils of empire\u201d, <em>Migration Mobilities Bristol<\/em>, University of Bristol, 15 June 2021, <a href=\"https:\/\/migration.bristol.ac.uk\/2021\/06\/15\/britain-as-the-spoils-of-empire\/\">https:\/\/migration.bristol.ac.uk\/2021\/06\/15\/britain-as-the-spoils-of-empire\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>21<\/span><div>Achille Mbembe, <em>De la postcolonie. Essai sur l\u2019imagination politique dans l\u2019Afrique contemporaine<\/em>, Karthala, Paris, 2000.<\/div><\/li><li><span>22<\/span><div>For a useful summary, see Gilbert&nbsp;Achcar, <em>The People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising<\/em>, University of California Press, 2013.<\/div><\/li><li><span>23<\/span><div>According to Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, in 1929, over 110,000 Libyans, the total population of rural Eastern Libya, was interned in concentration camps. By 1934, only 40,000 were left alive amid widespread executions, suicide, starvation, and disease. Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, <em>Genocide in Libya: Shar, a Hidden Colonial History<\/em>. Routledge, 2020.<\/div><\/li><li><span>24<\/span><div>Nancy Porsia, \u201cIrregular migration and Libya: is the crisis over?\u201d, in Navigating the Pandemic&nbsp;:&nbsp;The challenge of stability&nbsp;and prosperity in the Mediterranean, <em>ISPI<\/em>, 2020.<\/div><\/li><li><span>25<\/span><div>For a discussion see Charles Heller, De-confine Borders: Towards a Politics of Freedom of Movement in the Time of the Pandemic, Mobilities, Volume 16, 2021.<\/div><\/li><li><span>26<\/span><div>Mark Micallef, \u201cThe Human Conveyor Belt: trends in human trafficking and smuggling in post-revolution Libya\u201d, <em>Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime<\/em>, March 2017, <a href=\"http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf\">http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>27<\/span><div><a href=\"http:\/\/globalinitiative.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/global-initiative-human-conveyor-belt-human-smug-gling-in-libya-march-2017.pdf\"><\/a>See in particular, Charles Heller and Lorenzo Pezzani, \u201cMare Clausum, Italy and the EU\u2019s undeclared operation to stem migration across the Mediterranean\u201d, <em>Forensic Oceanography<\/em>, May 2018. <a href=\"https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf\">https:\/\/content.forensic-architecture.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/05\/2018-05-07-FO-Mare-Clausum-full-EN.pdf<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>28<\/span><div>For a review, see Annick Pijnenburg and Kris van der Pas, Strategic Litigation against European Migration Control Policies: The Legal Battleground of the Central Mediterranean Migration Route, <em>European Journal of Migration and Law<\/em>, 24(3), 2022, pp. 401-429. A new communication to the ICC has been filed recently by the ECCHR: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ecchr.eu\/en\/case\/abfangen-von-migrantinnen-und-gefluechteten-auf-see-ein-verbrechen-gegen-die-menschlichkeit-istgh-muss-ermitteln\/\">https:\/\/www.ecchr.eu\/en\/case\/abfangen-von-migrantinnen-und-gefluechteten-auf-see-ein-verbrechen-gegen-die-menschlichkeit-istgh-muss-ermitteln\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>29<\/span><div>In addition to our personal exchanges, I draw on Giansandro Merli, \u201cDai lager libici all\u2019Italia, parla il leader dei rifugiati di Tripoli\u201d, <em>Il Manifesto<\/em>, 24 June 2022, <a href=\"https:\/\/ilmanifesto.it\/dai-lager-libici-all-italia-parla-il-leader-dei-rifugiati-di-tripoli\">https:\/\/ilmanifesto.it\/dai-lager-libici-all-italia-parla-il-leader-dei-rifugiati-di-tripoli<\/a><\/div><\/li><li><span>30<\/span><div>The UNHCR\u2019s data on resettlements can be accessed here:&nbsp;https:\/\/rsq.unhcr.org\/en\/#z6IN. For an analysis of the limitations of and problems with the UNHCR\u2019s activities in Libya&nbsp;see MSF, \u201cOut of Libya: Opening Safe Pathways for Vulnerable Migrants Stuck in Libya\u201d, June 2022, p.19,&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/msf.or.ke\/en\/publications\/out-libya-opening-safe-pathways-vulnerable-migrants-stuck-libya\">https:\/\/msf.or.ke\/en\/publications\/out-libya-opening-safe-pathways-vulnerable-migrants-stuck-libya<\/a>&nbsp;and the website of the Unfair Agency campaign:&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/unhcr\/\">https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/unhcr\/<\/a>.<\/div><\/li><li><span>31<\/span><div><a href=\"https:\/\/www.refugeesinlibya.org\/manifesto\">https:\/\/www.refugeesinlibya.org\/manifesto<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>32<\/span><div>Maurice Stierl and Martina Tazzioli, \u201cOne hundred days of refugee protest in Libya\u201d, <em>Open Democracy<\/em>, 3 March 2022. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.opendemocracy.net\/en\/beyond-trafficking-and-slavery\/one-hundred-days-of-refugee-protest-in-libya\/\">https:\/\/www.opendemocracy.net\/en\/beyond-trafficking-and-slavery\/one-hundred-days-of-refugee-protest-in-libya\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>33<\/span><div><a href=\"https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/call-to-geneva\/\">https:\/\/unfairagency.org\/call-to-geneva\/<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>34<\/span><div>Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire, <em>Discours sur le colonialisme<\/em>, Paris, Pr\u00e9sence africaine, 1955 (1st \u00e9d. 1950). Translated as \u201cDiscourse on Colonialism\u201d. Translated by Joan Pinkham. <em>Monthly Review Press, New York<\/em>. 1972. For a discussion of the colonial turn in Holocaust studies, see Rothberg, <em>Multidirectional Memory<\/em>, ibid, p.101. For recent debates turn has sparked, see Enzo Traverso, \u201cNo, Post-Nazi Germany Isn\u2019t a Model of Atoning for the Past\u201d, <em>Jacobin<\/em>, 6 June 2022, <a href=\"https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2022\/06\/post-nazi-germany-colonialism-holocaust-israel-atonement\">https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2022\/06\/post-nazi-germany-colonialism-holocaust-israel-atonement<\/a>&nbsp;<\/div><\/li><li><span>35<\/span><div>Aim\u00e9&nbsp;C\u00e9saire, ibid. p. 41. I have kept the term \u201cbeast\u201d instead of \u201canimal\u201d used in the English translation to remain closer to the original French term \u201cb\u00eate\u201d.<\/div><\/li><li><span>36<\/span><div>Achille Mbembe, <em>Politiques de l\u2019inimiti\u00e9<\/em>, La D\u00e9couverte, Paris, 2016, p.162.<\/div><\/li><li><span>37<\/span><div>Jason Hickel, <em>Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World<\/em>, William Heinemann, London, 2020.<\/div><\/li><li><span>38<\/span><div>See Zimitri Erasmus, \u201cSylvia Wynter\u2019s Theory of the Human: Counter-, not Post-humanist\u201d, <em>Theory, Culture &amp; Society<\/em>, 2020, 0(0), pp. 1\u201319.<\/div><\/li><li><span>39<\/span><div>Sandro Mezzadra, \u201cAbolitionist Vistas of the Human. Border Struggles, Migration, and Freedom of Movement\u201d, <em>Citizenship Studies<\/em>, 2020, 24:4, pp. 424-440.<\/div><\/li><li><span>40<\/span><div>Achille Mbembe, <em>Brutalisme<\/em>, Paris, La D\u00e9couverte, 2020, p. 56.<\/div><\/li><li><span>41<\/span><div>Bel Hooks. \u201cSisterhood: Political Solidarity between Women.\u201d <em>Feminist Review<\/em>, no. 23, 1986, pp. 125\u201338.<\/div><\/li><li><span>42<\/span><div>Alessandro Puglia, \u201cThe Libyan inferno in Segen\u2019s poems\u201d, <em>Vita<\/em>, 14 September 2018, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/\">http:\/\/www.vitainternational.media\/en\/story\/2018\/09\/14\/the-libyan-inferno-in-segens-poems\/11\/<\/a><\/div><\/li><\/ul>","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[],"tags":[30,29,28],"uagb_featured_image_src":{"full":false,"thumbnail":false,"medium":false,"medium_large":false,"large":false,"1536x1536":false,"2048x2048":false},"uagb_author_info":{"display_name":"Jelka Kretzschmar","author_link":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/author\/"},"uagb_comment_info":0,"uagb_excerpt":"From the abyss of Libyan detention to the forging of commonality through struggles Charles Heller,&nbsp;9th&nbsp;of&nbsp;December&nbsp;2021 Why&nbsp;am&nbsp;I joining&nbsp;a demonstration in solidarity with migrants and refugees in Libya in front of the UNHCR in Geneva on the 9th&nbsp;and 10th&nbsp;of December?&nbsp;What may seem like the simplest of questions conjures&nbsp;a series of far more challenging ones.&nbsp;At stake are nothing&hellip;","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/proposition\/1118"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/proposition"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/proposition"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/proposition\/1118\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2580,"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/proposition\/1118\/revisions\/2580"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1118"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1118"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.borderforensics.org\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1118"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}