I absolutely agree, because it is a matter of pull factors, and stopping people having to make the choice to migrate over such a treacherous route. They have so far to go: there are human traffickers; people may just be ditched at the side of the road as I have described, or sold out of a bus in the back of a car park, and then sold on again and beaten with wires; they may then be on the Mediterranean on a boat—and the technique used with those small boats is that as soon as a navy cutter comes to the rescue, they are deliberately capsized to tip the people in the water. The rescuers have to pluck them out of the water; they cannot just pull the boat somewhere. To return to the Greek example, while I was there I met a Yazidi Christian—someone on a different migrant route—with a 10-day-old child. They had gone through that whole process. How the child, who by then was aged three months, was still alive, I shall never know. Those are the most treacherous circumstances, so anything that can be done to stop the migration in the first place must be the only course of action.
Enslavement of Black Africans (Libya)
Proceeding contribution from
Paul Scully
(Conservative)
in the House of Commons on Monday, 18 December 2017.
It occurred during e-petition debate on Enslavement of Black Africans (Libya).
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
633 c265WH 
Session
2017-19
Chamber / Committee
Westminster Hall
Librarians' tools
Timestamp
2024-04-11 18:37:48 +0100
URI
http://hansard.intranet.data.parliament.uk/Commons/2017-12-18/17121819000027
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