Italy's complicity
Italy bears a
high degree of responsibility
for the torture suffered by this boy and all other migrants in Libya.
As emphasized by the United Nations in their report partially published in
Avvenire
magazine, there is a direct link between the capture of migrants by the Libyan Coast Guard, which is funded by Italy, and their subsequent deportation to the mafia's hands in these
refugee camps
.
Until the cry of the migrants from the Libyan camps is heard, there will be no hope.
In 2017, Italy decided to set up and finance the Libyan Coast Guard. In the process we invited one of the main kingpins of the Libyan mafia, Bija, to sit with our intelligence services and negotiate an agreement. Every year from then, Italy has consistently renewed this deal.
Politics has never had the courage to enact change, and civil society has never been able to exert enough pressure on the authorities to stop underwriting this
systematic violence
and their de facto complicity with the Libyan mafia.
We must ask ourselves: What kind of country does it make us when we are incapable of responding to the agony of these refugees, tortured because of our own policies?
Value of fraternity
The hope for redemption is not yet lost thanks to activists from across the continent who have come together to form a civil fleet. They rescue migrants from shipwrecks and pushbacks in the Mediterranean. It is because of the efforts of these activists, along with those who work alongside Refugees in Libya for the liberation of migrants in Libyan camps, that Europe has a chance yet to reconstruct the promise which it was first founded with. They are demonstrating to Europe the moral case for fraternity.
One of these organizations is called
SOS Mediterranée
, founded in 2015 by A German captain Klaus Vogel and French woman Sophie Beau as a reaction to Italy cancelling its maritime rescue operation Mare Nostrum in 2014. The organization charters vessels near the shores of Libya where migrant boats may find themselves in distress, saving the lives of people who would otherwise be ignored.
We are prisoners of individualism.
The tragedy of this era is that we have
forgotten fraternity
. We are prisoners of individualism, making us increasingly fearful, angry, and competitive. There is a connection between
the suffering of migrants
in Libyan camps and the pain of those oppressed by social injustice in Italy, including university students who lack access to the right to housing, exploited workers, people facing
discrimination based on their sexual or gender identity
, those who bear the brunt of ecological catastrophe, and so on. All of this is the result of a sick society that has forgotten fraternity.
There will be no salvation unless we accept accountability for building a new society that embraces the political value of fraternity. Authentic fraternity can only start by centering the least privileged. Until the cry of the migrants from the Libyan camps is heard, there will be no hope.
Let all our consciences awaken, and may we become capable of understanding that we can save ourselves only if we can summon the courage of empathy and visceral love.