UN council considers EU response to migrant smugglers

UN council considers EU response to migrant smugglers

UNITED NATIONS, United States - Agence France-Presse

In this photo taken on Thursday, Aug. 27, 2015, Portuguese navy ship NPR Viana do Castelo's crew members practice a rescue drill during a European Frontex migrant search and rescue mission in the Mediterranean Sea, off the southeastern coast of Spain. AP Photo

The UN Security Council is considering allowing European naval forces to board and search ships on the high seas in an effort combat the smuggling of migrants, diplomats said on Sept.9.

The draft Security Council resolution, focused on ships leaving from Libya, is currently being circulated among the five permanent members of the Security Council and the other European countries affected.
 
But it has not yet been distributed to the full 15-member Security Council, diplomats said.
 
Russian Ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin, this month's president of the council, said the resolution "may well be adopted in September."  

Another Security Council diplomat expressed hope the resolution could be adopted "in the next couple of weeks, before the UN General Assembly" meets in late September.
 
Churkin has said the current text, put forward by Britain, is "something more limited" than a previous draft that would have allowed EU member state navies to pursue migrant smugglers in Libyan territorial waters.
 
That draft died because it would have required the approval of Libya, a prospect complicated by the political tumult in the country where the internationally recognized Libyan government does not control the coastal territory.
 
The new resolution would authorize European navies to board and inspect suspicious vessels. If migrants are found on board, they would be given first aid and sent on to Italy, where they could try to seek asylum.
 
The ships would be seized and destroyed or dismantled, and legal action would be sought against the smugglers.
 
According to one diplomat on Sept.9, EU member states currently have differing degrees of legal leeway to act in the Mediterranean, with Italy, for instance, able operate more freely in the region than Britain or Germany.
 
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has organized a high-level meeting on migration on the sidelines of the General Assembly on September 30, to which he invited European leaders on Sept.8.