Libya just found a nightmare burial site, proving the country is a total death trap. The Attorney General revealed that a pit holding twenty-one corpses has been located. A prosecutor in Benghazi accused a suspect identified as M.F.H. of trading humans linked to this case. Agents from the Internal Security Agency and Battalion 166 stumbled upon the site during a joint sweep.
Officials demanded DNA testing and full autopsies to figure out who died and how they perished. Authorities noted M.F.H. already faces accusations for killing three migrants and running other smuggling rackets. An organization called Refugees in Libya pushed Karim Khan at the International Criminal Court to look into this mess, arguing these deaths happen because people get trapped without safe exits.
They insist accountability needs to go beyond local borders. Seawatch International slammed European Union strategies for putting lives at risk, claiming these fatalities result directly from migration policies that leave travelers stuck in dangerous zones. This chaos has spiraled since Colonel Muammar Gaddafi died over a decade ago.
Trafficking has exploded recently, with nearly fifty bodies found in similar pits last year. Smugglers even fly victims to Nicaragua to reach the States. Although the penal code lists prison time for slavery and holding captives, a State Department review blames the surge on a broken legal system, corruption, and powerful armed gangs running the show.
Officials demanded DNA testing and full autopsies to figure out who died and how they perished. Authorities noted M.F.H. already faces accusations for killing three migrants and running other smuggling rackets. An organization called Refugees in Libya pushed Karim Khan at the International Criminal Court to look into this mess, arguing these deaths happen because people get trapped without safe exits.
They insist accountability needs to go beyond local borders. Seawatch International slammed European Union strategies for putting lives at risk, claiming these fatalities result directly from migration policies that leave travelers stuck in dangerous zones. This chaos has spiraled since Colonel Muammar Gaddafi died over a decade ago.
Trafficking has exploded recently, with nearly fifty bodies found in similar pits last year. Smugglers even fly victims to Nicaragua to reach the States. Although the penal code lists prison time for slavery and holding captives, a State Department review blames the surge on a broken legal system, corruption, and powerful armed gangs running the show.