**FILE** Tripoli skyline (Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)
**FILE** Tripoli skyline (Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

Migrants in the Libyan capital of Tripoli are demanding immediate deportation to a safe location due to living conditions in detention centers and ill treatment by Libyan authorities.

Dozens of migrants protested on Saturday, Oct. 9, outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) headquarters in Tripoli, where protesters held banners.

Sudanese migrant Omar Idris claimed that they have been beaten, detained and imprisoned by the authorities.

โ€œOf course, we came here to immigrate; we registered with the commission (UNHCR).โ€ Idris said. โ€œWe lived in Gargaresh (a town 12 kilometers west of Tripoli). We were beaten and taken to jail, and as you can see, now we are all here; some of us came out of jail yesterday.โ€

He added, โ€œWe have women and children here, and also sick and injured, we are all suffering, and the reason we are here is that we demand immediate deportation to a safe place.โ€

The organization said that approximately 10,000 men, women and children are detained in poor conditions in official detention facilities in Tripoli.

UNHCR officials said that tensions with migrants, demanding urgent aid and their deportation from Libya, resulted in the injury of two staff members and impeded the access of other asylum seekers to the center.

According to Musa Khamis, a migrant from Darfur, Sudan, migrants are not treated equally.

โ€œIโ€™ve been in Libya for two years, here in Tripoli, and now weโ€™ve been here for ten days without water, food or anything. Why donโ€™t they want to let us (into the UNHCR office)? Only Syrians, Ethiopians and Eritreans enter, and they havenโ€™t let us in or give us any aid or anything; we have nothing.โ€

Earlier Saturday, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) condemned the killing of six people in one of the capitalโ€™s migrant detention centers.

The development comes a week after authorities rounded up more than 5,000 migrants in a massive crackdown and after U.N.-commissioned investigators said abuses and ill treatment of migrants in Libya amounted to crimes against humanity.

SOURCE: NewsAfrica

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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