Pakistan seeks IOM's help to evacuate stranded citizens in Libya
IOM said it received requests from Pakistan along with Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam to help citizens leave Libya.
GENEVA:
Pakistan has sought help from the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) to evacuate citizens stranded in crisis hit Libya.
Thousands of Pakistanis are stranded in Libya. So far 709 Pakistanis have been evacuated through special flights of PIA. Currently there are 1,700 Pakistanis in a special relief camp set up by the embassy in Tripoli.
The IOM said it had received requests from Pakistan along with the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to help their citizens leave Libya.
Migrants hit hard
Migrants have been hit hard by the spiralling conflict in Libya which could lead to more of them taking to unseaworthy boats to try to reach Italy, the IOM warned on Friday.
"IOM is concerned that the number of migrants trying to reach Italy from Libya by sea could increase in the coming weeks, as more people decide to opt for the dangerous Mediterranean crossing to escape ongoing fighting in the Libyan capital," the IOM said in a statement.
Migrants either working in Libya or using the country as a jumping off point as they seek to reach Europe illegally are particularly vulnerable to the country's raging instability.
"Displaced migrants trapped in Tripoli have been particularly hard hit," the IOM said.
A week ago, 10 Sudanese were killed when a stray missile hit a house in a besieged district of Tripoli, where an estimated 15,000 Sudanese live.
IOM staff have also identified some 2,000 Pakistanis who have found refuge in a school in central Tripoli.
"The place is overcrowded and everyone is anxious to be repatriated. But in the meantime, they urgently need food and medical care," said Othman Belbeisi, head of the IOM's Libya operations.
The situation of migrants in detention centres is also deteriorating, the IOM said.
Libya has 18 such centres for illegal migrants, holding a total of between 4,000 and 6,000 people.
The centres are running out of gas, water and food, and some have released inmates as they can no longer afford to provide adequate food and sanitation, the IOM said.
The organisation also said it was working with the Ethiopian embassy in neighbouring Egypt to obtain travel documents for a number of Ethiopian women who had been detained, and would help them get home.
Pakistan has sought help from the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) to evacuate citizens stranded in crisis hit Libya.
Thousands of Pakistanis are stranded in Libya. So far 709 Pakistanis have been evacuated through special flights of PIA. Currently there are 1,700 Pakistanis in a special relief camp set up by the embassy in Tripoli.
The IOM said it had received requests from Pakistan along with the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to help their citizens leave Libya.
Migrants hit hard
Migrants have been hit hard by the spiralling conflict in Libya which could lead to more of them taking to unseaworthy boats to try to reach Italy, the IOM warned on Friday.
"IOM is concerned that the number of migrants trying to reach Italy from Libya by sea could increase in the coming weeks, as more people decide to opt for the dangerous Mediterranean crossing to escape ongoing fighting in the Libyan capital," the IOM said in a statement.
Migrants either working in Libya or using the country as a jumping off point as they seek to reach Europe illegally are particularly vulnerable to the country's raging instability.
"Displaced migrants trapped in Tripoli have been particularly hard hit," the IOM said.
A week ago, 10 Sudanese were killed when a stray missile hit a house in a besieged district of Tripoli, where an estimated 15,000 Sudanese live.
IOM staff have also identified some 2,000 Pakistanis who have found refuge in a school in central Tripoli.
"The place is overcrowded and everyone is anxious to be repatriated. But in the meantime, they urgently need food and medical care," said Othman Belbeisi, head of the IOM's Libya operations.
The situation of migrants in detention centres is also deteriorating, the IOM said.
Libya has 18 such centres for illegal migrants, holding a total of between 4,000 and 6,000 people.
The centres are running out of gas, water and food, and some have released inmates as they can no longer afford to provide adequate food and sanitation, the IOM said.
The organisation also said it was working with the Ethiopian embassy in neighbouring Egypt to obtain travel documents for a number of Ethiopian women who had been detained, and would help them get home.