Trump
Administration Plans to Send Migrants to Libya on a Military Flight
Human rights
groups have called conditions in the country’s network of migrant detention
centers “horrific” and “deplorable.”
Eric Schmitt Hamed Aleaziz Maggie Haberman Michael Crowley
By Eric
SchmittHamed AleazizMaggie Haberman and Michael Crowley
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/us/politics/trump-libya-migrants.html?searchResultPosition=2
May 6, 2025
The Trump
administration is planning to transport a group of immigrants to Libya on a
U.S. military plane, according to U.S. officials, another sharp escalation in a
deportation program that has sparked widespread legal challenges and intense
political debate.
The
nationalities of the migrants were not immediately clear, but a flight to Libya
carrying the deportees could leave as soon as Wednesday, according to the
officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to discuss the operation.
The decision
to send deportees to Libya was striking. The country is racked with conflict,
and human rights groups have called conditions in its network of migrant
detention centers “horrific” and “deplorable.”
The Libya
operation falls in line with the Trump administration’s effort to not only
deter migrants from trying to enter the country illegally but also to send a
strong message to those in the country illegally that they can be deported to
countries where they could face brutal conditions. Reuters earlier reported the
possibility of a U.S. deportation flight to Libya.
The planning
for the flight to Libya has been tightly held, and could still be derailed by
logistical, legal or diplomatic obstacles.
The White
House declined to comment. The State Department and Defense Department did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
The
potential use of Libya as a destination comes after the administration set off
an earlier furor by deporting a group of Venezuelans to El Salvador, where they
are being held in a maximum-security prison designed for terrorists.
President
Trump and his aides labeled those men violent gang members and cited a rarely
used wartime law in their expulsions, a move that has been challenged in the
courts.
The State
Department warns against traveling to Libya “due to crime, terrorism,
unexploded land mines, civil unrest, kidnapping and armed conflict.” The
country remains divided after years of civil war following the 2011 overthrow
of its longtime dictator, Muammar Gaddafi. A United Nations-recognized
government in Tripoli rules western Libya, and another in Benghazi, led by the
warlord Khalifa Haftar, controls the east.
The United
States has formal relations only with the Tripoli government. But Mr. Haftar’s
son, Saddam, was in Washington last week, and met with several Trump
administration officials. Mr. Trump had friendly dealings in his first term
with Mr. Haftar, who controls most of Libya’s lucrative oil fields.
A major
transit point for Europe-bound migrants, Libya operates numerous detention
facilities for refugees and migrants. Amnesty International branded those sites
“horrific” and “a hellscape” in a 2021 report, which found evidence of “sexual
violence, against men, women and children.” The Global Detention Project says
detained migrants in Libya endure “physical mistreatment and torture,” forced
labor and even slavery.
In its
annual report on human rights practices last year, the State Department cited
“harsh and life-threatening” conditions in Libya’s detention centers and found
that migrants in those facilities, including children, had “no access to
immigration courts or due process.”
Human rights
groups say that European governments have been complicit in such treatment by
working with Libya to intercept migrants bound for the continent and send them
to the detention centers.
“I have been
in those migrant prisons and it’s no place for migrants,” said Frederic Wehrey,
a Libya expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “It’s just a
horrific place to dump any vulnerable person.”
Earlier this
year, the Trump administration deported several hundred people to Panama from
countries in the Eastern Hemisphere, including Iran and China. The migrants,
who said they did not know where they were going, were detained in a hotel for
several days before being taken to a camp near the jungle. Some of the migrants
were later released from Panamanian custody.
Around the
same time, U.S. officials also deported a group of around 200 migrants to Costa
Rica from countries in the Eastern Hemisphere, including Iran. A lawsuit filed
against the country argued that the deportations and subsequent detention in
Costa Rica “could cause irreparable harm” for a group of children sent to the
country.
After the
United States struck a deal with El Salvador to take Venezuelan migrants and
imprison them, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he was working to secure
similar agreements with additional nations.
“I intend to
continue to try and identify other countries willing to accept and jail as many
gang members as we can send them,” Mr. Rubio told The New York Times.
The planned
use of a military plane for the flight to Libya comes after the Defense
Department has assisted in transporting migrants to locations such as India,
Guatemala and Ecuador.
In late
March, Defense Department officials flew a group of Venezuelan migrants to El
Salvador without any staff from the Department of Homeland Security on the
plane, according to court records. The flight took off from Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba, to El Salvador and included four Venezuelans. A government filing
indicated that the Department of Homeland Security did not “direct” the plane
to take off for El Salvador.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs contributed reporting.
Eric Schmitt
is a national security correspondent for The Times, focusing on U.S. military
affairs and counterterrorism issues overseas, topics he has reported on for
more than three decades.
Hamed
Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for
The Times.
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
Michael
Crowley covers the State Department and U.S. foreign policy for The Times. He
has reported from nearly three dozen countries and often travels with the
secretary of state.
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