Neil Munshi
In 2017, Precious was approached by a woman in her neighbourhood who offered her an incredible opportunity: leave her corner of southern Nigeria for Italy, where she could work as a seamstress and send money back to her family.
Precious had seen people on social media seemingly living the high life in Europe and witnessed what the money they had sent home had done for their families. The journey would be easy, the woman assured her, and then she could help her family.
“She deceived me,” says Precious, sitting on a couch in Benin City, Nigeria’s fourth-largest city and a major hub for human trafficking and migration to Europe. “And I suffered.”
Far from an easy journey, Precious, who is now 22 and who did not wish to share her surname, was passed from middleman to middleman in Nigeria, and then, in Niger, piled into the back of a Toyota Hilux truck with 25 other people for a three-day drive across the Sahara desert.
She was beaten and starved, others died. But it was when the truck arrived at the border with Libya that her real suffering began. For more than a year, Precious was held in forced prostitution with dozens of other women from across sub-Saharan Africa.
She wasn’t allowed outside and was subjected to abuse and starvation. “Libya is a bad place — there are no laws there,” says Precious, who escaped in 2019 and returned home on a UN charter flight. “They say that since he died, everything has changed.”
Gaddafi would turn migration flows on and off as a way of extracting concessions from the EU and Italy. But when the despot was killed in 2011, traffickers and militias filled the void
Stories of brutality and abuse are common among the hundreds of thousands of people who have passed through Libya in the decade since the dictator was overthrown and the oil-rich north African country descended into chaos and conflict.
Libya had long been an entrepôt for migrants heading north, but after the 2011 revolution which toppled Gaddafi their numbers soared as it became the most important conduit for Africans seeking to reach Europe, where their arrival helped fuel the rise of the populist right.
More than 700,000 migrants are currently stranded in Libya, according to the International Rescue Committee, which calls the journey that Precious took “the world’s most dangerous migration route”.
Ten years on, observers say the unintended consequences of the toppling of Gaddafi — a dictator whose 42-year rule was marked by corruption and systematic human rights abuses — in August 2011 and his assassination two months later can be seen far beyond Libya: in migrant deaths in dinghies on the Mediterranean Sea, slave camps and brothels on land; and in the collapse in security across the western Sahel that has killed thousands, displaced millions and sunk France into what some consider its own “forever” war.
“Libya became a kind of ventre mou — a vulnerable point — for all the neighbouring countries,” says Mathias Hounkpe, head of the Mali country office for the Open Society Initiative for West Africa. “Mali, Niger, Chad, all these countries to some extent are having problems because we do not have stability in Libya.”
North Africa In Libya, the impact has been devastating. It has been blighted by violence and chaos since disputed elections in 2014 as rival factions carved the country into fiefdoms, while armed groups, criminal gangs and people smugglers exploited the weakness of the state.
In March, a unity government was sworn in as part of a UN-backed process to end a two-year civil conflict that sucked in regional powers and foreign mercenaries from the likes of Chad, Russia, Syria and Sudan. The new administration is supposed to lead the country to elections in December.
The foreign ministers of Libya’s neighbours — including Egypt, Tunisia, Sudan, Chad and Niger — met last week to discuss the situation, and called for overseas mercenaries and fighters to pull out of the country. “Libya is the first victim of these irregular elements,” said Algeria’s foreign minister Ramtane Lamamra. “And the risk is real that neighbouring countries also become victims if the withdrawal [of mercenaries] is not handled in a transparent, organised way.”
A Libyan rebel celebrates as his comrades fire a rocket at Gaddafi’s troops in 2011. Stories of brutality and abuse are common among the thousands of people who have passed through the country since the dictator was overthrown A Libyan rebel celebrates as his comrades fire a rocket at forces loyal to Gaddafi in 2011.
How troubles flowed from Libya to Mali
The Sahel, the semi-arid strip below the Sahara that is home to some of the world’s poorest countries, has long been a region of instability. So it is useful to think of Gaddafi’s fall not as a direct cause of its current turmoil but as an accelerant of dynamics long under way in the region, says Yvan Guichaoua, a Sahel specialist at the UK’s University of Kent.
“These insurgencies in Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali were somehow just ready to break out and just needed a sort of push, a trigger,” he says. “And Libya was this trigger.”
Mali had been the subject of numerous rebellions over the years, but it was fighters — both Tuareg rebels and jihadis — who cut their teeth in Libya, armed with Gaddafi’s arsenal and flush with cash, that finally captured northern Mali, helping to cripple the government in the capital, Bamako.
France intervened in 2013 and has been there ever since, an intractable military entanglement that has become a vulnerability in President Emmanuel Macron’s 2022 re-election campaign. Jihadi groups have since embedded themselves deeper and deeper into the region, turning it into one of the most important fronts for al-Qaeda and Isis.
Extremists in neighbouring Burkina Faso took inspiration from their Malian counterparts and mounted their own domestic insurgency that has shattered the country’s security. Jihadis exploited existing ethnic tensions in both countries and filled governance vacuums left by a neglectful state.
Migrants on an overcrowded boat off the coast of Libya. More than 700,000 migrants are currently stranded in Libya, according to the International Rescue Committee Migrants on an overcrowded boat off the coast of Libya.
Sahelian leaders in turn have used the chaos in Libya as an excuse for their own inability to secure their nations and “muscular strategy toward their own people”, says Guichaoua, adding that the country’s importance has sometimes been overstated as a driver of insecurity.
That is echoed by Corinne Dufka, west Africa director for Human Rights Watch, who says Libya’s link to insecurity in the Sahel “has been totally exaggerated”.
The “vast majority” of weapons in circulation now, she says, “are from attacks that [jihadis have] waged against the security forces . . . or are just buying on the open market”. What is not in dispute is that migrants have long travelled through the Sahara desert to get to Europe. In his latter years Gaddafi had acted as a regulator — turning flows on and off as a way of extracting concessions from the EU and Italy.
But with the despot dead, traffickers and militias filled the void. Post-revolution, “the smuggling economy [was able] to expand its capacity and logistical latitude, and operate with greater impunity than ever before”, according to a 2018 report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
The EU in effect set its border in the middle of the desert in Niger by paying that country €1.6bn in aid between 2016 and 2020 to stop migrants from travelling on centuries-old routes through the Sahara. It set them on to more dangerous desert routes, where thousands have since died.
In neighbouring Chad, authoritarian leader Idriss Déby had faced down rebellions for years, many launched from Libya. The Chadian group that ultimately killed him had worked as mercenaries for the France-backed rebel general Khalifa Haftar in eastern Libya and emerged equipped to mount a serious offensive on the capital N’Djamena, say regional experts.
Déby, who had served as president since taking power in a 1990 coup, had become further entrenched because of the political and financial support he received from Europe, which saw him as its most important bulwark against jihadis in the Sahel.
“A lot of things have happened since [2011],” says Daniel Eizenga, a research fellow at the US defence department’s Africa Center for Strategic Studies. “But . . . the fall of Gaddafi is really a key moment for at least unleashing that set of crises — it’s just a cascading set of events from there.” French president Emmanuel Macron, left, with his former Chadian counterpart Idriss Déby.
The African leader was killed in a battle with Libya-based rebels this year French president Emmanuel Macron, left, with his former Chadian counterpart Idriss Déby.
Guns for hire In February 2011, as the Arab uprisings swept across the Middle East and north Africa, young Libyans inspired by the crumbling of regimes in Egypt and Tunisia used social media to organise a “Day of Rage” against Gaddafi’s brutal rule.
The west, led by France, intervened, bolstering the popular uprising. It was a highly-contested decision — opposed by Joe Biden, the then US vice-president — but Nato fighter jets were streaking across the skies over Libya by March. In August, the rebels had taken Gaddafi’s compound.
On October 20, rebel forces found Gaddafi outside the city of Sirte and summarily executed him. His death left a vacuum and sent the country spiralling into disarray.
US president Barack Obama said in 2016 that his “worst mistake” was “failing to plan for the day after” in Libya. Biden said in a 2016 interview: “My question was . . . ‘He’s gone. Doesn’t the country disintegrate? What happens then? Doesn’t it become a . . . Petri dish for the growth of extremism?’”
Mourners in Nigeria attend the funeral of 43 farm workers killed by Boko Haram fighters. Western powers had considered Chad’s Idriss Déby their most important ally in the fight against the Islamist terror group
Extremists used Gaddafi’s arsenal to expand their activities in the Sahel. It is “still to this day the largest uncontrolled stockpile of ammunition in the world”, says David Lochhead, a senior researcher at the Small Arms Survey, who was one of the first UN peacekeepers deployed to northern Mali in 2013.
The west had not prepared for the immediate aftermath. And the EU has subsequently spent billions of euros in security, development and border aid across west and central Africa in order to stem the flow of migration.
France spent more than €900m last year on Operation Barkhane, its military mission to the Sahel, where it has had 5,000 troops stationed since it first intervened to crush the insurgency in northern Mali in 2013. No region has paid more than the Sahel itself, where thousands have been killed and millions displaced in spiralling violence that began with the fall of northern Mali after the return of thousands of armed mercenaries who had worked for Gaddafi.
Activists in Niger protest against the results of the presidential run-off this February. An attempted coup in the Sahelian state was thwarted just days earlier “There was all that concern [in 2011] — much of it justified — about what are you going to do about 14,000-15,000 well-trained men with nothing to do . . . coming into your territory, who are your citizens,” says Bisa Williams, who served as the American ambassador to Niger between 2011 and 2013.
“It created a swarm of people descending on sub-Saharan Africa, and those countries weren’t prepared.” Northern Mali had long faced Tuareg rebellions.
But “what made it so potent this time . . . was that it became an opportunistic insurgency in some ways that [jihadist groups] linked on to”, she says. “And maybe that put in the minds of people that domestic insurgencies [and] domestic grievances could get more muscle from these groups that had more money and firearms.
“[For some members] the attraction of the resources, the manpower, the training, were too hard to resist,” says Williams. “And so little by little, they affiliated themselves with Isis [and al-Qaeda].”
UN peacekeepers in Mali, where thousands have been killed and millions displaced in violence that began with the fall of the north after the return of thousands of armed mercenaries who had worked for Gaddafi.
Déby’s end
On the morning of April 20, as celebratory gunfire erupted on the streets of N’Djamena to mark his victory in a sixth straight Potemkin election, Idriss Déby was already dead or dying hundreds of kilometres from the capital.
The Chadian strongman had been killed while visiting troops on the frontline of a firefight with a rebel convoy hurtling south from Libya. Western powers considered Déby their most important ally in the fight against Islamist terror group Boko Haram in the area bordering north-east Nigeria.
He had become even more essential to the French-led effort against jihadism in the Sahel. Chad’s stability was so important to Paris that in 2019 it sent Mirage fighter jets to strike a rebel convoy heading for the capital.
Yet the French did not intervene as the Libya-based Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT) rebel column neared N’Djamena earlier this year. “You can’t think about the transformation of the rebellions in northern Chad without looking at them in view of the Libyan civil war,” says Eizenga.
“The current instability and uncertainty in Libya — which is a direct result of Gaddafi’s death — and the ongoing civil war have just opened up all kinds of opportunities for would-be mercenaries and other rebel factions.”
“Libya has always been a key part of Chadian stability, and Déby said in 2011, ‘look if Gaddafi goes, we’re going to have a lot of trouble,’ and I think he knew [what] that meant for him too,” he adds.
A pick-up truck carrying migrants passes close to Agadez in Niger. Traffickers have increasingly had to take more dangerous routes north A pick-up truck carrying migrants passes close to Agadez in Niger.
It is a shadow of himself. “I came back in 2017 and I was half dead,” he says. He had tried to cross the Mediterranean Sea three times during his two years in Libya.
Each time, his rubber boat was caught by the Libyan Coast Guard, who put him in prisons that were, he says, little more than slave camps, where the guards forced him to call his family to wire money for his release or hired him out to farmers as slave labour for their fields.
In the past eight months, 23,000 people have been intercepted at sea and returned to Libya, according to the IRC. Recommended The Big Read Instability in the Sahel: how a jihadi gold rush is fuelling violence in Africa Michael is one of tens of thousands of victims handed over to smugglers and militias by the Libyan Coast Guard, which despite being accused of gross human rights violations is a key partner in the EU’s anti-migration efforts.
Libya is now the source of up to 90 per cent of the people who cross the Mediterranean to Europe, according to UNHCR. The International Organization for Migration reports that 1,312 people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean so far this year, more than double the number by this time last year and 20 per cent higher than the same period in 2019.
“Now there is no law, so some people there [in Libya] live how they want to,” says the 32-year-old. “This lack of governance and the population of Africans trying to go through . . . [the traffickers] saw they could make a lot of money, and that they could treat us however they wanted.” He stares vacantly at the picture on his phone, before adding: “I can’t describe what I went through in Libya.”
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Neil Munshi in the West Africa correspondent at the Financial Times, covering economics, politics, security and culture in a region that stretches from Mauritania to Gabon to Chad and Cameroon (and all of Ecowas in between), with a particular focus on Nigeria. Previously he worked as a correspondent in New York and Chicago, covering everything between the coasts. He started his career at the FT as a correspondent in Mumbai in 2011.
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