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- Title
The Smuggling of Migrants across the Mediterranean Sea: A Human Rights Perspective.
- Authors
Elserafy, J. Shadi
- Abstract
Irregular migration by sea is one of the most apparent contemporary political issues, and one that entails many legal challenges. Human smuggling by sea is only one aspect of irregular migration that represents a particular challenge for States, as sovereignty and security interests clash with the principles and obligations of human rights and refugee law. In dealing with the problem of migrant smuggling by sea, States have conflicting roles, including the protection of national borders, suppressing the smuggling of migrants, rescuing migrants and guarding human rights. The legal framework governing the issue of migrant smuggling at sea stems not only from the rules of the law of the sea and the Smuggling Protocol but also from rules of general international law, in particular human rights law and refugee law. The contemporary practice of States intercepting vessels engaged in migrant smuggling indicates that States have, on several occasions, attempted to fragment the applicable legal framework by relying on laws that allow for enhancing border controls and implementing measures that undermine obligations of human rights and refugee law. This article seeks to discuss the human rights dimension of maritime interception missions and clarify as much as possible the obligations imposed by international law on States towards smuggled migrants and whether or not these obligations limit the capacity of States to act.
- Subjects
HUMAN rights violations -- Law &; legislation; EUROPEAN Court of Human Rights; JUSTICE administration; EUROPEAN Convention on Human Rights; CIVIL rights
- Publication
East European Yearbook on Human Rights, 2019, Vol 2, Issue 1, p94
- ISSN
2589-7764
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5553/EEYHR/258977642019002001005