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Friday, March 25, 2011

800,000 Foreign Workers Still in Libya

In this image taken during an organized trip by the Libyan authorities, men gather at a mass funeral for people killed in coalition bombings, officials said, in Tripoli, Libya, Thursday March 24, 2011. The cause of deaths could not be verified. French fighter jets struck an air base deep inside Libya and destroyed one of Moammar Gadhafis planes Thursday, and NATO ships patrolled the coast to block the flow of arms and mercenaries. Other coalition bombers struck artillery, arms depots and parked helicopters.

Some 800,000 foreign workers are still in Libya, according to an estimate by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).
Laurence Hart, the IOM mission chief in Tripoli, told AFP: "Based on IOM estimates, there are about 800,000 foreign workers of various nationalities still in Libya."
He added that he was not in a position to say how many of them wanted to leave the country but said the organisation had received requests for aid to help repatriate their citizens from the embassies of a number of African countries.
The IOM asked the Libyan authorities at the beginning of March for permission to send a humanitarian mission to the country where tens of thousands of immigrants were awaiting to be evacuated.
"We have still not received a reply," said Hart, who is currently away from Libya. Since February 20, some 280,000 people have fled the violence in Libya, 151,000 to Tunisia and 118,000 to Egypt, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

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