The 18 fishermen of Italian nationality were arrested after Libyan patrol boats detained their fishing vessels on allegations of operating in the territorial waters on the Mediterranean Sea that belong to Libya.
They are being held in Libya’s second most-populous city, Benghazi, which is under the control of the military commander Khalifa Haftar who controls the East part of the oil-rich nation.
The fishing grounds on which the fishermen were arrested have been disputed since 2005, when the then Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi extended the country’s territorial waters from 12 nautical offshore miles to 74 nautical miles, a decision that Haftar has been trying to enforce.
In order to free the fishermen, Haftar reportedly wants the Italian government to swap the 18 Italians with four Libyan nationals convicted of human trafficking in 2015 who are serving a 30-year sentence in Italy.
Italy’s Foreign Minister, Luigi Di Maio considers such demand for exchange “unacceptable.” On his part, the Italian prosecutor in-charge of the human trafficking case, Carmelo Zuccaro has termed Haftar’s suggestion “repugnant.”
In his October 18 address, Pope Francis also prayed for peace and stability in North African nation so that the “various discussions in progress at an international level … may be relevant for the future of Libya.”
Libya has been unstable since the 2011 “Arab Spring” that led to the ouster of Muammar Gaddafi, with the country now witnessing political wrangles between Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA) and the internationally recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) based in the capital, Tripoli.
2014 was a defining year in the country’s political crisis after the General National Congress (GNC), which was elected in July 2012 with a mandate to develop a new constitution for the country, extended its mandate beyond January 2014, a move that was met with widespread protests.
Haftar, the then commander of the Libyan Army, called for GNC’s dissolution, a demand that the leadership of GNC rejected. In response, Haftar executed Operation Dignity offensive against the National Congress, forcing its leaders to announce a new election date.