Libya’s Hidden Nightmare: Bangladeshi Women in Modern Slavery

Tuhin Sarwar
Journalist
Investigative journalist and author Tuhin Sarwar covers human rights, the Rohingya crisis, climate change, and AI governance and accountability through data-driven journalism, field research, and evidence-based...
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Hidden beneath Libya’s scorching deserts and the Mediterranean’s blue waves, Bangladeshi women are trapped in a brutal sex slavery network, where Europe’s promise becomes a living nightmare

Libya, once a transit point for migrants dreaming of a better life in Europe, has transformed into a site of pervasive violence, exploitation, and human trafficking. Beyond the Sahara’s blistering heat and the Mediterranean’s deceptive beauty, thousands of women, children, and men from across Africa and South Asia languish in detention and trafficking networks, surviving extreme abuse, sexual exploitation, and torture that international observers describe as a violent business model. https://www.ungeneva.org/en/news-media/news/2026/02/115978/migrants-and-refugees-libya-subjected-systematic-abuse-un-report/)

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Beneath Libya’s burning desert and the Mediterranean’s blue waves, Bangladeshi women and girls are trapped in a brutal trafficking network

Among the most vulnerable are Bangladeshi women and girls, many of whom arrived seeking job opportunities only to be betrayed, detained, and forced into modern slavery. Their experiences expose a humanitarian catastrophe compounded by institutional collapse, porous borders, armed group control, and flawed migration policies.


Statistics & Trends: A Data Overview

Humanitarian agencies and field research offer stark numerical insights into the scale of Libya’s migrant crisis:

  • Mass Detention: As of late 2025, Libya hosted close to 929,000 migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, many held in government and militia‑controlled facilities where abuse is routine. ACAPS

  • Systematic Abuse: A joint United Nations report based on interviews with nearly 100 migrants from 16 countries found widespread abduction, arbitrary detention, and severe violations, including sexual violence, forced labour, extortion, and trafficking. The United Nations Office at Geneva

  • Sexual Violence: Testimonies reveal girls as young as 14 subjected to daily rape and torture in trafficking houses tied to militia networks — conditions that mirror modern slavery. (Committee for Justice)

  • Return & Repatriation: Limited official efforts have repatriated migrants (including Bangladeshis), but numbers fall far short of the actual scale of exploitation and detention. (EuroBangla Times)

These figures underscore a sustained crisis that goes far beyond irregular migration — it involves organized trafficking and the erosion of basic human rights within an environment of armed conflict and state fragmentation.


Human Rights & Trafficking Context

The United Nations Human Rights Office (OHCHR) and the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) characterize Libya’s migrant situation not as isolated abuses but as an entrenched, systematic model of exploitation. Their joint report describes forced abduction, extortion, trafficking, rape, and torture as routine practices in detention centres where militia, criminal networks, and even state‑linked guards operate with impunity. The United Nations Office at Geneva

According to the report, migrants — including women and children — are often rounded up, separated from families, and transferred to detention without due process, and kept in facilities where sexual violence, forced labour, and extortion are normalized. UNSMIL

International organizations and NGOs have long documented similar conditions: overcrowding, lack of food and clean water, absence of medical care, and abuse at the hands of guards. In some centers, detainees reported resorting to drinking toilet water, forced labour, and routine sexual harassment and assault. ()

Crucially, these abuses occur not only in militia‑controlled “safe houses” and trafficking hubs but also in facilities nominally run by Libyan authorities — often funded or supported by European border programmes — a fact that has drawn significant international criticism. Al Jazeera

Social & Economic Analysis: How Exploitation Became Business

Libya’s collapse following the 2011 civil war left the country fragmented, with competing authorities, weak central institutions, and pervasive militia influence. This vacuum enabled human traffickers to expand their operations across multiple levels of the migration economy.

Today, human trafficking in Libya functions as a multi‑layered economy:

  • Recruitment and transit networks in South Asia and Africa pay brokers for passage to Libya.

  • Migrants are transferred across borders via Sudan, Cairo, Amman, and the Sahara, often at gunpoint and without legal protection.

  • Armed groups and brokers detain migrants in centres where ransom demands are common — families often must pay multiple times for release.

  • Women and girls are sold into forced prostitution or sexual exploitation as part of a structured “business model.”

This pattern of commodifying human beings changes the narrative from irregular migration to organized crime exploiting systemic vulnerabilities. The financial flows — often obscured through informal systems like hawala networks — reinforce the incentives for traffickers, militias, and corrupt officials to continue profiteering from human misery.


Experiences of Women & Children: Human Stories Behind the Data

Behind every statistic is a human life, aspirational, vulnerable, and too often broken. These narratives illuminate the lived reality behind Libya’s migrant crisis:

Mariam’s Story (Bangladesh)

Mariam, a 25‑year‑old woman from a rural Bangladeshi village, left her home hoping to provide for her family. Promised work in the Gulf, she was rerouted to Libya, where militias confiscated her documents and forced her into sexual slavery. Guards told her she was property, cooking and cleaning by day, and facing repeated abuse at night. In this system, even basic needs like clean water and food were treated as commodities to be exploited.

Her ordeal ended only after international assistance secured her release. But she remains permanently scarred physically and emotionally, and her experience reflects a broader pattern documented by human rights monitors.

Children at Risk

Reports from international organizations include distressing accounts of minors being raped, sexually assaulted, forced to witness abuse, and held in inhumane conditions without access to healthcare, proper shelter, or basic hygiene — situations that contribute to long‑term trauma and psychological disorders like PTSD. Humanium


Legal & Policy Framework: Gaps and Global Response

Libya’s failure to ratify the 1951 Refugee Convention or its 1967 Protocol means migrants lack formal legal protections under international refugee law. This absence leaves them vulnerable to arbitrary detention and exploitation without recourse to due process, legal counsel, or protection mechanisms.

International law, including the Palermo Protocol on Trafficking in Persons and the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, prohibits trafficking, enslavement, and inhumane treatment. Yet enforcement remains elusive within Libyan territory.

European Union policies aimed at containing migration — including funding and training Libya’s coastguard — have inadvertently reinforced abuses. Intercepted migrants returned to Libya are often subjected to the same cycles of detention and violence, a practice that has drawn strong criticism from human rights defenders. The United Nations Office at Geneva

In 2024, the Italian Supreme Court ruled Libya is not a “safe harbour” for migrants, underlining the legal and moral imperative to halt returns until robust human rights safeguards are in place.


Case Studies & Interviews: Corroborating Evidence

The United Nations report and related investigations include testimonies that corroborate patterns of abuse:

  • An Eritrean woman told investigators she was held for more than six weeks in a trafficking house in Tobruk, where she witnessed girls as young as 14 being raped daily, only being released after a family payment. Committee for Justice

  • Multiple migrants reported forced labour, extortion, torture, confiscation of identity documents, and ransom demands tied to family payments. The United Nations Office at Geneva

  • Interceptions at sea by Libyan agents often involve dangerous maneuvers and forced returns to detention centres. Committee for Justice

These accounts, gathered from individuals across Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, paint a consistent portrait of systemic violations and trafficking practices amounting to modern slavery.


Solutions & Recommendations: What Must Change

Ending this crisis requires coordinated action on multiple fronts:

1. Independent Monitoring & Closure of Abusive Facilities International oversight mechanisms — linked to the UN and independent humanitarian organizations — are essential to monitor detention centres, document violations, and hold perpetrators accountable.

2. Dismantling Trafficking Networks Global law enforcement cooperation is critical to disrupt cross‑border trafficking networks, prosecute complicit actors, and dismantle militia involvement.

3. Safe & Legal Migration Pathways Expanding humanitarian visas, resettlement options, and safe passages will reduce dependence on smuggler routes that funnel migrants into exploitative systems.

4. Protection & Rehabilitation for Survivors Psychosocial, medical, and legal support for survivors — especially women and children — must be scaled up, with reintegration programs tailored to trauma, stigma, and economic displacement.

5. Policy Shift on Border Management International partners, including EU states, must reassess policies that return migrants to Libya’s detention system, prioritizing human dignity and protection obligations over deterrence.


Conclusion

The situation facing Bangladeshi women, children, and countless other migrants in Libya is not a series of isolated abuses — it is a systemic crisis of human rights violations and organized trafficking. Beneath the desert’s heat and along the Mediterranean’s glittering surface, exploitation has become normalized, enforced by armed networks and enabled by legal gaps and flawed policies.

Unless urgent, collaborative, rights‑based interventions are implemented, this cycle of exploitation and suffering will continue. The voices emerging from detention, trauma, and survival — like Mariam’s — are stark reminders: humanity must not be reduced to a commodity in a marketplace of violence.


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Tuhin Sarwar

Investigative journalist and author Tuhin Sarwar covers human rights, the Rohingya crisis, climate change, and AI governance and accountability through data-driven journalism, field research, and evidence-based reporting.

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Investigative journalist and author Tuhin Sarwar covers human rights, the Rohingya crisis, climate change, and AI governance and accountability through data-driven journalism, field research, and evidence-based reporting.
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