1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

New networks carry Syrians from Egypt to Europe

Lewis Sanders IVMay 15, 2015

The UN Security Council is set to vote on the EU's proposal for military action against people smugglers in the Mediterranean. But who are they, what do their networks look like, and are they really a security threat?

https://p.dw.com/p/1FQTD
Flüchtlingskind Kreta Griechenland
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/EPA/R. Stefanos

The people smuggling trade in Egypt has existed for years, mostly operating out of rural villages. But following the influx of Syrian refugees to Egypt, a new network has emerged and it relies heavily on Syrians in Egypt to conduct its business.

Tom Rollins, a journalist working on refugee migration in the Mediterranean, told DW that while there is a hierarchy to the Syrian networks in Egypt, much of the trafficking works organically. He said the networks are typically comprised of a kingpin and simsars, or brokers, who serve as middlemen between potential migrants and those who operate the boats.

A local - and growing - business

"It's a local business," Rollins said of the Syrian network in Egypt.

Brokers in the network, based in urban areas as opposed to traditional Egyptian networks, offer up to 10 Egyptian pounds (1.15 euros) to Syrian shopkeepers per referral, a former staff member at a refugee aid organization in Egypt told DW on condition of anonymity.

Smugglers then hand the refugees and economic migrants off to boat operators, mostly poor fishermen.

"The smuggler won't be in the boat. He will be in his office counting the money," the former staff member added, highlighting the hierarchy in monetary distribution among the network's players.

The cost of securing passage on a ship is estimated to cost between $1,500 and $3,000, most of which lands in the pockets of the network kingpin with smaller cuts going to the boat operators and simsars.

The people smuggling trade in Egypt has picked up significantly due to the influx of Syrian refugees who cannot officially work in Egypt, which forces them to resort to the informal economy or to try to move on and seek a better life elsewhere.

There are more than 130,000 Syrian refugees registered in Egypt, a substantial increase from 13,000 in January 2013, according to figures provided by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

A security threat?

Meanwhile, the UN Security Council is set to vote in favor of an EU proposal to use military action against people smugglers to address the migration crisis on the Mediterranean.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has backed the proposal, but is concerned that military action against people smugglers "could further endanger migrant lives."

IOM spokesperson Joel Millman told DW the solution cannot be resolved through military action, although traffickers need to be targeted.

"The top priority must be safeguarding migrants' lives," he said. "Destroying a raft or a boat is not a solution. A sunken boat can be replaced. A human life cannot."

However, the question over whether people smugglers should be targeted continues to be a security concern.

"The fisherman who sells his boat is not the criminal, he may not even be there when the boat was deployed full of migrants. We are angry about the reckless tactics of the traffickers who overload those boats and make them unsafe," Millman said.

"We don't know if the fishermen are doing this," he added. "If they are they should be targeted. But mostly we hear of traffickers filling boats beyond their safe capacity."