Libya expels over 200 migrants across land borders
Libya sent more than 200 illegal migrants back across its land borders, in a rare display of cooperation from the country's divided political institutions.
The migrants, dressed in differing tracksuits to identify their nationalities, were handed biscuits, milk and bottles of water by police in Tripoli, before being bused in convoys to Libyan border crossings.
The group of returnees included "105 Egyptians, 101 Chadians and 20 Sudanese,".
The operation was organised by the Interior Ministry of Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah's Tripoli-based government, whose authority is contested by a rival administration in Libya's east.
But a deal with authorities there and in the south enabled coordination of the expulsions.
War-ravaged Libya is a conduit for thousands of people each year fleeing conflict and poverty across Africa, seeking refuge across the Mediterranean in Europe.
Most enter via the country's vast southern borders in the Sahara desert.
Police spokesman General Ahmad Abu Kraa said holding centres for detained migrants had become "overwhelmed, which is creating a lot of problems".
Libya is regularly criticised for its treatment of migrants, with rights groups alleging horrific treatment at the hands of smuggling gangs and inside state-run detention centres.