In the presence of Al-Dabaiba, the graduation of the 36th batch of the Azizia Police Officers College

Al-Azizia- The graduation ceremony of the 36th batch of police officers was held at the headquarters of the College of Police Officers in the municipality of Al-Azizia, in the presence of the head of the national unity government, Abdul Hamid al-Dabaiba, and the designate Minister of Interior, Imad Trabelsi.

Al-Dabaiba said in a speech, that the release of new blood to the security establishment after a 10-year hiatus is a national effort that is credited to the Ministry of the Interior, stressing his support for building the security establishment by graduating qualified cadres whose loyalty is to God and then to the homeland.

The prime minister added, “We work together to protect Libya and its unity, and we reject the return of wars.”

The graduation ceremony was also attended, according to the media office of the Prime Minister, a number of members of Parliament from the 11th constituency, the Minister of Local Government “Badr Al-Din Al-Toumi”, the Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs “Adel Jumaa”, the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Interior for Public Affairs Major General “Mahmoud Saeed”, and the mayors of The Greater Al-Azizia municipalities, a number of notables from the Wershafana tribe, and parents of the graduates.

Source: Libyan News Agency

The House of Representatives discusses the Youth and Sports Bill

Benghazi- The House of Representatives discussed, in its official session today, Tuesday, which was held at the Council’s headquarters in the city of Benghazi, headed by First Deputy “Fawzi Al-Nuwairi,” a draft youth and sports law.

The official spokesman for the House of Representatives, Abdullah Blehaq, stated that the House decided to refer the law to the Youth and Work Committee of the House for final review.

Blehaq added that the First Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives briefed the House on his meeting with the Attorney General this morning at the House of Representatives headquarters in the city of Benghazi.

Source: Libyan News Agency

The General Authority for the Search for Missing Persons announces the extraction of 3 bodies from a site in the city of Tarhuna

Tarhuna– Today, Tuesday, the General Authority for Research and Identification of Missing Persons announced the extraction of (3) unidentified bodies from a site in the city of Tarhuna.

The authority stated on its Facebook page that the authority’s search department teams exhumed the bodies based on a report from the Directorate Support Force and after excavations on Salem Bin Ali Road in Tarhuna.

The authority indicated that work is continuing on the rest of the communications received by the authority in this regard.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Drone Advances in Ukraine Could Bring Dawn of Killer Robots

Drone advances in Ukraine have accelerated a long-anticipated technology trend that could soon bring the world’s first fully autonomous fighting robots to the battlefield, inaugurating a new age of warfare.

The longer the war lasts, the more likely it becomes that drones will be used to identify, select and attack targets without help from humans, according to military analysts, combatants and artificial intelligence researchers.

That would mark a revolution in military technology as profound as the introduction of the machine gun. Ukraine already has semi-autonomous attack drones and counter-drone weapons endowed with AI. Russia also claims to possess AI weaponry, though the claims are unproven. But there are no confirmed instances of a nation putting into combat robots that have killed entirely on their own.

Experts say it may be only a matter of time before either Russia or Ukraine, or both, deploy them. The sense of inevitability extends to activists, who have tried for years to ban killer drones but now believe they must settle for trying to restrict the weapons’ offensive use.

Ukraine’s digital transformation minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, agrees that fully autonomous killer drones are “a logical and inevitable next step” in weapons development. He said Ukraine has been doing “a lot of R&D in this direction.”

“I think that the potential for this is great in the next six months,” Fedorov told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

Ukrainian Lt. Col. Yaroslav Honchar, co-founder of the combat drone innovation nonprofit Aerorozvidka, said in a recent interview near the front that human war fighters simply cannot process information and make decisions as quickly as machines.

Ukrainian military leaders currently prohibit the use of fully independent lethal weapons, although that could change, he said.

“We have not crossed this line yet – and I say ‘yet’ because I don’t know what will happen in the future,” said Honchar, whose group has spearheaded drone innovation in Ukraine, converting cheap commercial drones into lethal weapons.

Russia could obtain autonomous AI from Iran or elsewhere. The long-range Shahed-136 exploding drones supplied by Iran have crippled Ukrainian power plants and terrorized civilians but are not especially smart. Iran has other drones in its evolving arsenal that it says feature AI.

Without a great deal of trouble, Ukraine could make its semi-autonomous weaponized drones fully independent in order to better survive battlefield jamming, their Western manufacturers say.

Those drones include the U.S.-made Switchblade 600 and the Polish Warmate, which both currently require a human to choose targets over a live video feed. AI finishes the job. The drones, technically known as “loitering munitions,” can hover for minutes over a target, awaiting a clean shot.

“The technology to achieve a fully autonomous mission with Switchblade pretty much exists today,” said Wahid Nawabi, CEO of AeroVironment, its maker. That will require a policy change — to remove the human from the decision-making loop — that he estimates is three years away.

Drones can already recognize targets such as armored vehicles using cataloged images. But there is disagreement over whether the technology is reliable enough to ensure that the machines don’t err and take the lives of noncombatants.

The AP asked the defense ministries of Ukraine and Russia if they have used autonomous weapons offensively – and whether they would agree not to use them if the other side similarly agreed. Neither responded.

If either side were to go on the attack with full AI, it might not even be a first.

An inconclusive U.N. report last year suggested that killer robots debuted in Libya’s internecine conflict in 2020, when Turkish-made Kargu-2 drones in full-automatic mode killed an unspecified number of combatants.

A spokesman for STM, the manufacturer, said the report was based on “speculative, unverified” information and “should not be taken seriously.” He told the AP the Kargu-2 cannot attack a target until the operator tells it to do so.

Honchar thinks Russia, whose attacks on Ukrainian civilians have shown little regard for international law, would have used killer autonomous drones by now if the Kremlin had them.

“I don’t think they’d have any scruples,” agreed Adam Bartosiewicz, vice president of WB Group, which makes the Warmate.

AI is a priority for Russia. President Vladimir Putin said in 2017 that whoever dominates that technology will rule the world. In a December 21 speech, he expressed confidence in the Russian arms industry’s ability to embed AI in war machines, stressing that “the most effective weapons systems are those that operate quickly and practically in an automatic mode.” Russian officials already claim their Lancet drone can operate with full autonomy.

An effort to lay international ground rules for military drones has so far been fruitless. Nine years of informal United Nations talks in Geneva made little headway, with major powers including the United States and Russia opposing a ban. The last session, in December, ended with no new round scheduled.

Toby Walsh, an Australian academic who campaigns against killer robots, hopes to achieve a consensus on some limits, including a ban on systems that use facial recognition and other data to identify or attack individuals or categories of people.

“If we are not careful, they are going to proliferate much more easily than nuclear weapons,” said Walsh, author of Machines Behaving Badly. “If you can get a robot to kill one person, you can get it to kill a thousand.”

Multiple countries, and every branch of the U.S. military, are developing drones that can attack in deadly synchronized swarms, according to Zachary Kallenborn, a George Mason University weapons innovation analyst.

So will future wars become a fight to the last drone?

That’s what Putin predicted in a 2017 televised chat with engineering students: “When one party’s drones are destroyed by drones of another, it will have no other choice but to surrender.”

Source: Voice of America

An expanded meeting on reopening the Ghadames border crossing with Algeria

Tripoli- Today, Tuesday, an expanded meeting was held at the headquarters of the Relations and Cooperation Department at the Ministry of Interior regarding the reopening of the Ghadames border crossing, Al-Dabdab, and a review of the operational needs facing its reopening.

The Ministry of Interior stated on its official page that the meeting dealt with discussing a number of issues related to the service aspects needed by the port, and to identify the rest of the obstacles facing the workflow.

The meeting concluded, according to the ministry, to develop organizational solutions to manage the port by the competent authorities in an integrated manner that guarantees the success of the work, and to agree to set a meeting next Tuesday to present a final report to all components operating at the port to announce the readiness of the Libyan side to reopen it.

According to the ministry, the meeting included the director of the Relations Department, the director of the General Department of Ports Security, the head of the Control Affairs Office at the Passports Authority, a member of the Office of Communication and International Cooperation, representatives of the ministries concerned with the port (Foreign Affairs, Transportation, Economy), the Customs Authority, the Internal Security Agency and the General Intelligence, and the director of the office International Health Oversight at the Center for Disease Control and the National Center for Animal Health and the Mayor of Ghadames Municipality.

Source: Libyan News Agency

UNHCR Update Libya (20 December 2022) [EN/AR]

Highlights

On 29 December, a ceremony was held to mark the rehabilitation work of Sidi Hussein sewage lifting station in north Benghazi, which was overseen by partner Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC). The event was attended by the Water and Sewage Company. The lifting station will service the Sidi Hussein neighbourhood, hosting around 14,000 people including refugees and many Libyans who returned after the fighting in Benghazi in 2017. As it was out of service, many roads in the area had to be closed during the rainy season. The work included repairing of the pump, plumbing, tiling, and electrical work, and painting of the building. The project is part of efforts to rehabilitate basic infrastructure in areas previously affected by conflict and in which large displacement occurred.

On 29 December, UNHCR participated in the joint interagency mission to Misrata and Tawergha in coordination with the Resident Coordinator’s Office. In Misrata, the mission met the municipality officials and discussed the new UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) and the key role of municipalities. In Tawergha, the mission met the Local Council and talked about the challenges faced by the community in access to education, health, water, housing, jobs, and the urgent need for durable solutions for IDPs and returnees. The mission also visited some UN projects and two schools which are used as collective shelters by 47 returnee families to listen to their concerns and needs.

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees