UNSMIL condemns the mass arbitrary arrest of migrants in Libya.

Tripoli, June 12, 2023 (Lana) The UNSMIL expressed its concern about the mass arbitrary arrest of migrants and asylum-seekers in Libya.

The UNSMIL said in a statement today that Libyan authorities have arrested thousands of men, women, and children from the streets and their homes or following raids on alleged traffickers’ camps and warehouses in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions, and thousands more collectively, including migrants who had entered Libya legally, were expelled without due process.

UNSMIL calls on Libyan authorities to halt these actions, treat migrants with dignity and humanity in line with their international obligations, and grant UN agencies and INGOs unimpeded access to detainees in urgent need of protection.

Source: Libyan News Agency

International Monetary Fund: Libya needs a clear-cut economic strategy and it must reduce the level of spending.

The International Monetary Fund has affirmed Libya’s urgent need for a transparent budget that reduces costs associated with high spending on public sector wages and subsidies.

The fund indicated in a report that public sector salaries dominate government spending, as about 2.2 million people – a third of the population – work by default in the public sector, and subsidies and grants amount to about a quarter of spending.

He also noted that fuel subsidies are particularly problematic, with the domestic price of gasoline at 3 cents per liter, the second lowest in the world.

The fund added that Libya needs a clear economic strategy, which represents an opportunity to mobilize the public behind a plan that works to improve the use of oil revenues to diversify the economy, and the success of reforms will depend on achieving a stable political and security environment and developing institutional capabilities.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Local affairs editor (LANA) comments on what was published by the UN mission regarding illegal immigrants in Libya.

The United Nations Support Mission in Libya, in a post on its Facebook page, today, Monday, expressed its concern about what it called the “mass arbitrary detention of migrants and asylum seekers that affected all parts of the country.” Noting that “the Libyan authorities have arrested thousands of men, women and children from the streets and from their homes, or following raids on what are alleged to be camps and warehouses for traffickers.”

Commenting on what was published by the United Nations Support Mission in Libya today, the editor of local affairs at the Libyan News Agency wrote: We believe that the United Nations Support Mission in Libya has once again fallen into a new old fallacy regarding the thorny file of the phenomenon of migrants and asylum seekers and used heavy phrases that may affect Libyan sovereignty.

The editor clarified again that the mission ignored the truth when it ignored that Libya receives on its soil, according to semi-official statistics, and for decades, between (1.2) and (1.5) million immigrant citizens of many African and even Asian nationalities working in Libya safely in the private sector, including the construction sector, Agriculture industry, technical workshops, etc. They live among its people and transfer their money regularly to their families in their countries of origin. They organize football tournaments and celebrate with the Libyan people in the squares and streets of all Libyan cities, including the capital, Tripoli, on religious and national holidays in their distinctive African traditional costumes.

The editor pointed out that a number of other immigrants infiltrated into Libya and joined the ranks of criminal gangs to smuggle and distribute drugs, manufacture alcohol locally, and set up places for prostitution. A serious threat to Libyan national security and a drain on Libyan resources.

The editor noted that the mission’s announcement that many of these migrants, including pregnant women and children, were detained in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions and that thousands of others, including migrants who entered Libya legally, were collectively expelled without scrutiny or following due legal procedures, is easy talk but lacks accuracy and most importantly, from this, solutions are lacking against the backdrop of bilateral and international agreements to deal with this flood of human flow through the desert paths to jump to the other bank of the Mediterranean.

Regarding the mission’s indication that the campaign of arbitrary arrests and deportations coincided with an alarming increase in hate speech and racist discourse against foreigners on the Internet and in the media, the local affairs editor considered that Libya is responsible for its national media and not responsible for social media, noting that heads of state and government have made statements on Racism against Africans and even openly against African countries in Europe and America without the United Nations moving a finger.

In the same context, the editor stressed that addressing this thorny and worsening phenomenon of illegal immigrants begins with the source countries and ends with the destination countries, stressing that Libya, as a transit and polarization country, pays the highest bill for this global phenomenon at the expense of its security and stability despite its fragile security and economic situation due to the turning a blind eye of the source countries. These massive human flows are not prevented, and destination countries in Europe erect security barriers at sea and on their borders to prevent the arrival of migrants.

The local affairs editor concluded, at the end of his comment, that the UN mission called on the Libyan authorities to stop these measures and treat migrants with dignity and humanity in line with its international obligations, and indicated that the Libyan authorities must grant United Nations agencies and international non-governmental organizations unimpeded access to the detainees who are being detained. They need urgent protection, it remains ruminative, hostile talk and dead media material unless the United Nations, through the UN mission, develops an integrated plan to address this humanitarian phenomenon, in which it explicitly calls on the source and destination countries to shoulder their moral, political and social responsibilities, fully cooperate with the Libyan authorities, and provide all means for that.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Judicial Council approves transfer of judges to certain courts

The Supreme Judicial Council approved on Monday the transfer of a number of judges to work in some courts of appeal and first instance, based on the nomination of the head of the Judicial Inspection Authority.

This came in its weekly meeting held on Monday and headed by the Council’s head, Judge Ahmed Yahya Al-Mutawakel.

The Judicial Council called on the assigned judges and members of the prosecution to abide by attendance and full investigation when issuing rulings and decisions that do not affect the origin of the right, instructing the Judicial Inspection Authority to follow up and report about that to the Council at first.

In its meeting, the Council reviewed the memorandum of the Minister of Justice regarding the recommendations of the Justice and Awqaf Committee in the House of Representatives, and directed the judicial authorities to implement the recommendations, each in its own jurisdiction.

Source: Yemen News Agency

Aggression forces commit 88 violations of Hodeida truce

The operations room to monitor the violations of the Sweden ceasefire agreement in Hodeida province recorded 88 violations committed by the Saudi-led aggression coalition forces during the past 24 hours.

An official source at the operations room told Saba that the violations included three raids by the aggression spy aircraft on Hays and the creation of new combat fortifications in Al-Jabaliya.

The violations also included the flight of six spy aircraft over Hays and al-Jabaliya, four violations with artillery shelling and 71 others with various gunshots, the source added.

Source: Yemen News Agency

Interventions of German Red Cross in Dhamar discussed

The Governor of Dhamar province, Mohammed Al-Bukhaiti, discussed during his meeting on Monday with the Director of the German Red Cross office in Sana’a, Barat Azirov, the level of interventions in the aspects of water, health and emergency.

In the meeting, Al-Bukhaiti reviewed the humanitarian situation in the province resulting from the continuation of the aggression and siege.

He pointed to the urgent needs in the health sector, praising the efforts of the German Red Cross in the humanitarian, health and relief fields.

For his part, the director of the German Red Cross office praised the facilities provided by the local authority in Dhamar and the Supreme Council for the Management and Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, emphasizing the importance of strengthening partnership for the success of humanitarian and relief projects required by the province.

Source: Yemen News Agency