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Libya urged to shut migrant detention centers at UN meeting

Migrants are seen after they were relocated from government-run detention centres, after getting trapped by clashes between rival groups in Tripoli, Libya September 4, 2018. (REUTERS)
Migrants are seen after they were relocated from government-run detention centres, after getting trapped by clashes between rival groups in Tripoli, Libya September 4, 2018. (REUTERS)
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Updated 10 sec ago

Libya urged to shut migrant detention centers at UN meeting

Libya urged to shut migrant detention centers at UN meeting
  • Libya has had little peace since a 2011 uprising against long-time autocrat Muammar Qaddafi and is between warring eastern and western factions

GENEVA: Libya was urged at a UN meeting on Tuesday to close detention centers where rights groups say migrants and refugees have been tortured, abused and sometimes killed.
Multiple states including Britain, Spain, Norway and Sierra Leone raised concerns at the meeting in Geneva about treatment of migrants in Libya, a major transit route for Africans fleeing conflict and poverty toward Europe. Some of them have been held in warehouses by traffickers where they have been subject to violence and extortion, according to a Dutch court case.
Norway’s ambassador Tormod Endresen called for protection of vulnerable migrants and an end to arbitrary detentions. Britain’s rights ambassador Eleanor Sanders echoed that and also sought unrestricted access for UN and other groups to mass graves. Some bodies of migrants found in mass graves earlier this year bore gunshot wounds, a UN agency said.
In an open letter to Libyan authorities published in parallel to the UN review, rights groups called for reforms, saying that armed groups were operating with impunity, obstructing courts and committing widespread abuses.
Libya has had little peace since a 2011 uprising against long-time autocrat Muammar Qaddafi and is between warring eastern and western factions.
Libya’s Eltaher Salem M. Elbaour, acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation for the UN-backed western government based in the capital Tripoli, said migrants placed a heavy burden on the divided state.
“I’m not here to paint a perfect picture of the human rights situation in my country,” he said.
“Quite the opposite — I have come here to reiterate the large efforts we have made in order to ensure these rights are respected in spite of the challenges that are known to all during this very delicate transitional period.”
He cited as examples his country’s acceptance of the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction in Libya and the creation of a new joint committee to address detention centers. Libya’s review is part of a process by which governments and rights groups scrutinize all 193 UN member states’ records every few years and recommend improvements. The United States snubbed its own review last week in a rare move.Ìę

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Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer resigns

Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer resigns
Updated 11 sec ago

Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer resigns

Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer resigns
JERUSALEM: Israel’s Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, who played a leading role in negotiations during the Gaza war and was a close confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, resigned on Tuesday.
His departure follows weeks of speculation in Israeli media and marks the end of a tenure that began in late 2022, when he was tapped for the post after years as Israel’s ambassador to Washington.
“I am writing to inform you of my decision to end my position as minister for strategic affairs,” Dermer wrote in a two-page letter to Netanyahu released to the media.
There was no immediate response to a request for comment from the prime minister’s office.
The US-born Dermer wrote that when he became minister of strategic affairs in December 2022, he promised his family he would serve for no more than two years and twice he extended it with their blessing.
He wrote the first time was to work with Netanyahu to remove the existential threat of Iran’s military nuclear capability in June and the second was to negotiate a ceasefire in Gaza in October and the return of Israel’s hostages held in Gaza.
“What I am to expect in the future I don’t know but one thing I know for sure: In all that I will do, I will continue to do my part to secure the future of the Jewish people,” he wrote.
Dermer was one of Netanyahu’s most trusted advisers, negotiating the October ceasefire with both the Trump administration and Arab countries.
Dermer was ambassador to Washington from 2013-2021. His service there overlapped with Republican President Donald Trump’s first term from 2017-2021.
Many Democrats regarded Dermer as having gotten too close to the Republicans during his Washington tenure, undermining the bipartisan relationships nurtured by previous Israeli envoys in the US capital.