United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) Alarmed by Wave of Arbitrary Arrests Across Libya
Legal professionals and members of the judiciary have been targeted by violence and arbitrary arrests. The violent arrest of Judge Ali Al Shareef in Tripoli on 10 March, the continued arbitrary detention of lawyer Mounir Al-Orfi in Benghazi since 12 March and of two Military Prosecutors, Mansour Da'aoub and Mohammed al-Mabrouk al-Kar since 2022 in Tripoli, highlight increased threats against legal professionals and undermine their independence.
In Tripoli, member of the House of Representatives, Ali Hassan Jaballah languished in arbitrary detention for more than a year before being sentenced in October 2024 by a military tribunal in a trial marred by irregularities and denial of due process rights. Libyan Asset Recovery Management Office (LARMO) head Mohamed Mensli has been arbitrarily detained since 7 January with little access to legal representation or medical care amid concerning reports of his deteriorating health. Khalifa Amghar Abdulrasul, a notable from Ghat, continues to be arbitrarily detained in Benghazi since May 2024 without charge, access to his lawyer or family. This practice has been normalized, with hundreds more languishing in illegal detention throughout Libya.
UNSMIL is further concerned by the pattern of video confessions where individuals are detained and coerced into 'confessing' to alleged crimes with videos published online. These video 'confessions' are used to intimidate and humiliate targeted individuals. All such video 'evidence' must be declared inadmissible, and perpetrators must be held accountable.
The Mission welcomes the recent partial access to detention facilities across the country. This enables meaningful engagement to tackle systemic violations and abuses in a detention context. UNSMIL calls for unimpeded access to all detention facilities in Libya.
Arbitrary detention and its weaponization can only shrink civic space, contribute to creating an atmosphere of fear and intimidation and should be actively discouraged. It undermines the environment necessary for Libya's democratic transition, and weakens Libyans trust in law enforcement and security entities that must work to protect and promote the rights of all people in Libya, not undermine them.
The Mission renews its call for the immediate release of all arbitrarily detained individuals and to hold those responsible accountable.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL).

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Middle East Eye
2 days ago
- Middle East Eye
UAE and Haftar behind RSF capture of Sudan's triangle border region
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Egypt hosts secret talks between Sudan's Burhan and Libya's Haftar in bid to mend ties, sources say Read More » According to satellite imagery, flight tracking data seen by MEE, and interviews with gold miners and other eyewitnesses, this success in the wild, lawless border regions would not have been possible without Haftar's Libyan forces and the patronage of the United Arab Emirates and Russia. The involvement of the UAE has brought Abu Dhabi into further conflict with Egypt, which has tried – and so far failed – to mediate better relations between Haftar and Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the head of the Sudanese Armed Forces. At the beginning of July, MEE revealed a secret meeting hosted by Egypt between the Sudanese general and the Libyan commander, both of whom are its allies. The meeting did not go well. RSF attack Key to the RSF's capture of the Sudanese part of the triangle region was Subul al-Salam, a Libyan militia affiliated with Haftar's forces. A cousin of Hassan, who works with him as a gold miner and trader, told MEE that forces from Subul al-Salam 'helped the RSF until it reached the market and controlled the entire area'. Sudan war intensifies in Kordofan as RSF razes villages Read More » He said that the group, alongside RSF fighters, carried out ethnically motivated killings. Another miner, Abu Zar, said there were Libyan fighters inside the main market at al-Katma. He told MEE that an armed group called the Tariq Ben Zeyad brigade, which is believed to be controlled by Saddam Haftar, Khalifa's son, was also part of the attack on the triangle border region. 'We heard that Saddam Haftar, the strong son of the Libyan commander, was closely monitoring the military operation before he ordered the forces to withdraw back to Libyan territory,' another miner, who asked for anonymity, said. 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An unpublished study leaked to MEE by a Libyan researcher reported that two Emirati planes landed at southeastern Libya's al-Kufra airport on 10 July, unloading weapons and supplies that were then transported to the RSF in Darfur through the Chadian-Libyan border. 'This has been the UAE's plan, not just in Libya, but in Chad, CAR and South Sudan. Control of borders gives them free access to weapons, to recruit fighters and to smuggle out gold' - Cameron Hudson, former US diplomat The dossier revealed that the UAE ordered Haftar to move his Libyan National Army (LNA) forces from Camp 87 in Benghazi to support the RSF 'with hundreds of vehicles in its attack on the SAF and Darfur rebels in the desert'. This movement of Haftar's forces comes partly in response to resistance in Chad to the continued supply of the RSF through the country's desert regions. A Libyan source close to the issue, who did not want to be named, said the 'recent interference by Hafter through its allied militia Subul al-Salam' had changed the balance of power in the triangle region, which has a Sudanese, Libyan and Egyptian component. Egypt, the source said, was 'looking suspiciously at the UAE and Haftar', with the region vital to Cairo's national security. 'Subul al-Salam matters, but this is an Emirati project,' Jalel Harchaoui, an analyst focusing on Libya, told MEE. 'The big event is the fact that the RSF now controls the Sudanese part of the triangle… Subul al-Salam was instrumental because the Libyan part of the triangle was very permissive until mid-May. The SAF, the Joint Forces and civilians from Egypt were all able to access it.' 'What was necessary, as preliminary step, was for Subul al-Salam to shut all of that down – and this is how the RSF was able to use that platform to carry out that incursion and take over the Sudanese part of the triangle,' Harchaoui said. Former US diplomat and CIA expert Cameron Hudson believes the UAE is still working to ensure the victory of the RSF in Sudan's war. Sudan's shadow war: Drone strikes reveal escalating tensions between UAE and Turkey Read More » 'The RSF's control of its border areas will worsen and extend Sudan's war, making it even more difficult to resolve. This has been the UAE's plan, not just in Libya, but in Chad, the Central African Republic, and South Sudan. Control of borders gives them free access to weapons, to recruit fighters and to smuggle out gold,' Hudson, who is also a senior associate at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies Africa programme, told MEE. 'It is no coincidence that the UAE maintains bases in all these countries near the border with Sudan to help facilitate that military and economic trade,' he said. Libyan researcher and political analyst Islam Alhaj said that the UAE was exploiting the security vacuum in southern Libya to send the weapons to the RSF and support other illegal activities, including gold smuggling, in the region. Russia continues to back both sides Satellite imagery reported by Nova Italian news agency disclosed that two Russian cargo planes were recently tracked flying from al-Kufra airport to RSF areas in Sudan. According to previous reporting by MEE and the imagery provided by the Copernicus programme, the Russian IL-76 plane is typically used for transporting military personnel and equipment, as well as for medium-range logistical operations. Sudan war: Russia hedges bets by aiding both sides in conflict Read More » The shipment was part of a flow of arms shipments from southeastern Libya to the RSF that has been in operation since May, a month before the paramilitary's capture of the Sudanese part of the border triangle. Harchaoui told MEE that the 'brand new phenomenon' was the act of flying supplies from UAE bases outside Libya directly in al-Kufra, rather than transporting them overland or by air from within other parts of Libya. The airport at al-Kufra plays a key operational role, serving as a logistical base to facilitate the flow of supplies to RSF forces through remote and lightly monitored corridors. Russia, as MEE has reported before, is playing both sides in Sudan's war, with the government in Moscow building ties with the Burhan-led Sudanese government in Port Sudan, while it appears to continue helping the RSF through the UAE and its own mercenary groups. Regional power plays With Turkey recently stepping up its help for the Sudanese army and other regional powers, including Egypt and Saudi Arabia, aligned with Burhan, external actors continue to struggle for control and profit in Sudan, which still contains vast untapped natural resources and an expansive and strategically positioned coastline. The RSF has declared a parallel government in Nyala, South Darfur. This self-declared entity would border five countries, including South Sudan, Central African Republic, Chad, and now – following the capture of Sudan's triangle border area - Libya and Egypt. 'The new government will face many challenges to carry any civilian duties including the good governance, protecting the civilians and oversight the finance and this will lead to big failure which will threat the other neighbouring countries,' Suliman Baldo, the executive director of the Sudan Transparency and Policy Tracker, told MEE. 'I don't think it will be able to stop the smuggling of gold and crops from Sudan and maintain the other supplies coming from neighbouring countries towards Sudan as its big investments for the RSF commanders,' he said. Additional reporting by Oscar Rickett.


Filipino Times
2 days ago
- Filipino Times
Makabayan bloc to refile VP Sara impeachment in 2026 if SC upholds ruling
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Filipino Times
05-08-2025
- Filipino Times
Bill filed in House to require annual SALN disclosure of top officials
Lawmakers from the Liberal Party and the ML party-list have filed a bill seeking to require the annual public disclosure of the Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) of the President, Vice President, and other high-ranking government officials. House Bill No. 2897, also known as the proposed 'People's Freedom of Information Act of 2025,' was filed Monday at the House of Representatives. Under the measure, SALNs of Cabinet members, senators, House lawmakers, justices of the Supreme Court, commissioners of constitutional bodies, and generals of the Armed Forces of the Philippines must be published yearly on the official websites of their respective offices. The bill also mandates all branches of government to publish and update monthly a register of 'public interest transactions' on their websites. These include itemized collections and disbursements, summaries of income and expenditures, procurement plans and contracts, agreements involving public-private partnerships, and public funding extended to private entities. All Filipino citizens would be granted the right to request and access any record held by government agencies. The proposed law obligates public officials and agencies to disclose information on official acts, transactions, decisions, and research data used in policy-making. 'We would want to push for more transparency and accountability sa gobyerno natin, lalo na na maraming mga usapin tungkol sa korapsyon at laganap 'yung ating mga disinformation,' ML party-list Representative Leila de Lima said.