Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Women at the forefront of COVID-19 and conflict recovery in Libya – Libya – ReliefWeb

Tripoli As part of its efforts to empower women and work towards gender equality in Libya, and to mark International Womens Day, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) with support from the Government of Japan has organized an interactive dialogue in Tripoli to celebrate the contribution of women towards the recovery from COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict in Libya.

Women representatives from civil society organizations, activists, politicians, peace mediators, and elected municipal councilors participated in the event that aimed at highlighting the key role that women played in Libya to address the pandemic and build peace as well as discuss COVID-19 gender implication and challenges to promote equality during the crisis.

Minister of Labor, Mr. Mahdi Al Amin, opened the event: "I am happy to be here to participate in this Women's Day. The active participation of women is evident during both the political and peacebuilding crisis, as well as COVID-19 pandemic crisis. Our Ministry supports the empowerment of women in political and business management supported by international partners such as UNDP. We thank them for their help.

On his part, UNDP Libya Resident Representative, Mr. Gerardo Noto, stated: Libyan women are making a difference in their communities daily. Gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls are central to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. At UNDP in Libya, we work to ensure that women are not left behind on the way to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. We support initiatives that accelerate structural transformations and work to ensure that all development efforts take into account the contributions of women, he concluded.

The dialogue has provided an opportunity to hear directly from Libyan women the risk and challenges that they went through during the pandemic, and where they see the opportunities and the solutions to tackle COVID-19. Listen to them, we could also identify what is needed to better value the role of women and foster womens participation in policy and decision-making for a better future, stated UNDP Libya Gender Advisor, Khadija Abdullah Elboaishi.

"This gathering is not only to celebrate Women's Day, but also an opportunity to highlight the role of women inside the country and their valuable work. It was also an opportunity to network with some institutions and activists, and it was a good forum for the exchange of opinions and dialogue between us, said Ms. Amal Barka, a participant in the forum from the Tawergha Women's Peace organization.

For more information, or media interviews please contact: hilaria.espin@undp.org

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Women at the forefront of COVID-19 and conflict recovery in Libya - Libya - ReliefWeb

The Government of Japan and UNICEF – Press Release, 11 March 2021 – Libya – ReliefWeb

TRIPOLI, 11 March 2021 - The People of Japan continues to support the education and child protection services of children in Libya during the COVID-19 pandemic and on-going conflict. Over 22,000 children and people in need will directly and indirectly will benefit from the newly announced contribution of US$ 750,000 to UNICEF in the area of child protection and education.

The programme supported by the Government of Japan will provide much needed education and protection assistance to vulnerable children in Libya affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, armed conflict, internal displacement, and migration.

The Government of Japan is pleased to continue its partnership with UNICEF particularly in the context of COVID-19 pandemic. The contribution will focus on achieving results in protecting children and improving their living conditions in Libya through increasing access to quality education and child protection services, said Mr. Masaki Amadera, Charge d'Affaires, Embassy of Japan in Libya. We trust and sincerely hope that this long-standing partnership will help to address the needs of children and families. he added.

The programme which is intended to run for a period of 12 months will bolster UNICEF Libyas work to improve the living conditions of vulnerable children and young people through a combined emergency child protection and education in emergency assistance.

At a time when the extensive impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on vulnerable children and their families is becoming more apparent, UNICEF is grateful to the People of Japan for its continuous commitment which allows us to build lasting community resilience through creating a safe space for boys and girls and directly supporting the education services, said Abdulkadir Musse, UNICEF Libya Special Representative.

As communities are disrupted by COVID-19 virus, children are already at the increased risk of violence, abuse and neglect and hence have become even more vulnerable. Some 440 girls and 360 boys are expected to participate in community-based psychosocial support programmes.

In partnership with the government counterparts and local partners, UNICEF will use the funds to reach more than 700 displaced children and adolescents affected by conflict with remedial and catch-up classes, life skills sessions, and recreational activities. Furthermore, an estimated 420 girls and 280 boys will access classes, psychosocial support and recreational activities in the community centre called Bayti.

The Government of Japan is a long and valued partner of UNICEF in Libya and UNICEF programmes have benefited from US$ 2.6 million in financial support in previous years to spearhead the multisector emergency preparedness and response to conflict and COVID-19 pandemic.

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Note to Editors:

UNICEF anticipates that this programme will reach at least 4,300 individuals and 18,000 households and community members with Education and Child Protection services:

About us:

Since 2012, UNICEF has promoted the rights and wellbeing of children and their families in Libya. Together with our partners, we work throughout the country to reach children and their families through our Health, Nutrition, WASH, Education, Child Protection and Emergency Response interventions. We strengthen the linkages between humanitarian action and development programming, focusing special effort on reaching the most vulnerable and conflict-affected children, to the benefit of all children, everywhere in Libya.

For more information about UNICEF and its work for children visit http://www.unicef.org. For the latest available data on children visit data.unicef.org. Follow UNICEF on Twitter and Facebook

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The Government of Japan and UNICEF - Press Release, 11 March 2021 - Libya - ReliefWeb

Libya: Al-Sarraj ready to hand over power to new gov’t – Anadolu Agency

TRIPOLI, Libya

Libyas Presidential Council head Fayez al-Sarraj said Wednesday that he is ready to step down and pass his tasks and responsibilities to the new government to consolidate the principle of peaceful transition of power.

Al-Sarrajs remarks came following the countrys House of Representatives vote of confidence to the new Cabinet led by Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh.

"I congratulate the government of national unity for the vote of confidence and I wish the new Cabinet success in accomplishing its tasks," al-Sarraj said.

"What happened today is an important step to end the conflict and division," he noted, calling on all parties to intensify "cooperation, unity, and tolerance for the sake of the renaissance of Libya.

Meanwhile, the government loyal to the Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar expressed on Facebook its "full readiness to hand over tasks, ministries, directorates, and institutions to the national unity government."

Earlier Wednesday, in a majority vote, Libya's parliament granted confidence to Dbeibehs new unity government.

Dbeibeh described the parliament's vote of confidence to his interim government as a "historical moment" and pledged to end the war in his country.

He proposed a unity government of 27 members on Saturday, promising that the government will prioritize "improving services, unifying state institutions, and ending the transitional period by holding elections."

On Feb. 5, Libya's rival political groups agreed in UN-mediated talks to form an interim unity government to lead the country to elections this December, where Dbeibeh was designated as the prime minister and tasked with forming a new government.

Libyans hope that this will end years of civil war that have engulfed the country since the ouster and killing of strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi in 2011.

The war was exacerbated when Haftar, supported by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Russia, and France, among others, carried out a military onslaught to topple the Tripoli-based internationally recognized government for control of the North African country.

* Bassel Barakat contributed to this report from Ankara

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Libya: Al-Sarraj ready to hand over power to new gov't - Anadolu Agency

The Tunisian-Libyan Economic Forum in Sfax starts with large participation from both countries | – Libya Herald

By Sami Zaptia.

The Libyan-Tunisian Economic Forum in Sfax yesterday attracted large participation from both sides (Photo: TABC).

London, 12 March 2021:

The Tunisian-Libyan Economic Forum, organized by the Tunisian-African Business Council, started yesterday in Sfax under the banner: The Forum of Hope and Challenge to Build an Integrated Economy.

The forum aims to boost economic relations between Tunisia and Libya to levels nearer those enjoyed by both countries before the 2011 Libyan revolution and to pre-Coronavirus times.

Specifically, there were calls for the reduction or removal of barriers to trade, including bureaucracy and doing away with payment through hard currency as well as activating existing agreements between the two countries.

The event received great support from companies from both countries as well as ministerial support.

The endorsement of the new Abd Alhamid Aldabaiba-led Government of National Unity (GNU) by Libyas parliament Wednesday was seen as a positive step that will reflect positively on bilateral trade.

Lively workshops

After the set piece opening introductions and speeches, there then followed three themed workshops which enjoyed lively interaction between speakers and business leaders. The subjects covered included; increased public-private partnership (PPP), food sovereignty, increased bilateral economic integration, the prioritization of each others products over third country products, and securing a greater share of sub-Saharan African market. Company exhibitions and B2B meetings

On the side-lines of the main event, companies exhibited their products

An exhibition of Tunisian products was organized On the side-lines of the forum, several companies exhibited their products and services at their stands.

There was also an area set aside for B2B meetings.

Field visits by the Libyan delegation to a number of economic institutions and companies in Sfax are also organized for the Libyan delegates .

Tripoli Chamber to participate in the Tunisia-Libyan Economic Forum: 11 March, Sfax | (libyaherald.com)

3rd Tunisian-Libyan Economic Forum, Sfax 11 March | (libyaherald.com)

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The Tunisian-Libyan Economic Forum in Sfax starts with large participation from both countries | - Libya Herald

Paris Perspective – Paris Perspective #6: Libya, human trafficking and the French connection – RFI

A decade since the Arab Spring swept across North Africa and the Middle East, Libya remains torn between opposing factions battlingto fill the power vacuum left by fallen dictator MuammarGaddafi. Paris Perspective looks at how Libya has become a hub for human trafficking,engulfed by lawlessness and impunity, and how France helped to make it that way.

Two rival governments now control thefaction-riven battleground that isLibya. There's theinternationally recognised administration in Tripoli, in the west, and the oil-rich parallel administrationcontrolledby rebel General Khalifa Haftar, in the east.

Positioned at the crossroads between Europe, sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, Libyalacksany fundamental state structure. Thus, it's become a breeding ground fortrafficking vulnerable migrants risking their lives in the hope of crossing the Mediterranean to start a new life in the EU.

French anthropologist andwriter Jrme Tubiana recently travelled to atown recognised as the people-smuggling capital of Libya. An authority on the Sahel, Tubianatransformed his encounters with an enigmatic doctor, who runs a safe-house for migrants, into a graphic novel: The Curse of You-Know-Where.

Meetthe 'doctor'

The doctoris a former English interpreter for Colonel Gaddafi who, according to Tubiana, was traumatised by the 2011 NATO military intervention in Libya. His hometown,a Gaddafi stronghold, was heavily bombed and remains a rare enclave of nostalgia for the ancienrgime.

Tubiana says the doctoris neither a hero nor a main character in the novel, but a guide. Hes actually been a real help to Doctors Without Borders (MSF), setting up a little clinic in a safe house ...He's really helping migrants who end up in this town.

Between 2018 and 2020, Tubiana visited the safe house four or five times, and gradually began extending his stays there as he was welcomed by the doctor.

Why Transform The Story Of Migrants In Libya Into A Graphic Novel?

The residents of the town, whichremains unnamed, have a mixed sense of pride and shame. They are proud that some Libyans are helping migrants there which is not that common but they are also tetchily aware of their reputation as Libya's migrant traffickingcapital.

The termtrafficking is very loaded in Libya. It's a generic word for a very widespread phenomenon," explains Tubiana."Migrants arecommonly captured and held prisoner for months, in very difficult situations, in crowded places. There they are tortured for ransoms that are supposed to be sent by their families.

And so, the locals bow their heads in shame. They dont want the name of their town to be revealed. In Libya there is a collective omerta, or code of silence, regarding migrant torture.

The migrant 'safe house'

Some 4,000 migrantsare thought to have crossed the threshold of this one safe house, which can host up to 80 people at a time. Thesmall comforts foundwithin its walls are rudimentary, at best.

They have food, clothes, places to sleep and some level of protectionbut that protection isnt perfect, says Tubiana.

There is a guard with a gun, but the protection isnt the gun it'sthe place is run by that Libyan doctor and somehow its protected by social cohesion. But that has its limits.

Just aday after Tubiana leftthe town, a series of shootings targeting a migrant couplewere reported. They involved a woman who had been forced into prostitutionby a smuggling gang that wasnow attempting to recapture her.

Events such as this highlight the sense of isolation and helplessness that is endemic among migrants crossing the desert to the sea. Nobody is coming to help, says Tubiana. The UN in Libya are not doing their work. They're not efficient at evacuating people,even people who are threatened.

The execution of a Sierra Leonean man by traffickers wanting to set an example to others is a stark reminder of what migrants are forced to endure.

MSF hasrecordedtestimonies ofexploited migrants who say such killings are regular practice among the ringleaders of trafficking networks. People are also killed if they can't pay their captors, butthis isn't always the case.

Atthe safe house, people are free to leave when they want to; its not a prison," says Tubiana, adding the doctor alsohelpsmigrants by using a local radio station to send messages to the traffickers telling them: "We know who you are, we know what you're doing. Please don't kill them."

The doctorencourages traffickers to send migrants who cannotpay for their lives to the safe house. Some have been dropped off in appalling condition. Dehydrated, skeletal, broken. And some die.

France won the battle but lost the peace

Following the ongoing accounts of abuse, racketeering, forced prostitution and slavery how has Europespecifically France dealt with the situation in Libya?

Back in 2011, France positioned itself at the diplomatic forefront of the Arab Spring, becomingthe first country to recognise the National Transitional Council. It also co-led the NATO mission to protect Libyan civilians.

The town where the novel takes place, like some other communities, remembers Gaddafi era with great nostalgia. But thats not a common feeling across most of Libya.

NATO brought a great deal of freedom, unprecedented freedom, explainsTubiana. But now people are disappointed by the state of the economy, the militia presence andthe corruption, as well as a lot of other problems.

Why French diplomacy failed in Libya

Once the air strikes ended, France failed tofollow throughon its promises which is notuncommon with western military interventions. Post-conflict, France didnt help secure Libyas future.

In 2017, when President Emmanuel Macron hosted Libya'stwo rival governments, the talks collapsed amid the absence of a coherent strategy to bring the warring parties together.

European quarrelling

Libya has also suffered because European countries have been unable to agree a common approach to dealing with the waves of migrantsthat are launched on skiffs from the North African coast.

Diplomatic relations between France and Italy, in particular, have been at a low ebb in recent years, with conflicting strategies in dealing with migration exacerbatingcommunication problems between Paris and Rome.

To make matters worse, theEuropean neighbourswere almost engaged in a proxy war on the ground in Libya.

Has the Covid-19 pandemic been used as a barrier to help trapped or stranded migrants?

Clearly France and Italy were on opposite sides of the fighting, especially during the toughest battles. Italy wassupporting the Government of National Accord and France [supporting] Haftar, says Tubiana, but with a caveat.

People wondered how much this rivalry was actually real, or staged. In other parts of the region, where European anti-migrant policy and oil interests were at stake, relations were not so bad."

The tug of war between France and Italy was only part of the problem, Tubiana adds. An "international incurrence" on Libya efforts by other nations to exploit its position and resources has probably been thestrongest forceagainst peace.

And, asoutsiders increase their ambitions in a country that is 90 percent dependent on oil,Libya's future will remainvery uncertain.

Watch full video here

This edition was produced andpresented by David Coffey

Sound engineering by Ccile Pompeani

Vision mixing and editing by Vincent Pora

Libya, human trafficking and the French connection - Full Interview

Jrme Tubiana is anthropologist, journalist, writer & Sahel specialist who has worked with the Small Arms Survey and Doctors Without Borders andco-wrote the graphic novel The Curse of You-Know-Where and the short film "Des nouvelles de Yonas" for ARTE.

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Paris Perspective - Paris Perspective #6: Libya, human trafficking and the French connection - RFI