Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology makes a wide range of recommendations – Libya Herald

The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology, held in Tripoli from 20 to 21 May, concluded its activities yesterday with the international participation of researchers from Tunisia, Egypt, Sudan, Lebanon, China, Kuwait and Iraq, in the presence of the Minister of Italian Companies and Industry and the Deputy Minister of Industry of Turkey.

Conference recommendations The wide range of recommendations made at the end of the conference included emphasizing the role of the state in supervising, directing and monitoring economic activity, and encouraging local and foreign investment in industrial projects.

The recommendations also called for developing technological capabilities, benefiting from the infrastructure of military industries, supporting the banking sector to achieve the necessary financing for industrial projects, in addition to focusing on protecting local products and encouraging investment in food and petrochemical industries.

The recommendations stressed the importance of international cooperation, benefiting from pioneering industrial experiences, developing laws and legislations that encourage investment, technology transfer, promoting innovation and entrepreneurship, confronting climate change, and holding workshops to implement the recommendations of the conference.

These recommendations aim to strengthen the Libyan economy and achieve sustainable development by involving various vital sectors in the development process.

The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology, 20 to 21 May, kicks off (libyaherald.com)

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The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology makes a wide range of recommendations - Libya Herald

The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology, 20 to 21 May, kicks off – Libya Herald

The activities of the Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology kicked off in Tripoli yesterday (20 to 21 May) under the slogan Prospects for Investment, Partnership and Technology Transfer in Industry .

The conference aims to discuss prospects for investment, partnership and technology transfer to the industrial sector and the development of the public and private industrial sector in Libya.

The opening ceremony was attended by the Tripoli based Libyan Prime Minister, Abd Alhamid Aldabaiba, the Minister of Industry and Minerals, Ahmed Abuhisa, the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Industry and Minerals for Production Affairs, Industrial Zones and General Affairs, Mustafa Al-Samo, the Deputy Minister of Industry of Turkey, Oru Baba Inan, and several diplomatic representatives.

Need for public and private banking to play their role In his opening speech, PM Aldabaiba stressed the need for the public and private banking sector to play its role in supporting the industrial sector in all its fields according to a plan that contributes to the localisation of industry.

The Prime Minister also stressed the need for the local and international private sector to invest in the field of industry and provide the necessary support to Libyan manufacturers to carry out their role.

For his part, the Minister of Industry and Minerals, Abuhisa, directed the need to offer public factories that have been idle or operating for investment and operation by the private sector (privatisation), and to provide the necessary facilities to support them in activating these complexes, which have been idle for years (some from the Qaddafi era have never operated).

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The Libya International Conference on Industry and Technology, 20 to 21 May, kicks off - Libya Herald

PARTLY FALSE: This photo is not of migrants freed from captivity in southeast Libya in May 2024 – PesaCheck

This Facebook post, with an image purportedly of migrants freed from captivity in southeast Libya in May 2024, is PARTLY FALSE.

The Somali text accompanying the photo reads, 107 migrants, mostly Somalis forcibly freed from captivity in southeast Libya.

The image depicts a group of people sitting on the ground while an armed soldier keeps guard.

The image was also featured in articles on Somali websites, here and here.

On 6 May 2024, the spokesperson for the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) in Benghazi, Libya, Walid Alorafi, reported that at least 107 migrants, mainly from Somalia, including women and children, were freed from captivity in a town in southeast Libya. This was after security forces raided a hideout in the downtown of Kufra.

A Google reverse image search shows the photo was taken in Libya, but is unrelated to the recent release of migrants who were all handed over to the illegal migration agency.

Deutsche Welle published the image in July 2016 and again in November 2017 in an article titled Caught between duty and temptation.

The image has also been featured in other publications, as seen here and here.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that Libya is home to 704,369 migrants from over 43 nationalities, according to data collected in 100 Libyan municipalities in mid-2023.

PesaCheck has looked into a post on Facebook claiming to show a photo of migrants freed from captivity in southeast Libya in May 2024 and found it to be PARTLY FALSE.

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PARTLY FALSE: This photo is not of migrants freed from captivity in southeast Libya in May 2024 - PesaCheck

From Libyan hell to migrant boat, two young Bangladeshis are saved – Yahoo! Voices

They never thought they would end up in Europe by leaving their native Bangladesh.

But forSiam and Mohammad, hopes for a better life in Libya turned into a hell to escape at all costs, even if it meant risking their lives crossing the Mediterranean.

"They beat me on my legs and they punched my body also, so many times," said Mohammad, 25, aboard the rescue ship Ocean Viking just hours after being rescued off Malta, speaking of traffickers in Libya.

Recounting to an AFP reporter in broken English how armed Libyan traffickers terrorised him for months, Mohammed recalled his captors threatening to "take off my nails".

"I will die if I will stay here," he remembered thinking of Libya, a country he originally thought could provide him with money to send to his family.

With jet-black hair and big, round eyes, Mohammad tinkers with the zipper of his tracksuit, scanning the horizon from the main deck.

"So I decided, whatever will happen, I have to leave this place."

Siam, 20, said that "If you can give money, you'd pay and you'd be free. Otherwise they'd beat you".

The traffickers "make videos of beating you and tell your family to give money, otherwise they will kill you", he said.

Arriving in Libya on flights from the United Arab Emirates for a few hundred euros, both young men -- who met only while crossing the Mediterranean -- had hoped to find jobs there in agriculture, oil or construction.

But instead they found themselves trapped in a merciless migrant trade that crushes thousands of people every year, in a country plunged into chaos since 2011.

- Escape or ransom -

Both of them fatherless, Siam and Mohammad had promised to provide for their families back in Bangladesh, where almost half the population lives on less than a dollar a day.

"All depends on me -- medical, food, everything. That depends on me," Mohammad told AFP aboard the ship.

Thanks to an intermediary, Siam found a small job as a cleaner in a Benghazi hospital but "was only given half my salary. When I asked for my due, they slapped me," he said.

Fleeing became the only way out. But risking one's life on the world's most dangerous migration route comes at a price -- $5,000. Where would the money come from?

His family begged for money from anyone who could help, Siam said.

"And then my family sold my house. Sold my house to save me," he said.

Locked up in unsanitary prefab buildings, tossed from one trafficker to another, Mohammad finally managed to escape his jailers along with two companions.

Without a roof over his head or any money, he gave away all he had left: his phone and his clothes. Luckily, a smuggler accepts his pittance.

So he found himself aboard a fibreglass boat, along with Siam, bound for Sicily.

- Nothing left -

The young men recalled huddling at the bottom of an eroded hold, cold and bathed in salt water, the smell of gasoline pervading the air.

"The ocean had very big waves, like five metres, six metres. And, the boat was very small," Mohammad said.

After three days in which the boat travelled 600 kilometres (370 miles), water, food and fuel were running out and the boat began to take on water.

Bottles, sponges, clothing -- everything was used to bail.

Thanks to a telephone, the migrants managed to communicate their GPS position to the Alarm Phone migrant hotline thattracks boats in the Mediterranean.

It was nearly four in the morning Monday when the Ocean Viking, operated by the SOS Mediterranee migrant rescue group, noticed the small boat in distress and began its approach.

Mohammed recalled wondering whether they were pirates: "But what could they possibly take from us? We've got nothing left."

Staggering to stay on their feet and exhausted, the 35 migrants on the boat were plucked from the sea.

"You are a blessing... You have loved us very much," Siam told his rescuers. "You saved our life."

Both men now wish to apply for asylum.

But under Italy's far-right government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the task could be difficult.

This month, Italy designated Bangladesh -- the country from which most migrants to Italy departed last year -- as a "safe country", complicating asylum requests.

Not that Mohammad, who hopes to be a baker or pastry chef, is discouraged.

"I came so close to death. Being here is a second birth," he said.

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From Libyan hell to migrant boat, two young Bangladeshis are saved - Yahoo! Voices

Bosnian-Libyan Partnership Day (20 to 24 May) launched in Sarajevo – Libya Herald

The activities of the 2nd edition of the Bosnian-Libyan Partnership Day (20 to 24 May) were launched in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, Monday, the Libyan Iron and Steel Company (LISCO) reported.

The event is held in cooperation with the Bosnian Foreign Chamber of Commerce and International University of Sarajevo. LISCO is a leading sponsor.

In his opening address, the head of the delegation of LISCO, Chairman Mohammed Abdul Malik Al-Fagih, called on Bosnian companies to work and invest in the Libyan industrial sector, specifically in the iron and steel industry, as well as other industries and fields.

He also reviewed the companys capabilities, which can be relied upon to increase the volume of exports and trade exchange between the two countries.

This even comes within the framework of promoting LISCOs exports to the east of the European continent, and increasing trade between the two countries in various fields.

Bosnian-Libyan Partnership Day: Sarajevo 20 to 24 May (libyaherald.com)

In Sarajevo, Misrata Chamber signs agreement with Sarajevo Chamber of Commerce (libyaherald.com)

Updated: Misrata Chamber to lead delegation to Sarajevo Business Forum, Halal Fair 17 to 19 May (libyaherald.com)

ESDF follows up on planned pharmaceutical production in Libya through its investment in Bosnias Bosnalijek (libyaherald.com)

ESDF to reactivate medicine production within Libya through its Bosnian Bosnalijek pharmaceutical investment | (libyaherald.com)

Bosnian embassy in Tripoli reopens and resumes issuing of visas | (libyaherald.com)

GNA urges Bosnian firms to return | (libyaherald.com)

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Bosnian-Libyan Partnership Day (20 to 24 May) launched in Sarajevo - Libya Herald