Torture, no due process at Libyan jails – UN

6 Jun, 2014 20:19 / Updated 11 years ago

Some 14,000 refugees and Libyans are festering in overcrowded prisons in the country, being subjected to torture, no due process and horrible confinement conditions, the UN stated on Friday.

“Detention of refugees and migrants in Libya, instead of being an exceptional measure, as required under international law, is widespread and prolonged,” UN human rights spokesman Rupert Colville said at a briefing, reported Reuters.


Fifty percent of all inmates are “deprived of their liberty without regard for due process.” The majority have been detained since 2011 – the year in which former leader Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown.

Another half of those being held are refugees or migrants. Many of them are from the Middle East or sub-Saharan Africa, who would have tried to sail to Europe. Attempts at making the crossing are a common problem. At least 34,800 people have made the crossing from Africa to Italy already this year.

“Detention of refugees and migrants in Libya, instead of being an exceptional measure, as required under international law, is widespread and prolonged,” Colville told Reuters. Twenty-seven detainees have died in custody last October, according to the UN, possibly from torture.

“They do not usually have the means to challenge their detention and are kept in extremely poor conditions, with chronic overcrowding and lack of basic sanitary conditions. They are also subject to ill-treatment and exploitation for labor,” Colville added.

Colville commented on the instability rocking the country since 2011. Local militias have been spreading chaos and political settlement has been extremely difficult; there have been repeated attacks and threats made against those attempting to assume the PMs office.

Two weeks ago armed gunmen loyal to rogue General Khalifa Haftar attacked Libya’s parliament, announcing its suspension. Forces loyal to Haftar claim to be purging the nation of Islamist militias while authorities accuse them of staging a coup.

Libya's parliament remains split by rivalries, with few democratic reforms made since 2011. The country is now under the rule of its third prime minister since March, and a new constitution is still not ready.

“Hardly a week goes by without some assassination, armed groups of ambushing people and killing them, bombs and all the rest of it,” Colville stated, adding that: “It's a very alarming situation and it just continues all the time and seems if anything to be getting a bit worse.”