PUBLIC AI Index: MDE 19/004/2007
08 February 2007
UA 34/07 Forcible return/Torture and ill-treatment
Petition online: http://www.petitiononline.com/ER021507/petition-sign.html
LIBYA 430 Eritrean nationals
According
to reports, 430 Eritrean nationals, including over
50 women and children, are currently
detained by Libyan authorities and are facing
imminent deportation to Eritrea. Reports suggest that
the Libyan authorities may have
beaten and raped or sexually abused some detainees,
and some detainees may even have died in custody as
a result of such torture or other ill-treatment.
According to Amnesty International' s information, of
the 430 detainees, 130 detainees,
including several women and children, are detained
at a detention centre in al-Marj, 1,000 km from the
Libyan capital Tripoli, while
the remaining 300 are detained in Misratah, about 200km from Tripoli.
Most of the detainees are conscripts who fled Eritrea
to avoid military service. The
right to conscientious objection is not recognized
in Eritrea and if returned they will be at high risk
of being arrested and tortured.
Military service in Eritrea, which, in practice,
lasts for an indefinite period, is compulsory for
women and men aged 18 to 40,
although the age limit for women was reportedly reduced
to 27. There are no military courts and military
offenders are arbitrarily punished
with torture – being beaten
and tied for hours or days in
painful positions – and indefinite
incommunicado detention in harsh conditions.
Groups of refugees who were forcibly returned to Eritrea
from Libya in 2004 and from
Malta in 2002 were held incommunicado upon their arrival.
Many were tortured and some died while in custody.
Amnesty International documented
their treatment in its report Eritrea: `You have
no right to ask' – Government resists
scrutiny on human rights (AFR
64/003/2004, May 2004). In August 2006, 300 Eritreans
were detained in Libya and threatened
with deportation. It however appears that
they were not deported although the whereabouts of
some of them remains unknown (see UA 225/06, MDE 19/004/2006, 24 August
2006).
Libya is a state party to the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights
and the Organization of African Unity (OAU – now
the African Union) Convention
on the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in
Africa, both of which oblige the authorities not
to return anyone to a country
where they would be at risk of serious human rights violations,
including torture. The United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) has recommended that even rejected
asylum-seekers should not be
forcibly returned to Eritrea. It is not clear that
these detainees have been allowed
access to UNHCR officials in Libya or any opportunity to formally apply for asylum.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
On 21 July 2004, Libyan authorities deported 110 Eritrean
nationals, most of them asylum
seekers fleeing military conscription, back to Eritrea,
reportedly at the request of the Eritrean authorities.
On arrival in Eritrea they arrested,
tortured and detained incommunicado in
secret military prisons. On 27 August 2004, the Libyan
authorities attempted to deport
a further 76 Eritrean asylum seekers, including six
children. The plane was, however, hijacked by some
of the passengers and landed
in Sudan. All passengers, except for the hijackers, were given refugee status in Sudan.
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Please send appeals to arrive as
quickly as possible, in English or your own language:
- calling on the Libyan authorities not to forcibly return
any Eritrean nationals to Eritrea, where they would be at
risk of torture,
as well as indefinite detention without charge or trial;
- reminding the Libyan authorities that they have signed
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
and the 1969 Organization of African Unity Refugee Convention, both
of which oblige them not to
forcibly return anyone to a country where they would
be at risk of serious human
rights abuses such as torture, as would be the case in Eritrea;
- calling for all Eritreans detained in Libya to be treated
humanely and given immediate
access to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) in Tripoli to enable them to apply
for protection if they wish to do so.
APPEALS TO:
Head of State
Colonel Mu`ammar AL-GADDAFI
Office of the Leader of the Revolution
Tripoli
Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Salutation: Your Excellency
Prime Minister
Dr Al-Baghdadi Ali AL-MAHMOUDI
Secretary of the General People's Committee
Secretariat of the General People's Committee
Tripoli
Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Email: via the form on the government of Libya's webpage
(in Arabic only): www.gpc.gov. ly/online/ contactus. php
(The form reads as follows:
1- Name; 2- Email address; 3- to: (please pick the first
one)The Brother, head of the
General Public Committee, Dr. al-Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi; 4- content; 5- send)
Salutation: Your Excellency
Justice Minister
Mr Mustafa Muhammad ABDELJALIL
Secretary of the General People's Committee for Justice
Secretariat of the General People's Committee for Justice
Tripoli
Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Email:secretary@aladel.
gov.ly
Salutation: Your Excellency
COPIES TO:
Foreign Minister
Mr Abd al-Rahman Mohamed SHALGAM
Secretary of the General People's Committee for Foreign
Liaison and
International Cooperation
Secretariat of the General People's Committee for Foreign
Liaison and
International Cooperation
Tripoli
Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and to diplomatic representatives of Libya accredited
to your country.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the International Secretariat,
or your section office, if sending appeals after 22 March 2007.
Petition online: http://www.petitiononline.com/ER021507/petition-sign.html