Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Sudanese authority calls on Libya to condemn "rogue" RSF – The Libya Observer

The Sudanese government has called on Libya to condemn the "rogue" Rapid Support Forces, which is battling the Sudanese Armed Forces, considering the latter a legitimate official institution responsible for the stability and maintenance of peace and security in the country.

A statement by the Sudanese Embassy in Libya Tuesday said the ongoing events in Sudan are the result of the RSF's rebellion against the Sudanese national army.

RSF units attacked several diplomatic missions and international and regional organizations, violating the pertinent international laws and norms, the embassy stated.

It called on the Libyan authorities to condemn the "rogue" party and the continued fighting in the country, which it said is endangering the lives of civilians, including women and children.

"The ongoing developments in Sudan is an internal matter, and the Sudanese government can contain the matter without external interference."

On Monday, the Libyan Embassy in Khartoum announced the evacuation of 105 Libyan nationals by ship from a port city in Sudan to Jeddah in preparation for flying them back home.

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Sudanese authority calls on Libya to condemn "rogue" RSF - The Libya Observer

Libya’s Temporary Suspension Of Trademark Registrations By … – Mondaq News Alerts

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Libya has imposed, by means of a directive, a restriction onforeigners registering trademarks in the country, with effect fromNovember 1, 2022. The European Commission's website states that"Libya's trademark office has suspended the acceptance oftrademark applications and registrations filed by foreignapplicants".

According to the administrative directive of Libya'sMinistry of Economy and Trade, the trademark office limited itsoperation of new trademark registrations arising from foreignapplicants, while the status of pending procedures concerningforeign-owned trademarks is still not clear.

The office has reported that its activities will be limitedto the following:

"The religious and politicalinfluences are quite evident within the trademark protection scopein Libya, which is why this temporary suspension for trademarkregistration by foreign applicants does not come as asurprise."

Libya has been going through a context of instability plagued bypolitical conflicts since the overthrow of former leader Muammaral-Gaddafi in 2011, who ruled the country for over 30 years. Thecountry has, since then, been divided between two main factions:the internationally recognised Government of NationalAccordwhich is based in the capital city ofTripoliand the Libyan National Army (led by General KhalifaHaftar) based in the eastern city of Tobruk.

Apart from this, there are also several armed militias operatingthroughout the country, each with its own alliances, creating avolatile and unpredictable situation favourable to politicalinstability.

In March, Libya's High Council of State voted for aconstitutional amendment intended to provide a basis for electionsand a diplomatic representative from the UN for Libya moved to takecharge of a stalled political process to enable elections that areseen as the path to resolving years of conflict.

This ongoing conflict has disrupted the country's legal andregulatory framework, including intellectual property laws.Furthermore, the country's economy is heavily reliant on oiland gas exports, which have been severely impacted by the conflict.Thus, Libya's economy has suffered greatly with the disruptionof production and exports, which led to high unemployment,inflation, and a shortage of basic goods and services.

Foreign investment plays an important role in the economicdevelopment of a country, providing wealth, expertise, andtechnology, amongst other factors. However, not allowing foreignersto register their trademarks creates legal uncertainty as it makesestablishing a strong and stable presence in the Libyan marketdifficult. This policy discourages foreign investment, which iscrucial for job creation and economic growth.

In addition, the Libyan government has a history ofnationalising foreign-owned assets, which has created a lack oftrust between foreign investors and the government.

Regarding trademark registration, it's worth noting thatLibya's legal system is based on Islamic law (Sharia). It hasbecome the country's official legal system after the overthrowof former leader Muammar al-Gaddafi. The impact on how religioninfluences trademark registration in Libya is noticeable.

Ins Sequeira approached this subject in an article describing the nuances of such influence: "Libyantrademark law prohibits the registration of certain categories oftrademarks, including those seen as 'violating public morals orpublic order' (...) or those that are 'identical or similarto symbols constituting a purely religious nature' (...). Inpractice, this means that trademarks referencing banned substancesare regularly refused (eg, pork products in Class 29 and alcoholicbeverages in Classes 32 and 33). In addition, trademarks thatincorporate non-Islamic religious symbols, such as the Christiancross or Christmas-related goods (eg, Christmas trees in Class 28)are also refused."

The religious and political influences are quite evident withinthe trademark protection scope in Libya, which is why thistemporary suspension for trademark registration by foreignapplicants does not come as a surprise.

Indeed, without a functioning central government, there is avery challenging environment for businesses operating in thecountry. As a result, obtaining trademark registration can be acomplex and difficult process, and there may be significantobstacles to overcoming the legal and regulatory landscape.

The Libyan government's policy of not allowing foreigntrademark registration in the country has significant economic andpolitical implications. The absence of a unified legal system, theleftovers of nationalising foreign assets, and the challengingbusiness climate in Libya have all contributed to making itdifficult for foreign investors to operate in the country.

The policy of not allowing foreign trademark registration maywell be contributing to the country's economic stagnation andfor this reason, it is imperative for the Libyan government toestablish a more favourable business environment for foreigninvestors.

Doing so is crucial for promoting economic growth and prosperityin Libya, by way of unlocking the full potential of foreigninvestment and long-term economic development in the country.

This is a co-published article, which was originally published in theWorld Intellectual Property Review (WIPR).

The content of this article is intended to provide a generalguide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be soughtabout your specific circumstances.

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Libya's Temporary Suspension Of Trademark Registrations By ... - Mondaq News Alerts

Industry Minister participates in Turkey’s Teknofest discusses … – Libya Herald

Libyas Minister of Industry and Minerals, Ahmed Abuhisa, participated yesterday in the opening ceremony of the seventh session of Turkeys Technofest Festival for Aviation Sciences and Technology, in the presence of Prime Minister, Abd Alhamid Aldabaiba, and several industry ministers from several regional countries.

The Minister, and his accompanying delegation, held several meetings and business meetings with several officials in the industry and technology sector, which included a working session with the Undersecretary of the Turkish Ministry of Industry, in which they discussed prospects for cooperation and providing technical support for several sectors such as industrial technological parks, capacity building, industrial policies and industrial investment.

Cooperation with Malta tooOn the side-lines of the visit, a meeting took place with the Minister of Industry of Malta, who expressed his countrys readiness to cooperate, especially in the field of agricultural industries.

The Ministry reported that its participation at the Technofest came at the invitation of the Minister of Industry and Technology of Turkey. It included a high-level delegation that included the Minister, the Director General of the Industrial Information and Documentation Centre, the Executive Director of the Technology Park, and the Director of the Ministrys International and Technical Cooperation Office.

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Industry Minister participates in Turkey's Teknofest discusses ... - Libya Herald

Two Libyan robotic teams recognized by "Judges Choice Award" in … – The Libya Observer

Two Libyan high school robotic teams received the Judges Choice Award in recognition of their outstanding performance at the World Robotics Championship in Houston, USA, held on 19-23 April.

The Libyan delegation included two teams from Tripoli, (Al-Mukhtar) and (Lybotics Scout), besides (Lybotics Super) from Benghazi, all aged between 12-18, the general coordinator for Lybotics Mohammed Zaid told The Libya Observer Thursday.

The mentor of the Lybotics Super team, which won the award along with the Mukhtar team, said his team has been working hard since January, and the students were up to the challenge of building their robots.

The group competed with the top 160 robotics teams from all over the world.

"That means they are among the top teams, which accounts for only about 2% worldwide," Ziad noted.

In the competition, engineering students are challenged to build movement mechanisms, which focus on directions and speed.

"The robots have specific tasks to accomplish in the competition, including moving, lifting cones, and placing them in tubes of different heights," Ziad explains.

He confirmed that the teams faced several difficulties, including an unfortunate incident when they lost the main robot during air freight, which eliminated them from qualifying for the next stage.

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Two Libyan robotic teams recognized by "Judges Choice Award" in ... - The Libya Observer

Face of Defense: A Chemist’s Journey to Make ‘Bad Unknowns’ Known – Department of Defense

Having grown up not far from the Army Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, Irvine Swahn knew at a young age that he would probably end up working there someday. He started as a base forklift driver before transferring in 1984 into an entry-level chemist position for the Edgewood Research, Development and Engineering Center as he began his last year of college.

Job Title: Chemist

Hometown: Street, Md.

Stationed: Aberdeen Proving Ground-South

Unit: CBRNE Analytical and Remediation Activity (CARA) Mobile Expeditionary Lab

Fast forward nearly 40 years, and you'll still find Swahn working at APG. But he had a few stops on his career path in between Army gigs, and those helped make him a leader in the field of chemical warfare agent science. He's worked in some intense situations in Iraq, Libya and Pakistan, to name a few and seen a lot of changes in technology. Nowadays, he's passing his extensive knowledge on to others and reminding all up-and-coming scientists that there are a lot of civilian careers available within the DOD all you need to do is get your foot in the door.

Swahn is a chemist within the 20th Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosives Command's CBRNE Analytical and Remediation Activity simply known as CARA. It's an all-civilian organization that has four main mission sets:

There are a lot of nasty, nasty chemical weapons out there. [I'm proud] knowing we were able to clean up about 98% of them 98% of the world's stockpile."

It may sound complicated to some, but Swahn said his role really isn't. As a chemist at the CARA mobile labs, he receives air, soil and water samples from military and civilian units, then prepares and analyzes them on various instruments to identify whether they contain dangerous chemicals that might cause harm.

"That's a whole lot of words to say we make the bad unknowns known," Swahn said. And the preparation is key. "You have to prepare those correctly for each specific instrument because you can get a little bit of information from one instrument, then more information from another. We have multiple chemical databases, which are libraries used by the instruments to identify those unknown compounds in samples collected."

Swahn trains new chemists on how chemical warfare agents are made, on how they break down in the environment and about their physical and toxicological properties. This information better equips CARA chemists to handle and analyze the dangerous compounds. Swahn also develops new methods for analyzing samples to better look for unknown chemical compounds or, as he said, "that needle in a haystack."

Swahn works with soldiers, too. He's currently gearing up to prepare realistic drills for units at various Army training centers so soldiers can learn to recognize certain chemicals and equipment that's used to store, fill or make weapons from synthesis labs up to full-scale industrial production plants. He also teaches them how to identify the most significant evidence and how to collect it properly.

Since the 1980s when Swahn first started his career, technological advancements have sped up chemists' ability to separate samples and do analysis on a greater number of chemicals.

"Now, you have instruments with hundreds of thousands of compounds in a library, and you can put any chemical in and get on-the-spot identification," Swahn said. "And now we're using a lot of handheld instruments, which top the big dinosaur instruments I started on. It's quite impressive how far we've come in the past 25 to 30 years."

Swahn's training expertise comes from his extensive background in working with chemical weapons. In fact, his resume really couldn't be more impressive. Here are just some of the highlights:

He took part in missions for the United Nations Special Commission in Iraq after the first Gulf War.

This included going to Iraq's former chemical warfare agent research and production facility, Al Muthanna, after the 1991 war. His job: to verify the country's chemical weapons stockpiles had been destroyed and that there was no on-site contamination. Later, he spearheaded the setup, manning and training of international analysts at the Baghdad Monitoring and Verification Center, the lab the UN Special Commission built to oversee the dismantling of the country's chemical weapons.

"They gathered all the chemical weapons they had across the countryside and brought them there to be destroyed," Swahn said. "It was interesting being in a former chemical weapons production facility and working with the Iraqis."

Swahn also helped draft many of the verification procedures that future inspectors would use there.

He worked in the Netherlands from 1997-2012 in the first group of inspectors tasked with eliminating chemical weapons stockpiled worldwide.

Swahn did this for the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, headquartered in the Netherlands, which implements the Chemical Weapons Convention, an agreement that went into effect in 1997 that works to end the development, production, stockpiling, transfer and use of chemical weapons for prohibited purposes.

"You can still make chemical weapons," Swahn said. "We can make them here in small quantities for nonprohibited purposes like testing, detection and decontamination studies. It's chemical-biological defense."

Swahn initially developed sampling and analysis procedures and carried out inspections in countries that had joined the convention. Eventually, he become a team leader with a wide range of responsibilities that included training inspection teams and team leaders. He also planned and conducted more than 60 international inspections. These teams had full diplomatic status that provided them special protection during their inspections. His last two years with the organization had him coordinating and planning some difficult missions to some volatile countries such as Libya, Russia, Pakistan and Iraq.

"OPCW is kind of the watchdog of the world for the CWC to make sure these countries that whatever chemical weapons agents they're making are in small quantities for protective purposes," Swahn said. "Its second job is to look at industry and make sure all these chemicals that can be used to make chemical weapons aren't diverted. We did many inspections at regular industrial plants all over the world."

During his time at the OPCW, the organization won a Nobel Peace Prize for its extensive work on eliminating chemical weapons.

"The prize was won for the work they did from 1997 to 2013, and I was there from 1997 to 2012," Swahn said.

His humility about the experience was evident in his lack of words for it.

"It was very worthwhile an adventure," he said. "It was a great accomplishment to be involved in."

He was indirectly part of notable moments in history.

Swahn recalled a trip to Pakistan where inspections were delayed for weeks due to terrorist activity. He and his team ended up doing the inspection with armed escorts. He was also involved with many inspections in Libya, where he was one of the first people to sample and analyze their chemical weapons. One of the inspection teams he was on finished its work and left Libya just two days before the country's longtime leader, Muammar Gaddafi, was killed in October 2011.

"Sometimes I felt out of my league negotiating special missions with ambassadors and high-ranking government officials, as with Libya, which was falling apart at the time," he remembered.

Swahn was also the first American to inspect Chinese military sites in 1998. It was a media circus that he found daunting.

"There were all these reporters, and they went right past our team leader. They wanted to talk to the American [me]," he remembered. "These people were shoving mics in your face and throwing all these questions at you and our public affairs guy was saying, 'Whatever you do, don't talk to reporters!'"I was just doing my job and trying to stay out of the politics," Swahn said.

Swahn returned to his military roots in 2012 to do chemistry research and training for various Army directorates. He spent about four years training Army National Guard soldiers, Reservists and their civil support teams and science offices on lab operations for the Army Chemical Biological Center. He still does this a few weeks every year.

Swahn was working for CARA in 2016 when he deployed with its mobile lab to Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, to set up and take samples from the area for U.S. Central Command.

"It was inspiring to support commanders in the field who were making critical decisions on completing their mission while not risking their forces," Swahn said. "I helped answer questions like, 'How do we detect these agents?' 'How long do we have to stay away from areas where this stuff was disseminated?' And, 'What are the effects of these types of chemicals?'"

Over the span of nearly four decades, Swahn has worked at multiple weapons destructions sites in countries all over the world. He's trained inspectors of all nationalities and helped develop various chemical-biological defense programs. Needless to say, he's had a lot of memorable experiences. But he said his favorites have been the travel and the camaraderie.

"Walking through Red Square in Moscow, on top the Great Wall of China, and traveling to the Taj Mahal and the Great Pyramids at Gisa are just a few of the most memorable experiences," he said. "Getting to see the magnificent, well-preserved Roman ruins of Sabratha and Leptis Magna [in Libya] was the chance of a lifetime and seeing the ancient ruins of Babylon, Hatra and Samarra [in Iraq] wasn't bad, either."

He said the occasional tension between countries was also pretty memorable.

"Whenever you went anywhere, they always suspected you of being a spy, and we always suspected them of being spies," Swahn said. "I started working before the end of the Cold War, when we were against the Russians. Then, 10-15 years later, I'm in Russia negotiating with these same guys who were thinking about how to kill us, and we were thinking about how to kill them."

As for one of the craziest moments?

"In April 1998, I was showered by a plume of liquid Sarin agent that covered my protective suit during a live agent collection at a destruction facility," he said. "It was pretty crazy, but keeping a cool head and good decontamination allowed me to survive!"

Swahn said the things he's most proud of are the opportunities he had to train various military units in chemical weapons defense and the work he did for the OPCW.

"There are a lot of nasty, nasty chemical weapons out there," he said. "[I'm proud] knowing we were able to clean up about 98% of them 98% of the world's stockpile."

For up-and-coming scientists who are looking to get their foot in the door along a similar career path, Swahn said they need to find what they want and make it happen.

"Dream big, study hard, be willing to travel around the world, and be the best at anything you do," he said.

For Swahn, that meant finding a way to be indispensable when he first started at that entry-level chemist position. At the time, he said the ERDEC was developing a new and complicated system to analyze particulates from old munitions. Only he and one other man knew how to use it properly and that other man was leaving the job.

"When that guy left, they didn't really have a backfill, so they said, 'We've got to find a way to get [Swahn] on, because he's the only one who knows this instrument,'" Swahn recalled. "That's how I got the full-time position."

And the rest, as they say, is history.

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Face of Defense: A Chemist's Journey to Make 'Bad Unknowns' Known - Department of Defense