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Investigation ordered after teenage basketball fan shot dead at Libyan top-flight match – Yahoo Canada Shine On

Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh, Prime Minister of Libya's Government of National Unity, has ordered an investigation into the death of a teenage basketball fan

The prime minister of Libya's Government of National Unity has ordered an investigation after the death of a teenage basketball fan shot in the head at a top-flight match in Tripoli.

Abdul Mohimen Al-Falah was fatally injured on Monday in a disturbance outside the arena following the Libyan Basketball League play-off between Al Ittihad and Al Ahly Benghazi.

Local reports have suggested armed security were involved in trying to control the violence.

The 19-year-old was taken to Tunisia for treatment but died on Thursday.

His funeral is expected to take place on Saturday while fellow Al Ittihad supporters are set to gather at the stadium to pay their own respects.

A promising footballer, Al-Falah played for the youth team of second division Al Azima.

The high-profile nature of the death has led prime minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh to instruct the country's interior ministry to take responsibility for finding those responsible, while the Libyan Olympic Committee has stressed the need for more professional security forces at major sports events.

Despite the country's ongoing security crisis, which has seen a proliferation of firearms, the Libyan Basketball Federation is one of the few sports organisations that allows spectators to attend games.

The federation has now postponed all fixtures until next week while Al Ittihad used social media to announce the suspension of all club activities for three days.

The team's supporters have been using the slogan "Keep your weapons away from our stadiums and our youth" in a bid to pressure the authorities to take such incidents more seriously.

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Investigation ordered after teenage basketball fan shot dead at Libyan top-flight match - Yahoo Canada Shine On

Cancelled: Revelations from Norway’s Secret Negotiations to Stop … – Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)

This event is unfortunatelycancelled

In February 2011, civil war broke out in Libya when opposition forces in the east of the country tried to overthrow dictator Muammar al-Gaddafi.

A few weeks later, the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution establishing a no-fly zone over Libya and allowed the use of "all necessary means" to protect civilians.

NATO followed up by sending fighter jets, which bombed infrastructure and attacked Libyan government forces. Norway accounted for a tenth of the NATO effort, dropping close to 600 bombs over the country during the spring and summer of 2011.

In the run up to the UN resolution, secret Norwegian mediation efforts took place to try to end the conflict. This PRIO public seminar will feature new insights into what went on behind the scenes during these mediation attempts. The discussion will be based on revelations from a new book by the former diplomat and state secretary, Henrik Thune, called Strengt fortrolig [Strictly Confidential].

In 2011, Henrik Thune, who was then a Project Manager in the secretariat of Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Stre, was part of a small group of Norwegians who engaged in diplomatic negotiations to secretly try and stop the conflict between Gaddafi's regime and opposition forces.

Join us at PRIO for a discussion on new insights into global politics and secret diplomacy that have not been publicly discussed before in the Norwegian context.

Henrik Thune is the keynote speaker. Thune is a former state secretary at the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He is also an author, foreign policy researcher and former director at the NOREF center for international conflict resolution. He has worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for three periods, first as a senior adviser between 2006 and 2008, then as project manager between 2010 and 2012, and finally as state secretary for Anniken Huitfeldt from 2021 to 2022.

Ada Elisabeth Nissen is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Oslo.

Henrik Urdal is the Director of PRIO.

Kristian Harpviken is a Research Professor at PRIO and will moderate the discussion.

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Cancelled: Revelations from Norway's Secret Negotiations to Stop ... - Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)

Spanish gastronomy course inaugurated in Tripoli to last three days – Libya Herald

The Spanish embassy in Tripoli inaugurated Thursday night the Spanish Gastronomy Course that will take place in Tripoli over the next three days. Taught by the renowned Spanish chef Pedro Muagorri, in collaboration with the Spanish Embassy and Repsol, the course will introduce Spanish gastronomy in Libya to 14 local chefs.

Day ones menu was served to about 24 invited guests (including Libya Herald) where guest local chefs helped prepare such renowned Spanish dishes as gazpacho, gilda from San Sebastian and various fish dishes.

Growing cultural events by embassiesThe event follows the positive cultural contributions by various embassies in Tripoli such as the Week of the Italian Cuisine in the World by the Italian embassy in December 2022.

But it also continues the Spanish embassys enrichment of cultural life in Libya through the hosting of Flamenco dancers and the Spanish chamber music concert by Concerto Mlaga, an Andalusian ensemble last December, and the Spanish Film Festival that started last year and ended last week.

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Spanish gastronomy course inaugurated in Tripoli to last three days - Libya Herald

Nigerians In Libya Cry For Help, Say Police Move From House To … – SaharaReporters.com

Nigerians living in Libya have called on the Nigerian government to rescue them from the atrocities of the police in the North African country.

According to them, the Libyan police have arrested and imprisoned thousands of Nigerians in the country.

They alleged that over 100 others were dumped in a desert area called Agadez, without food or water.

Agadez is 900km North West from the capital of Niger, Niamey and 700km South from the Libyan border.

One of the sources currently trapped in Libya told SaharaReporters that there is panic among the immigrant population in the country as the police go from house to house, searching and arresting Nigerians, including pregnant women and children whom they throw into prison for no reason.

According to the source, since the end of April 2023, the Libyan police have been tougher on non-Libyans.

Libya is hot. They pack our Nigerian girls and people from other countries. They pack them in prison and now the prison is full. I heard that they packed them to a place called Oshofana, and that place, they always sell people.

There is nowhere to stay now. Everything is hot for everybody. Please, we beg our Nigerian government to please come and help us in this situation because I heard that other people, their governments have been coming to evacuate them.

Everything is hot. They are going from house to house to carry people. Even where I am, it is just because security is tight and just the help of God, not really because of the security. They are doing everything to us.

We are passing through a lot. They are packing both men and women, including pregnant women and children. Any black person, they pack them. Exactly why they are doing it is what we dont know.

They reduced salaries and house rent is higher. They are just making things difficult for us and we do not know exactly what we did. They are not even allowing us to get jobs or even go out because police are everywhere. To bail anyone in prison is N500,000 in Nigerian Naira equivalent, and yet, they dont even release some, the source said.

According to another source, those that have been put in prison are being starved.

The source said the Libyan authorities accused Nigerians and other black Africans of destroying their country by engaging in drug trafficking, sale of alcohol, stealing and causing food scarcity.

The source also said that the Libyan authorities said that the high rate of migrants in the country has led to food inflation.

According to the source, the authorities accuse migrants of not paying taxes while moving all the money they make to their home countries.

Therefore, the country no longer wants us, the source added.

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Nigerians In Libya Cry For Help, Say Police Move From House To ... - SaharaReporters.com

Mediterranean: Significant Increase of Arrivals, EU Complicity in … – European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) |

First quarter of 2023 sees increase of arrivals across the Mediterranean with Italy as main entry point. Renewed critique over EU complicity in cycle of abuse and crimes against humanity in Libya. As Italy and France continue to clash over migration, NGOs are concerned over pushbacks across their borders.

According to the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex), irregular border crossings into EU across the Central Mediterranean quadrupled in first 4 months of 2023 compared to the same period of 2023, rising to the highest level since the agency began collecting data in 2009. Detections reported by national authorities on the Central Mediterranean route increased to almost 42,200 by end of April. Figures published on May 5 by the Italian interior ministry sets the number of arrivals to Italy at 42,449 since the start of the year. On 7 May, the arrival of nearly 2,000 people at Lampedusa in less than three days wasreported. A total of 1,053people are reporteddead or missing in the Mediterranean this year as of early May.

Green MEP, Tineke Strik stated on 15 May: Very worrisome developments in Italy: The loss of so many lives in the recent shipwreck. The new immigration laws that strip away rights. The crackdown on Search and Rescue NGOs. I have arrived at Lampedusa, followed by Rome to assess the situation on the ground. According to Strik: None of these issues can ultimately be solved without a humane EU response rooted in solidarity and fundamental rights. However, this is not a reflection of the reality presented to her by civilian rescuers: Malta is non-responsive to distress calls and Italy instructs vessels to bring people back to Libya. This is a deliberate hands-off policy, condoned by the EU, leading to innocent people drowning. Strik told media: The cynical thing of course is that the EU is funding the Libyan coast guard, adding: We continue this whole perpetual cycle of abuse and crimes against humanity, although the EU says we want to break the business model of smugglers. Under the headline The EUs secret weapon against refugees time, Researcher at the Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies at Osnabrck University, Maurice Stierl describes how: Delays in rescuing people at sea arent a European policy failure. They are a deliberate, cruel strategy. Stierl, writes: Over the last decade, and in order to preventarrivals, European Union authorities have sought out ways to slow down rescue engagement while accelerating interceptions to Libya. On 12 May, Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF) released a statement reiterating the situation and EUs complicity: In 2022, approximately 23,600 people were intercepted by the EU-funded Libyan coastguard and forcibly returned to Libya. In Libya, migrants are at constant risk of being arbitrarily detained and subjected to crimes against humanity according to the latest UN report. One of the victims is 17-year-old Asha who was rescued by Ocean Viking operated by SOS MEDITERRANEE on 1 April. The organisation has released her testimony on how she was abandoned at the age of nine during Somalias civil war, then picked up by an abusive uncle and fleeing alone to escape a forced marriage to an83-year-old cousin spending three years in Libya, where she was imprisoned and tortured including in a prison run by mafias cooperating with Libyan authorities. Following a briefing at the UN Security Council by the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Karim Asad Ahmad Khan, Lawyers for Justice in Libya, urged him to do more to publicly state the gravity of human rights violations in Libya. Human trafficking alone does not capture this; these crimes may amount to Crimes Against Humanity and war crimes. Those responsible must be investigated before the ICC. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), in the period of 7 13 May 2023, 89 migrants were intercepted and returned to Libya and the total in 2023 so far has passed 5,000.

Meanwhile, NGOs continue to warn of distress and save lives. MSF Sea reported on 16 May: Following an alert from the Alarm Phone Geo Barents just rescued 26 people in distress on an unseaworthy boat located in international waters off Libya. Among them are one pregnant woman and eight children. The following day, Louise Michel reported: 71 people rescued from boat in distress. Less than a day after being back at sea, our crew was informed by aircraft Colibri 2 from Pilotes Volontaires about a potential distress case. The organisation whos vessel MV Louise Michel has been blocked for 20 days by Italy following the last rescue operation, for rescuing too many people, further stated: When our crew arrived they found 71 people on an overcrowded and unseaworthy rubber boat. All people are now safely aboard Louise Michel. On 16 May, iuventa released a statement on the ongoing trial in Italy against members of their crew and others. According to the statement: iuventas defence filed a request to the Italian Constitutional Court, challenging the legal basis of the criminal proceedings. This legal action questions the Italian and European legislation on smuggling cases, based on which more than 1,000 people are currently detained in Italy alone. Francesca Cancellaro, iuventa lawyer, said: Its time to rethink the whole discipline. As of today, this criminal case against individuals has taken on broader legal scope, extending beyond this singular case. This is a significant development for us as it fully reflects the nature of the charges, which were never only about the individual defendants but rather an attack on all who have engaged in similar conduct, are currently doing so, or may do so in the future.

Amid increasing tension between Italy and France over migrant arrivals, French authorities have deployed drones at the French-Italian border. According to French authorities, drones are needed because of the many opportunities to access the border in these areas, and because It is materially impossible to prevent people from crossing the border irregularly without using drones. While the French prefect said that 12,607 migrants have been stopped at the French-Italian border around Menton since the beginning of the year marking a 40 per cent increase. However, the numbers are intensely debated by both authorities and media in the two neighboring EU member states. And Lawyers and associations assisting migrants at the border have denied that there have been significant increases. In the summer, we usually give out about 300 meals a day, at the moment, the average is between 100 and 150, stated a spokesperson for organisations at the border. Meanwhile, MSF is concerned about pushbacks at the Italy-France border at Ventimiglia. According to Sergio Di Dato, the head of the MSF mobile clinic assisting migrants in transit between Italy and France On average, there are 20-25 pushbacks of people from France to Italy every day. There is concern that this number may rise after 150 additional border police were sent to the borders. Di Dato added that the situation is complicated also in Ventimiglia, where some of the migrants pushed back women, children and the vulnerable are taken care of by associations focusing on these things, while others end up under the Roia Bridge in camps without washing facilities and amid rats. The policies of Italian PM Meloni were defined as unjust, inhuman and ineffective by Stphane Sjourn the leader of French President Emmanuel Macrons Renaissance party on 10 May. However, on the same day, Meloni visited the Czech Republic with her counterpart, Petr Fialastating: On migrants, Meloni brings many proposals to Europe. We support Italys proposals, we have the same vision.Fiala added that a more active fight against traffickers was needed while Meloni said, Pursuing non-predatory cooperation with African countries is the most serious tool for tackling the migration crisis. Such non-predatory cooperation was illustrated by Italian Interior Minister, Matteo Piantedosi commending Tunisias significant effort against irregular migration, during a visit to the North African country that is the scene of an ongoing crack-down on migrants. Piantedosi expressed his full appreciation for the significant effort made by Tunisia to guard its maritime and land borders, to fight the networks of traffickers and confiscate their boats, to rescue migrants at sea. According to the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES), more than 200 people have drowned in a series of shipwrecks off Tunisia in 2023 and the Tunisian coast guard continues to pull back migrants and Tunisians attempting to reach Europe.

In Malta, a national monitoring committee overseeing the health and housing conditions of detained migrants has called for an immediate overhaul of two blocks of the notorious al Far detention centre. The watchdog body called for the appointment of an architect to inspect and report on urgent works needed to safeguard the safety of detained persons of the al Far block A building and the China House block built over 50 years ago. The board further reiterated points made in earlier reports including the need to ensure detained asylum seekers access to legal counsel, mental and healthcare, as well as outdoor areas among other issues. Reportedly, the observations were made in a report on the 2021 inspections of detention centres, tabled in the House of Representatives in Mid-May which are mandatory requirements under Maltas adherence with the Council of Europes Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. After a visit in 2021, the councils anti-torture Committee called on Malta to improve the treatment of detained migrants.

According to ECRE member, Aditus Foundation, on 10 May, the Court of Appeal delivered a secondimportant judgementon the status of holders ofSpecific Residence Authorisation (SRA). The cases concern Maltas refusal to renew SRA statuses and strip the holders of their rights reducing them to undocumented migrants despite their integration into society. Aditus Foundation states: the Appeal Court would have none of this. It laid down clear and strong principles rejecting Maltas appeals and restoring our clients legal status. The organisation further notes: these two cases confirm what we have been telling Government for several years. Malta should recognise and reward those people who have made significant integration efforts to make Malta home.

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Mediterranean: Significant Increase of Arrivals, EU Complicity in ... - European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) |