Repressive Laws, Harassment, Detentions Derail Organizations’ Work

Abusive Legal Framework
Civic groups in Libya contend with a range of abusive laws that make their work extremely difficult, if not impossible, to carry out. The Gaddafi-era Law 19/2001 on the Reorganization of Nongovernmental Organizations greatly restricts civil society work in all of Libya, permitting registration only for groups working on social, cultural, sports-oriented, charitable, or humanitarian issues, but not other issues including human rights. The government has not clarified how organizations working on other issues can legally operate. Law 19/2001 also sets out overly burdensome registration requirements and empowers authorities to intervene in associations’ leadership and dissolve organizations without a court order.
Some Libyan legal experts contend that Law 19/2001 was effectively suspended because the 2011 Libyan Constituent Covenant guarantees freedom of association, speech, and assembly, but that “the courts still use this law as if it’s active,” according to one expert.
The head of a human rights group with multiple branches said the lack of a legal framework impeded the work of nongovernmental groups, forcing them to “operate in limbo,” and that it was important to ensure civil society participation in drafting a new law on associations. “People are afraid to travel as they are afraid of meeting with foreigners. Security agencies demand to give approval in advance of any meeting with foreigner groups. This is not suitable for civic work.”
Discussions including Libyan civic groups around the adoption of a new draft law on associations are ongoing, including with officials from the civil society commission, members of the House of Representatives, and the UN special rapporteur on freedom of peaceful assembly and association. Activists, civil society members, and UN officials confirmed that multiple drafts of a new law on civil society were in circulation and that consultations were taking place to expedite the process, but that members of the legislative authority, rival political bodies, and civil society members had not reached consensus around a unified draft.
Between 2019 and 2022, the former Presidential Council of the Government of National Accord regulated the work of nongovernmental groups under Decree 286.
The decree included burdensome registration requirements and stringent regulations on funding, mandating onerous advance notification for attending conferences and other events. After nongovernmental groups appealed, a Benghazi court suspended Decree 286 in 2022 for violating the 2011 constitutional declaration.
On March 8, 2023, the Law Department of the Supreme Judicial Council issued a legal opinion, following a request by the Commission for Civil Society, declaring all civil associations and civil society organizations not established under Law 19/2001 on Nongovernmental Organizations as illegal. The Office of the Tripoli Prime Minister on March 13 reaffirmed the legal opinion and revoked the licenses of nongovernmental organizations established in Libya since 2011. However on March 21, 2023, it gave nongovernmental organizations provisional legal standing until they “correct their legal status,” without providing a clear timeline.
Legislators have yet to revoke Gaddafi-era Penal Code provisions that provide severe punishments, including the death penalty, for the establishment of “unlawful” associations.
Registration and Administrative
Impediments
She said the process for foreign nongovernmental organizations was difficult and that she and other staff members had to use their personal accounts for financial transfers, as it was not possible for the organization to open an account. “Once, we had to wait for eight months for US$2,500,” she said. “In some cases, people were not paid their salaries for seven months.” She said the financial process and reporting requirements surpassed what could be reasonably expected from a small nongovernment group and that some “banks sometimes ask for a bribe.”
Civil Society Commission
The Commission for Civil Society, established in 2018, and that operates through branches around the country, has sweeping powers to inspect and demand documents, control funding, and cancel an organization’s registration and work permits of foreign organizations. According to the head of the Commission’s branch in Tripoli, in August 2023, the House of Representatives formally took authority over the Commission from the Council of Ministers, initiated a unification process, and assigned the Commission a budget and legal status.
The various Commission branches have taken different approaches to resolving the impasse over organizations’ registration and renewal. The director of the Zawiyah branch said it provides an interim annual document renewing existing nongovernmental organizations’ registration, while other branches, such as in Tripoli, apply standards established by the Benghazi commission in the east to register organizations. The heads of two Commission branches said intelligence agencies on occasion requested information about certain civic groups, and that nongovernmental groups sometimes needed intelligence agencies’ approval to register.
An activist in Tripoli, whose human rights group is active on press freedom in eastern Libya, said that security agencies in the east not only harass activists and try to control their activities, but held influence with authorities, including the Commission. “You will only get the Ishhar [notice of approval] if the agencies approve of you,” he said.
Another activist who heads a media freedom organization in Tripoli accused the Commission’s branches in east and west Libya of overreach: “Independent groups [based in Libya] are under a lot of pressure, as only those affiliated with the government are able to work. In the east, there is harassment by the armed groups and control over our activities.” He also said that the registration process had become more complicated: “We got our first notice of approval [Ishhar] in 2013, and only had to renew our registration in 2021. So, in January [2021] we first applied in Tripoli, but the Commission refused to give us our registration, so in March 2022, we applied in Benghazi. It took the commission there over a year to approve.”
Arrests and Detention
An Internal Security agency in eastern Libya accused him of “contacts with international organizations,” and “attempting to undermine state security” because of his activities with a youth forum around three sensitive issues: supporting the 2021 elections roadmap, transitional justice, and social responsibility of oil companies. He said, “I, for one, was detained without an arrest warrant and released without having to make any pledge. I was beaten in detention and even contracted a skin disease that I ended up treating in Tunis after leaving Libya.” He also said that he did not have access to a lawyer throughout his arrest and detention.
Harassment, Threats, and Attacks
Another exiled activist, from eastern Libya, said that Internal Security officers called a relative to warn against the activist speaking publicly after he was released from detention in 2022. A member of an armed group in eastern Libya called the same relative in 2023, warning him over the activist’s public criticism of the Libyan Arab Armed Forces’ management of major flooding that killed thousands of people in the eastern region and left thousands more missing or homeless.
Self-Censorship and Exile
Those who remained in Libya said that they had to self-censor their speech or activities to avoid being targeted by authorities and armed groups. One seasoned activist at a human rights organization based in western Libya said that security threats were increasing and that activists had resorted to working undercover. “Most work is done in secrecy.” He said that in 2022, local groups in Tarhouna with close ties to a militia threatened him over political disagreements.
Another activist from the south said he had to restrict his activities to remain in Libya, because of an “unsafe” environment for nongovernmental organizations. He said: “Although I might occasionally post something on my personal Facebook account, since 2020, I stopped publishing articles and no longer take media requests on general or human rights issues to avoid becoming a target for militias. I do not want to leave Libya and therefore have to maintain a low profile.”
“The south used to be safer for human rights activists, but since the military offensive in 2019, civic space shrunk just as much as anywhere else. Now, there’s nowhere safe in Libya, neither in the east nor in the west. Freedom of speech has become non-existent.”
Six of the activists interviewed said that they had been compelled to leave Libya and settle in Tunisia or in another country due to the fear of being persecuted for their work, and one said he had to leave his region and settle in Tripoli.
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