Libya urged to shut migrant detention centers at UN meeting

Migrants are seen after they were relocated from government-run detention centres, after getting trapped by clashes between rival groups in Tripoli, Libya September 4, 2018. (REUTERS)
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Updated 11 November 2025
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Libya urged to shut migrant detention centers at UN meeting

  • Libya has had little peace since a 2011 uprising against long-time autocrat Muammar Qaddafi and is between warring eastern and western factions

GENEVA: Libya was urged at a UN meeting on Tuesday to close detention centers where rights groups say migrants and refugees have been tortured, abused and sometimes killed.
Multiple states including Britain, Spain, Norway and Sierra Leone raised concerns at the meeting in Geneva about treatment of migrants in Libya, a major transit route for Africans fleeing conflict and poverty toward Europe. Some of them have been held in warehouses by traffickers where they have been subject to violence and extortion, according to a Dutch court case.
Norway’s ambassador Tormod Endresen called for protection of vulnerable migrants and an end to arbitrary detentions. Britain’s rights ambassador Eleanor Sanders echoed that and also sought unrestricted access for UN and other groups to mass graves. Some bodies of migrants found in mass graves earlier this year bore gunshot wounds, a UN agency said.
In an open letter to Libyan authorities published in parallel to the UN review, rights groups called for reforms, saying that armed groups were operating with impunity, obstructing courts and committing widespread abuses.
Libya has had little peace since a 2011 uprising against long-time autocrat Muammar Qaddafi and is between warring eastern and western factions.
Libya’s Eltaher Salem M. Elbaour, acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation for the UN-backed western government based in the capital Tripoli, said migrants placed a heavy burden on the divided state.
“I’m not here to paint a perfect picture of the human rights situation in my country,” he said.
“Quite the opposite — I have come here to reiterate the large efforts we have made in order to ensure these rights are respected in spite of the challenges that are known to all during this very delicate transitional period.”
He cited as examples his country’s acceptance of the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction in Libya and the creation of a new joint committee to address detention centers. Libya’s review is part of a process by which governments and rights groups scrutinize all 193 UN member states’ records every few years and recommend improvements. The United States snubbed its own review last week in a rare move. 

 


Syria’s growth accelerates as sanctions ease, refugees return

Updated 06 December 2025
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Syria’s growth accelerates as sanctions ease, refugees return

  • Economy grows much faster than World Bank’s 1% estimate, fueling plans for currency’s relaunch

NEW YORK: Syria’s economy is growing much faster than the World Bank’s 1 percent estimate for 2025 as refugees flow back after the end of a 14-year civil war, fueling plans for the relaunch of the country’s currency and efforts to build a new Middle East financial hub, central bank Governor AbdulKader Husrieh has said.

Speaking via video link at a conference in New York, Husrieh also said he welcomed a deal with Visa to establish digital payment systems and added that the country is working with the International Monetary Fund to develop methods to accurately measure economic data to reflect the resurgence. 

The Syrian central bank chief, who is helping guide the war-torn country’s reintegration into the global economy after the fall of Bashar Assad’s regime about a year ago, described the repeal of many US sanctions against Syria as “a miracle.”

The US Treasury on Nov. 10 announced a 180-day extension of the suspension of the so-called Caesar sanctions against Syria; lifting them entirely requires approval by the US Congress. 

Husrieh said that based on discussions with US lawmakers, he expects the sanctions to be repealed by the end of 2025, ending “the last episode of the sanctions.”

“Once this happens, this will give comfort to our potential correspondent banks about dealing with Syria,” he said.

Husrieh also said that Syria was working to revamp regulations aimed at combating money laundering and the financing of terrorism, which he said would provide further assurances to international lenders. 

Syria’s central bank has recently organized workshops with banks from the US, Turkiye, Jordan and Australia to discuss due diligence in reviewing transactions, he added.

Husrieh said that Syria is preparing to launch a new currency in eight note denominations and confirmed plans to remove two zeroes from them in a bid to restore confidence in the battered pound.

“The new currency will be a signal and symbol for this financial liberation,” Husrieh said. “We are glad that we are working with Visa and Mastercard,” Husrieh said.