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Home Libya

Libya looks to new Human Rights credentials

byMichel Cousins
February 26, 2013
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Libya looks to new Human Rights credentials

The Prime Minister Ali Zeidan at the 22nd Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva yesterday (Photo: UN)

Prime Minister Ali Zeidan . . .[restrict]at the 22nd Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva yesterday (Photo: UN)

Tripoli, 26 February 2013:

Libya has every intention of fully respecting human rights in all their various forms, Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has told the UN’s Human Rights Council.

Speaking yesterday, Monday, at its 22nd sessi0n in Geneva, the Prime Minister said that two years after the revolution the country was still hurting from the consequences of the Qaddafi dictatorship and still rebuilding its infrastructure. Nonetheless, he stated, a Human Rights Commission had been created and all laws restricting the enjoyment of human rights had been repealed.

Moreover, Libya had ratified several human rights international instruments including the International Convention on Enforced Disappearances and the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

The country was also seeking to spread a culture of human rights through a policy of democracy and empowerment of women, he added. Additionally, the government supported rights for vulnerable people, including persons with disabilities and children.

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An agreement had also been reached with the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights regarding the provision of technical assistance, he explained. All judicial bodies were being restructured. National reconciliation and transitional justice mechanisms were also put in place.

Much of what had been done was thanks to the help of the international community, he said, and he thanked the UN office in Libya for providing technical assistance. Its efforts, he said, had contributed enormously to recent developments in the country.

Until the revolution, Libya’s human rights record was non-existent and its attempts to pretend otherwise cause for ridicule or outrage.

The so-called Muammar Qaddafi Prize for Human Rights, founded in 1989, was dismissed as a propaganda deception and a sick joke.

However, in 2003, there was fury among international human rights organisations when the regime’s ambassador to United Nations Human Rights Commission, Najat Al-Hajjaji, was elected to head it. The move, widely seen as a payback to Qaddafi for his bank rolling the creation of the African Union, helped finally discredit what by then had become a toothless organization. It was replaced by the UN Human Rights Council in 2006. [/restrict]

Tags: featuredLibyaUNHRC

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