She said an organization Human Rights Watch The justice sector in Libya is unable to conduct serious investigations into the grave violations of human rights and international crimes, due to the divisions that torn it.
In a report issued yesterday, the organization registered that the judicial system is in Libya It is characterized by “grave violations of due legal procedures.”
The report emphasized that the non -accountable militias control prisons and detention centers, which are only subject to “control of several ministries and governmental authorities.”
The report pointed out that the Libyan Penal Code and other relevant legislation are “old and do not deal with international crimes, and need a comprehensive reform to align it with Libya’s international obligations in the field of human rights.”
Local legislation in Libya includes rulings and laws described by the report as “repressive and arbitrary inherited from the era of the former leader Muammar GaddafiConsidering that it contradicts international law.
“Rights Watch” also reported that the laws and judicial rulings issued since the overthrow of Gaddafi “restricted freedoms and are not in line with International lawWhile the military courts in the East and West continues to trial civilians under the pretext of crimes related to “terrorism”.
The report pointed out that the judicial procedures in the civil and military courts are marred by “grave” violations of the due legal procedures, as the “Libyans and non -Libyans arbitrarily arbitrarily protest.”
The report also pointed out that the detention facilities in Libya are “dispersed and are violent and inhuman conditions of migrants, asylum seekers and Libyan citizens alike.”
The report added that torture, abuse, arbitrary detention, and inhumane situations, including overcrowding, widespread practices, stressing that they were good documentation.
He stated that the armed groups and the semi -government forces that control detention facilities “do not always implement the release orders or the court’s orders to summon the detainees,” and the right to a fair trial “is not respected in Libya.”
The organization called on the Libyan authorities to cancel all the laws that violate international law “immediately” and “Constitutional Declaration The Libyan “, and laid the foundations for a comprehensive legislative reform with the participation of jurists and local and international civil organizations.
It also called for the amendment of the Penal Code to criminalize serious international crimes specifically, ensure fair trial standards and the rights of legal procedures due in line with international law, and to practice effective and real control over all detention facilities.
Source : Human Rights Watch + Websites