Libya

Values?

It was inspiring to listen to Thomas Hammarberg in Dublin on Wednesday. The Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe was hugely impressive in a question and answer session that ranged from bullying on social networking sites, to the rights of Roma and Irish Travellers, to the situation of human rights defenders in Chechnya and Serbia.

One of the most powerful points he made was about what he described as a crisis in European values. He spoke about the difficulties posed by the arrival of 23/24,000 migrants in Italy from Tunisia. Migrants who mostly will not have a legitimate fear of persecution and will therefore eventually be returned to Tunisia. In spite of the relatively small numbers it has sparked racist rhetoric from Berlusconi and moves to close borders within the European Union.

At the same time the fragile new Government in Tunisia has accepted 260,000 to 270,000 refugees from Libya without closing the border. Who would you be more proud of?

Not those who run Formula 1 motor racing. F1 lives in a parallel universe where ethics are aerodynamic and sponsored by multinationals.

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Libya: Human rights defenders Jamal Al Haji and Faraj Humaid released after 2 years in prison.posted on: 2009/03/18

Front Line welcomes the release in Libya of two human rights defenders, Jamal Al Haji and Faraj Humaid after 2 years in prison.

Libya: Sentencing of eleven human rights defendersposted on: 2008/06/17

Front Line is deeply concerned following the sentencing of human rights defenders Al Sadiq Qashut, Ahmad Yusif Al Ubaidi, Jamal Al Haji, a writer who has worked to defend freedom of speech, Al Al Dirsi, Faraj Humaid, Ali Humaid, Al Mahdi Humaid, Al Sadiq Salih Humaid, Dr Idris Boufayed, Farid Al Zuwi and Bashir Al Haris to between six and twenty-five years' imprisonment, on 10 June 2008. The eleven human rights defenders were sentenced for planning a peaceful demonstration which was due to take place on 17 February 2007 to commemorate the first anniversary of a demonstration in the city of Benghazi, in which eleven demonstrators were killed when the demonstration was violently broken up by the police.