Lawyers ask the ICC to investigate Tunisia opposition crackdown and migrant abuse

Lawyers ask the ICC to investigate Tunisia opposition crackdown and migrant abuse
Members of civil society groups and opposition parties carry banners during a protest against Tunisia's President Kais Saied in Tunis, Tunisia. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 September 2024
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Lawyers ask the ICC to investigate Tunisia opposition crackdown and migrant abuse

Lawyers ask the ICC to investigate Tunisia opposition crackdown and migrant abuse
  • It is the second time Tunisian opposition members have sought an ICC probe
  • he request comes less than two weeks before Oct. 6 elections in which Saied is seeking a second term

THE HAGUE, Netherlands: Lawyers and families of jailed Tunisian opposition leaders called on the International Criminal Court on Tuesday to investigate a crackdown on political opposition and the abuse of Black African migrants in the North African country, which has been offered European Union financial support to help rein in migration.
It is the second time Tunisian opposition members have sought an ICC probe. Last year, the families of seven imprisoned politicians asked the court to investigate claims of political persecution and human rights violations by President Kais Saied’s administration.
Lawyers now say they are filing a second request for an investigation following new claims of abuse of migrants and persecution of opposition leaders. The request comes less than two weeks before Oct. 6 elections in which Saied is seeking a second term.
“The new evidence shows that Black African migrants are facing brutal and heartless treatment at the hands of the Tunisian authorities. The ICC has the jurisdiction to investigate these alleged crimes against humanity and should act with the full force of international law to protect those most vulnerable,” lawyer Rodney Dixon said in a statement.
“Countless migrants report similar experiences of arbitrary arrest on land or at sea followed by collective expulsion to desert regions along the border with Algeria and Libya, while being beaten, mistreated, and suffering psychological abuse,” the statement said.
For many sub-Saharan Africans — who don’t need a visa to travel to Tunisia — the North African country serves as a stepping stone to Europe, while others come from Libya, which shares a border with Tunisia.
The ICC’s prosecution office did not immediately respond to an email seeking confirmation that it had received the request. The court’s prosecutors are already investigating allegations of crimes against migrants in Libya including arbitrary detention, unlawful killing, enforced disappearances, torture and sexual and gender-based violence.
Tunisia is a member state of the Hague-based court.
One of the family members seeking ICC action is Elyes Chaouachi, the son of Ghazi Chaouchi, who is the detained former secretary general of the social democratic political party Attayar.
“In Tunisia, the pillars of democracy and human rights are under siege, as autocracy, racism, antisemitism and hate speech rise unchecked. We urge the ICC and the international community to take a stand — support humanity, uphold justice and restore dignity. Our voices for freedom and equality must not go unheard,” Chaouachi said in a statement released by the legal team that filed the request to the court.
Last year, European leaders held out the promise of more than 1 billion euros in financial aid to rescue its teetering economy and better police its borders, in an effort to restore stability to the North African country — and to stem migration from its shores to Europe.


Houthi captors torture prisoners, Yemeni rights group alleges

Houthi captors torture prisoners, Yemeni rights group alleges
Updated 7 sec ago
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Houthi captors torture prisoners, Yemeni rights group alleges

Houthi captors torture prisoners, Yemeni rights group alleges
  • Families of abducted people have complained that the Houthis at the Central Security prison in Sanaa tortured their incarcerated relatives
  • Houthis have abducted at least 70 Yemeni employees from UN agencies, international rights and aid organizations, and diplomatic missions in Sanaa

AL-MUKALLA: A Yemeni rights group on Tuesday accused the Houthis of torturing prisoners at a Sanaa detention facility, as dozens of Yemeni activists and politicians demanded that the Yemeni militia release people abducted for celebrating the 1962 revolution.

The Mothers of Abductees Association, which represents thousands of female relatives of war prisoners, said that families of abducted people have complained that the Houthis at the Central Security prison in Sanaa tortured their incarcerated relatives, starved them, barred them from contacting or seeing their families, isolated them in cells with mentally ill prisoners, and held them in small, unventilated rooms.

“The Mothers of Abductees Association condemns the Houthi group’s serious violations against our children in the central prison, which pose a serious threat to their lives and safety. We hold them completely accountable for their psychological and physical safety,” the organization said in a statement.

The MAA chairperson, Amat Al-Salam Al-Hajj, told Arab News that the Houthis began torturing the detainees, who had been imprisoned for years, and isolated them after accusing them of causing a riot in the prison. The prisoners then appealed to their families to speak to the media to pressure the Houthis to stop torturing them, she said.

This revelation came after dozens of Yemeni journalists, lawyers, activists, and politicians signed an online petition urging the Houthis to release dozens of Yemenis abducted during a crackdown on those commemorating the 62nd anniversary of the 1962 revolution.

“We are deeply concerned about the unnatural arrest campaign targeting civil activists for expressing joy on the 62nd anniversary of the glorious September 26 Revolution. We urge the wise leaders of the authority in Sanaa to make every effort to persuade the Sanaa authority to immediately stop the arrests,” the Yemeni activists said in the petition.

Ahmed Nagi Al-Nabhani, a Yemeni activist based in Sanaa, told Arab News that the Houthi authorities said the Yemenis were arrested for “inciting” the public to challenge their rule, and that they were not arrested for celebrating the revolution, which the Houthis would honor this year.

“The Sanaa regime does not say that they arrested those people for celebrating the revolution, but rather on charges of incitement against the regime and serving the aggression,” Al-Nabhani said.

Over the past few days, the Houthis have abducted dozens of journalists, activists, military and security officers, and government officials, including some members of the former ruling party, the General People’s Congress, in Sanaa, Ibb, Amran, and other Yemeni cities for celebrating or encouraging the Yemeni people to celebrate the revolution.

The Yemeni revolution, which began in 1962 in northern Yemen, overthrew the Zaidi Imamate rulers who had controlled the region for centuries and established the Yemen Arab Republic.

According to Yemenis, the Houthis and the Zaidi Imamates shared similar radical ideologies that restricted Yemen’s rule to Hashemite families.

On Tuesday, local media and activists reported that two journalists were among dozens of tribal leaders, politicians, activists and other Yemenis kidnapped by the Houthis in Sanaa, Ibb, Dhamar, Amran and Hodeidah for expressing their support for the revolution on Facebook or WhatsApp.

Despite the ongoing crackdown, the Houthis on Thursday declared a public holiday to commemorate the 1962 revolution.

Speaking about the Houthi crackdown on revolution supporters, Yemen Shura council speaker Ahmed Obeid bin Dagher said that a revolution is “in the making” in Houthi-held areas that will end Houthi rule and that they will not stop it, according to the official news agency SABA.

Rashad Al-Alimi, meanwhile, chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, has urged the UN to relocate its agencies’ offices from Houthi-held Sanaa to the southern city of Aden, the country’s interim capital, to protect its employees from Houthi harassment and to stop dealing with the central bank in Sanaa. 

Al-Alimi, who is in New York for the UN General Assembly, told Joyce Msuya, the UN acting undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, that the UN should move its agencies’ headquarters in Yemen from Sanaa to Aden and transfer funds through the central bank in Aden rather than the central bank in Sanaa in order to strengthen the Yemeni riyal and cut off Houthi financial flows. 

The Houthis have abducted at least 70 Yemeni employees from UN agencies, international rights and aid organizations, and diplomatic missions in Sanaa on charges of spying for the US and Israel, as well as trying to destabilize the country’s health, education and agriculture sectors.


Egypt condemns Israeli military escalation in Lebanon

Egypt condemns Israeli military escalation in Lebanon
Updated 19 min 35 sec ago
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Egypt condemns Israeli military escalation in Lebanon

Egypt condemns Israeli military escalation in Lebanon
  • Egyptian Foreign Ministry expressed ‘sincere solidarity’ with the Lebanese people, offered its sympathies to the families of victims
  • Arab League chief echoes concerns and says international community must halt ‘this perilous slide toward a regional war’

CAIRO: Egypt on Tuesday condemned the escalation of Israeli military operations in Lebanon and the killing and wounding of hundreds of Lebanese citizens, including women and children.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry expressed “sincere solidarity” with the Lebanese people, offered its sympathies to the families of victims, wished the injured a speedy recovery, and affirmed its “categorical rejection of any violations of the sovereignty of Lebanon and its territories.”

It previously warned of the “gravity of the continued Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip and the danger of its expansion, which puts the region at risk of sliding into a full-fledged regional war.”

The ministry said that while “Egypt continues its efforts toward achieving a ceasefire in Gaza and containing the dangers resulting from the war there, it calls on world powers and the UN Security Council to immediately intervene to halt the Israeli escalation in the region, which jeopardizes the fate of its peoples and undermines prospects for peace.”

Egypt “calls for a peaceful settlement of the crisis, an immediate deescalation and the start of the implementation of Security Council Resolution 1701, with no selectivity and allowing for diplomatic solutions, especially since military escalation will only exacerbate the crisis,” it added.

Resolution 1701 was adopted in 2006 with the aim of resolving the war that year between Israel and Hezbollah.

Meanwhile, the Arab League’s secretary-general, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, also “vehemently condemned the extensive Israeli raids and military operations against Lebanon, which have resulted in a significant loss of life and thousands of injuries.”

He warned that this “alarming escalation constitutes a flagrant violation of Lebanese sovereignty and poses a grave threat to regional stability, with the potential to ignite a broader conflict that would have devastating consequences for all involved,” said Gamal Roshdy, a spokesperson for the organization.

Aboul Gheit called on the international community to act with urgency and shoulder its responsibilities in efforts to halt this “perilous slide toward a regional war, driven by the Israeli leadership's personal and political ambitions.”

In particular, he urged the UN Security Council to fulfill its duty to safeguard international peace and security by taking immediate action.

He said the current escalation must be halted without delay, warned that the devastation seen in Gaza must not be repeated in Lebanon, and reaffirmed the Arab League’s “unwavering solidarity with Lebanon in the face of these egregious Israeli assaults.”


Houthis not weakened by US and UK strikes, says Yemeni government official

Houthis not weakened by US and UK strikes, says Yemeni government official
Updated 35 min 19 sec ago
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Houthis not weakened by US and UK strikes, says Yemeni government official

Houthis not weakened by US and UK strikes, says Yemeni government official
  • Aidarous Al-Zubaidi called for better coordination between PLC and Western powers to combat threat Houthis pose to regional security

LONDON: Airstrikes on Houthi targets by the US and UK have not damaged the group’s capabilities, an official in the internationally recognized Yemeni administration said on Tuesday.

Aidarous Al-Zubaidi, who heads the Southern Transitional Council within the Presidential Leadership Council under Rashad Al-Alimi, told The Guardian newspaper that he believed the Houthis were using the strikes to garner sympathy and support by portraying the Western powers as aggressors.

He called for better coordination between the PLC and Western powers to combat the threat the Houthis pose to regional security and said it was time to accept that a power-sharing agreement offered to the Houthis last year was dead in the water.

The militia has carried out drone and missile strikes on commercial shipping in the Red Sea since November in retaliation for Israel’s military campaign against Hamas in Gaza and in solidarity with the Palestinians suffering during the conflict.

The US and the UK launched Operation Prosperity Guardian in December to hit back at the Houthis in an attempt to protect shipping routes through the region’s waters.

“The airstrikes, instead of deterring the Houthis, are having the opposite effect. In a way, it is helping the Houthis and making them stronger,” Al-Zubaidi told The Guardian.

“The local popular perception is that the Houthis occupy the high ground because they are mobilising people around the idea they are being attacked by the UK and the US, and the Houthis are mounting a defense.

“What is more, these operations are not really effective militarily. The Arab coalition, one way or another, has been attacking Houthi rocket launchers for the past eight years, but the Houthis have been able to adapt and find new solutions on how to hide their capabilities. They have built up resilience.

“The problem is (there is) no joined-up approach involving the region and Presidential Leadership Council. It is a US-British operation alone,” he added.

“It’s clear that at the Red Sea ports of Hodeidah and Salif, ships have been arriving without inspection containing high quality weapons from both the Iranians and Russians,” he said,  adding that these shipments of weaponry have helped the Houthis to target Israel.


Iran believes all remaining workers have died in coal mine explosion, raising death toll to 49

Iran believes all remaining workers have died in coal mine explosion, raising death toll to 49
Updated 24 September 2024
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Iran believes all remaining workers have died in coal mine explosion, raising death toll to 49

Iran believes all remaining workers have died in coal mine explosion, raising death toll to 49
  • Around 70 people had been working at the time of the blast
  • Bodies recovered so far showed no signs of blast injuries, suggesting many of the workers died from the gas before the blast

TEHRAN: Iran said Tuesday it believes the remaining workers trapped by an explosion at a coal mine in the country’s east have died, bringing the death toll in one of its worst industrial disasters to at least 49.
A provincial emergency official, Mohammad Ali Akhoundi, gave the death toll in a report carried by Iranian state television from the mine in Tabas.
Figures for the numbers of miners inside the mine at the time have fluctuated since a methane gas leak Saturday sparked an explosion at the coal mine in Tabas, about 540 kilometers (335 miles) southeast of the capital, Tehran.
Around 70 people had been working at the time of the blast. Bodies recovered so far showed no signs of blast injuries, suggesting many of the workers died from the gas before the blast.
Such gases are common in mining, though modern safety measures call for ventilation and other measures to protect workers.
It wasn’t immediately clear what safety procedures were in place at the privately owned Tabas Parvadeh 5 mine, operated by Mandanjoo Co. The firm could not be reached for comment.
On Tuesday, a lawmaker and member of parliament’s mine committee said the safety system of the mine was not working and “even the central alarm system was broke or did not exist.”
Lawmaker Zahra Saeedi added that workers learned of the safety issue just before the disaster but couldn’t leave in time. Two of the dead were health and safety experts at the mine, she said.
Iran’s new reformist president, Masoud Pezeshkian, in New York for the UN General Assembly, has said he ordered all efforts be made to rescue those trapped and aid their families. He also said an investigation into the explosion was underway.
Iran’s mining industry has been struck by disasters before. In 2017, a coal mine explosion killed at least 42 people. Then-President Hassan Rouhani, campaigning ahead of winning reelection, visited the site in Iran’s northern Golestan province and angry miners besieged the SUV he rode in, kicking and beating the armored vehicle in a rage.
In 2013, 11 workers were killed in two separate mining incidents. In 2009, 20 workers were killed in several incidents. Lax safety standards and inadequate emergency services in mining areas were often blamed for the fatalities.


Hezbollah warns Lebanese over dropped Israeli leaflets

A machine clears debris in a street under a residential building whose top two floors were hit by an Israeli strike.
A machine clears debris in a street under a residential building whose top two floors were hit by an Israeli strike.
Updated 24 September 2024
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Hezbollah warns Lebanese over dropped Israeli leaflets

A machine clears debris in a street under a residential building whose top two floors were hit by an Israeli strike.
  • “Please do not open or circulate the barcode. You must destroy it immediately,” the statement said, warning the code could “take all your information”

BEIRUT: Hezbollah urged Lebanese to discard Israeli leaflets dropped over the country’s east on Tuesday, warning against scanning barcodes that it said could compromise personal data.
“The Zionist enemy is dropping leaflets with barcodes in the Bekaa region and may drop them elsewhere,” the Iran-backed group said in a statement.
“Please do not open or circulate the barcode. You must destroy it immediately,” the statement said, warning the code could “take all your information.”
Later Tuesday, a Lebanese security source said an Israeli strike hit Hezbollah’s south Beirut stronghold, with the Israeli army also saying it had carried out a strike, a day after hitting the same area.
Hezbollah and its arch-foe had been exchanging near-daily cross-border fire for nearly a year over the Gaza war.
Since then, Israel has repeatedly broadcast warnings on loudspeakers to residents of southern Lebanon, asking them to evacuate.
On Monday Israel launched devastating strikes across Lebanon’s south and east, killing more than 550 according to Lebanese figures — the deadliest in one day since Hezbollah and Israel last went to war in 2006.
Lebanese official media said on Monday that people were receiving Israeli phone warnings telling them to evacuate, and Information Minister Ziad Makary’s office told AFP it had received one of the messages.
The calls caused panic among Lebanese after devastating week of coordinated communications devices explosions that killed 39 people and wounded thousands on Tuesday and Wednesday last week.
Those were followed by a deadly strike on Friday on south Beirut, with leading Hezbollah commander Ibrahim Aqil among the dead.