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السبت، مارس 16، 2013

Libyan Embassy in Cairo suspends work

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Libya's government relies on militias to serve as security forces since its police and military remain in shambles following the 2011 civil war that ousted Muammar Qaddafi from power. (Reuters)

Libya said Saturday that it had suspended work at its embassy in Cairo, a move that comes days after demonstrators burned a Libyan flag at its gate to protest the death of an Egyptian Christian imprisoned there.

The embassy's decision to suspend consular services affects thousands of Egyptians working in neighboring Libya who rely on the embassy to provide permits. The embassy's brief statement said it had suspended operations indefinitely, but did not say why.

Tensions flared following the death of a Coptic Christian from Egypt who was detained in Libya on suspicion that he was spreading Christianity in the Muslim nation. Egypt's Foreign Ministry said the man, Ezzat Atallah, likely died of natural causes, but his family alleges he was tortured to death.

Two other detainees, who are among an estimated 50 Egyptian Christians detained in Libya on suspicion of proselytizing, told The Associated Press in interviews after their release that they were tortured in a detention center run by a powerful militia in eastern Libya.

The two said they were rounded up in a market by gunmen who checked their right wrists for tattoos of crosses. They said that during four days of detention they were flogged, forced to take off their clothes in cold weather and stand at 3 a.m. outdoors on a floor covered with stones.

Libya's government relies on militias to serve as security forces since its police and military remain in shambles following the 2011 civil war that ousted Muammar Qaddafi from power.

Egypt's foreign ministry said that its embassy in Libya was investigating the allegations of torture.

Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians are working construction and trade jobs in Libya, a nation of 6.5 Muslims with no significant religious minority. Hundreds are believed to have been killed in crossfire during the civil war and many others have lost their jobs.

On Saturday, Egypt's main opposition National Salvation Front issued a statement calling on Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi to do more to address the alleged mistreatment of Egyptian Christians in Libya. The group condemned the deportation of dozens of Egyptians from Libya in recent weeks, and said that the Islamist president must do more to defend the rights of Egyptian Christians there.

The opposition group accused Mursi, who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood group, of reneging on promises to improve the status of the mostly poor migrant Egyptian workers living abroad.

"The presidency and government moved urgently and sent a high-level delegation to the United Arab Emirates to demand the release of detainees accused of belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood weeks ago, but has neglected to address the situation of Egyptians who have been assaulted in Libya," the opposition group said.
 

17 Mar, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/2013/03/16/Libyan-Embassy-in-Cairo-suspends-work.html
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