1. At its 20th and 21st meetings held on 13 May 1997,
the Committee considered the initial report of the Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya on articles 1 to 15 of the Covenant
(E/1990/5/Add.26) and adopted, at its 26th meeting held
on 16 May 1997, the following concluding observations.
A. Introduction
2. The State party informed the Committee at the very
last moment that its representatives could not appear
as scheduled in the first week of the session due to
travel problems resulting from the Security Council
embargo. The Committee decided that, if it was left
with no other option, it would, under the circumstances,
proceed with the adoption of concluding observations
in the absence of a delegation. This proved unnecessary
when the State party agreed to the consideration of
the report in the third week of the Committee's session.
3.
The Committee appreciates that a delegation was sent
to present the report, but regrets that the State party
did not provide written answers to the list of issues
and that the delegation also failed to answer many of
the questions asked by Committee members during the
dialogue, the Committee also regrets that the report
provided no information on articles 6, 7, 8 and 15.
B. Positive aspects
4.
The Committee expresses its satisfaction that the State
party's report proceeds with a review, article by article,
of the provisions of the Covenant, that it complied
with the Committee's guidelines and that it was prepared
by experts in various fields, although it regrets that
the report was incomplete with regard to articles 6,
7 and 8 and that a discussion of article 15 was altogether
lacking in the report, even if the delegation however
supplied answers to the Committee's questions about
article 15 during the dialogue.
5.
The Committee welcomes the report's assertion that the
Covenant forms an integral part of the State party's
legislation and is binding on individuals and organizations,
including official bodies.
6.
The Committee notes the affirmation contained in the
State party's report that legislation guarantees every
citizen the right to health care and social and cultural
welfare as well as the right to education, to work,
to freedom of association, to form unions, federations
and professional associations and to seek legal redress
for any infringement of rights recognized by law.
7.
The Committee takes note of the statement in the report
that the State party's legislation makes provision for
the equal enjoyment by men and women of all economic,
social and cultural rights. The Committee welcomes signs
of the advancement of women towards equality, and in
particular that the Congress contains women among its
members, that they have the right to be elected to posts
and that they also participate in trade unions and professional
associations.
8.
The Committee notes with satisfaction the significant
progress that the State party has made in the fields
of social security and health care, as well as concerning
family matters, especially in the areas of divorce and
care for children and orphans. The Committee also notes
with satisfaction the State party's efforts in the fields
of public housing and home ownership.
C. Factors and difficulties impeding the implementation
of the Covenant
10.
The Committee notes that fluctuations in world prices
for hydrocarbons have resulted in unpredictable inflows
of foreign exchange. This has resulted in cash flow
problems which have affected the State party's ability
to regularly pay its financial obligations.
11.
The services industry accounts for approximately 30
per cent of GDP while the contribution of agriculture
remains negligible, despite efforts by the Government
to promote this sector with the aim of achieving self-sufficiency
in food production.
12.
To date, there is little evidence that progress is being
made in implementing the 1992 privatization law. The
State party's attempts at economic restructuring and
the abolition of State import and export enterprises
have been confined to the consumer goods sector.
13.
The Committee notes the State Party's assertion that
the Security Council's imposition of an aerial embargo
on the State party has adversely affected the economy
and many aspects of the daily life of its citizens,
and impeded the full enjoyment by the State party's
citizens of their economic, social and cultural rights.
D. Principal subjects of concern
14.
The Committee notes with concern that despite the existence
of Libyan legislation guaranteeing full equality between
men and women and banning any discrimination against
women, the State party has advanced certain arguments
against the enjoyment by women of certain family and
civil rights on the basis of Sharia law. The Committee
underlines however the fact that the Covenant is predicated
on the principles of absolute non-discrimination against
women and the full enjoyment of all rights enjoyed by
their male counterparts.
15.
The Committee has reason to believe that in the field
of labour rights, notably concerning trade union activity,
the right to strike and the right to conduct free collective
bargaining - all rights which are guaranteed by legislation
in the State party - the gap between law and practice
is quite significant and that efforts need to be undertaken
so that practice conforms to existing legislation. The
Committee is troubled by the delegation's assertion
that strikes do not occur in the State party because
the conditions which cause strikes do not exist. It
is the Committee's view that the freedom of workers
to form independent trade unions to protect and advance
their interests and to ultimately have recourse to strike
is an indispensable right under the Covenant.
16.
The Committee expresses its concern at reports that
foreign workers who have come to work in the State party
in connection with the Great-Man-Made River project
are living and working in appalling conditions. According
to a report of the Committee of Experts on the Application
of Conventions and Recommendations of the International
Labour Organization (ILO), foreign employees in the
State party who are accused of infringing disciplinary
rules may be punishable by penalties of imprisonment
which can include compulsory labour. According to the
same ILO report, the State party also maintains different
rates of payment of pensions for foreign and Libyan
workers which, in the view of the Committee, is discriminatory.
17.
The Committee also expresses its concern at reports
that during the second half of 1995 thousands of foreign
workers were arbitrarily expelled from the State party
and were not given adequate compensation. It further
regrets that there was no possibility for a legal or
judicial remedy against those expulsions. The Committee
is alarmed that the justification given by the delegation
for this action was that foreign workers were the cause
of many of the State party's social problems such as
violent crime, immoral activities, black market transactions,
drug trafficking, trafficking in women, and the spread
of communicable diseases. Such a rationale is unacceptable
to the Committee and a clear violation of the Covenant.
In this regard, the Committee draws the attention of
the State party to the case of approximately 200 Palestinian
families who were forcibly evicted to a point near the
Egyptian border and who had to live in utterly degrading
conditions for two years before they were allowed to
reenter the State party.
18.
The Committee is concerned that the State party's delegation
views HIV/AIDs as a problem essentially relating to
foreigner workers. It is also concerned that the delegation
of the State party has indicated that foreign workers
who are working in the State party with valid work permits
and subsequently become HIV-positive are usually deported.
The Committee is of the view that this action is discriminatory
and inconsistent with the provisions of the Covenant.
19.
The Committee expresses its concern over reports of
censorship against expressions of a literary and artistic
nature, and at the State party's notion of "cultural
security" to justify such censorship.
E. Suggestions and recommendations
20. While aware of the important strides made to improve
the status of women, the Committee nevertheless calls
for an end to all remaining aspects of discrimination
against women.
21.
The Committee recommends that energetic efforts be undertaken
to close the gap which still exists between the aims
and purposes of Libyan legislation and the reality of
its application in labour matters, and in particular
with regard to union rights, the right to strike and
the right to free collective bargaining.
22.
It is further recommended that the status and working
conditions of foreign workers be improved and without
undue delay, and that these persons be treated with
dignity and fully benefit from the rights enumerated
in the Covenant.
23.
The Committee recommends that measures be taken to ensure
better and more widespread education, especially in
rural areas, as well as to health care, social security
and housing.
24.
The Committee recommends that foreign workers who are
employed in the State party with valid work permits
should not be deported if they become HIV-positive while
in the country. It further recommends that the State
party not treat the HIV/AIDs problem as one essentially
relating to foreigners, and that it take energetic steps
by way of a publicity campaign in the media to inform
its population of the nature of the disease, its modes
of transmission, and what steps can be taken to avoid
contracting it.
25.
The Committee requests that the State party provide
the Committee with all of the written answers promised
by the delegation, and further requests that State party's
second periodic report contain more information regarding
actual practice and the effective implementation of
the rights guaranteed by the Covenant and include information
on action taken with regard to the present concluding
observations.