Libya to allow NGOs
2009-11-25 11:10
Tripoli - Libya's laws are about to be changed to allow the formation of non-governmental organisations while the number of crimes for which the death penalty will be reduced, a magistrate said on Tuesday.
"If the new legislation is adopted, Libyan citizens will have the right to create civil associations on condition that they are apolitical," Abdelrahman Boutouta, the head of a legal committee tasked with amending Libya's penal code, told reporters.
According to the magistrate, all clauses forbidding the creation and outlawing membership of NGOs have been removed from the penal code, adding however that a "law of associations" is being drafted.
The penal code sanctions capital punishment for all individuals who support, create, join or finance organisations proscribed by law.
Statutes and rules of civil associations are considered as not promoting the ideals of the Libyan revolution led by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi on September 1, 1969, and therefore illegal.
Boutouta also said the amended penal code will limit the death penalty to those convicted of premeditated murder and of committing acts of terrorism.
Under the existing code, which dates back to 1953, 21 crimes are punishable by death including drug trafficking and attacks on the security of the state.
When completed, the new-look penal code must be approved by people's congresses in accordance with Gaddafi's philosophy of "people's power", Boutouta said.
He gave no indication of when this might take place.
- SAPA