Tunisia imprisons women deported from Libya amid calls for dealing with them humanely

Human Rights Watch has called on the Tunisian authorities to deal humanely with women deported from flashpoints, including Libya, and arrested on suspicion of links with jihadists.
In March, the Judicial Police announced the deportation of
the last group of Tunisian women prison inmates accused in the case of ISIS
members who were arrested in the city of Sirte in the 2016 al-Bunyan al-Marsous
operation.
The agency said that the number of deported women was ten
inmates and 14 children in three stages, the last of which occurred via the Ras
Ajdir border crossing, where the Tunisian authorities received them.
Human Rights Watch quoted a statement from the Tunisian
Observatory for Human Rights that the Tunisian authorities returned the last
ten women and 14 children who had been held in Libyan prisons between March 11
and 18, some of them for more than five years, due to their links to persons
suspected of belonging to ISIS.
The children were returned to the custody of their relatives
or placed under government care in social service facilities.
The human rights organization said that “some (women) have
been ill-treated, have contracted the coronavirus, and have been deprived of
their rights.”
“The authorities should assess the situation of these women
individually and prosecute those who have committed serious crimes. There is no
excuse to deprive them of their rights,” said Hanan Salah, senior researcher in
the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch., adding, “The
prison authorities should end all alleged violations against them, ensure that
they communicate with lawyers, and ensure that adequate preventive measures and
health care are in place to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.”
Human Rights Watch collected testimonies from relatives and
lawyers of women were denied medical examinations and the right to invite
lawyers to attend investigations.
The organization stated, according to a relative of one of
the detainees, that “members of the counterterrorism squad beat her during
interrogation and forced her to sign interrogation reports.”
The statement of the human rights organization said that
Tunisia should “ensure that any person deprived of his freedom is treated
humanely and with dignity and enables him to fully realize his rights in the
due process of law,” stressing that “the Tunisian authorities, as an immediate
step, must grant the right to unrestricted communication with lawyers and allow
family members of women detainees.”
The father of one of the women told Human Rights Watch that
his daughter, who was returned on March 18, had told him that she had
contracted the coronavirus. He said that a glass barrier separated the two
during his five-minute visit with her. “She was sick when I saw her and she
told me that other women also caught the virus. She told me that the women were
not receiving any medical treatment inside the prison,” he said.
According to the statement, the continued detention of these
women without charges is based on Tunisia’s Counterterrorism Law of 2015, which
extends solitary confinement from six days to 15 days for terrorism suspects,
allows courts to close hearings to the public, and allows witnesses to remain unknown
to the accused. The law also allows police to question suspects without a
lawyer for 15 days. Human Rights Watch said that the law threatens human
rights, lacks safeguards against abuse, and should be amended.
Most of the Tunisians, who have been stuck in Libya for
years, are languishing in Maitika prison in Tripoli or in the care of the
Libyan Red Crescent in the city of Misrata.
Tunisians topped the list of ISIS fighters, and dozens of
them occupied dangerous leadership positions, according to Tunisian and foreign
intelligence security reports.
Ten other Tunisian women and 21 children are still waiting
to be returned from Libya, according to the Tunisian Observatory for Human
Rights, which tracks cases of Tunisian citizens suspected of having links with
ISIS members abroad.
In northeastern Syria, scores of other Tunisians are
arbitrarily detained as ISIS suspects and family members of ISIS members. The
Tunisian authorities should take all feasible steps to repatriate or help
repatriate their citizens for their rehabilitation and reintegration, or
monitor or prosecute them in line with international legal standards if
necessary.