Source: Human Rights Watch
(Tripoli) – Human Rights Watch today issued the following tribute to
Salwa Bughaighis, a prominent human rights and women’s rights activist
who was assassinated in Libya on June 25, 2014:
A Voice of Courage Stilled in Libya
By Peter Bouckaert
The Libyan lawyer and human rights activist Salwa Bughaighis always made
a head-turning sight on the streets of Benghazi. Unveiled and striding
confidently to meeting after meeting, she was one of the few who
continued to challenge Islamist militias despite increased threats and
violence. After years of standing up to Muammar Gaddafi’s tyranny and
defending Islamist activists, some of whom were now trying to impose
their views on her and other women, she continued to stand up for
herself and other Libyan women.
On Wednesday, following countless threats against her and her family, Salwa was assassinated, shortly after she voted in Libya’s
parliamentary election. With Salwa’s death, the original idealism of
the 2011 uprising that overthrew Gaddafi’s tyranny has received another
crushing blow, and many Libyan women have lost a role model.
I first met Salwa when a colleague and I were among the first foreigners
to arrive in Benghazi in mid-February 2011. It was just days after the
Arab Spring protests had, against all odds, wrested control of eastern
Libya from Gaddafi’s brutal military, and after days of killings of
protesters in the streets. When we arrived at the courthouse in Benghazi
that evening, massive crowds of protesters were celebrating their newly
found freedom outside, caught between the euphoria of liberation and
the fear of what was to come.
Inside the courtroom, we found the people who had led the protests – an
unlikely group of liberal lawyers, academics, activists, doctors, and
other intellectuals. It may be difficult to imagine looking back from
the incredible violence engulfing Libya today, but during those first
days of the Libyan uprising, there was a heady idealism in the air.
Everyone spoke of building a new Libya with human rights for all, a
Libya of freedom, a Libya that would harness its massive oil and gas
resources for the development and well-being of its people. There were
many guns, of course, but the militias had not yet turned their guns on
each other.
Salwa Bughaighis and her sister, Iman Bughaighis, were among the first
anti-Gaddafi activists we met, and we became fast friends. Iman served
then as the spokesperson for the group, while Salwa was on its governing
body – the National Transitional Council – trying to come to grips with
the momentous tasks that lay ahead.
Almost immediately after our arrival in Benghazi, we learned that dozens
of people from other African countries, accused of being pro-Gaddafi
mercenaries, were being held prisoner by so called revolutionary forces
on the top floor of the courthouse, but we were barred access by a group
of surly guards when we tried to visit them. I went to find Salwa, and
when I explained our problem, she immediately excused herself from the
meeting she was attending and went upstairs with me.
On the way, she briefly allowed herself to break down in tears as she
shared with me the crushing burden she felt, a departure from her usual
composure.
“We never even dreamed that our uprising would succeed so quickly,” she
told me, “And now we have to start from scratch. Gaddafi destroyed all
of our institutions and only left fear to rule. Please tell the world to
be patient with us.” I assured her we understood the challenges ahead,
and that we would assist Libyan activists fighting for human rights.
As we reached the guards, she sternly lectured them. “These are our
friends from Human Rights Watch, and they came to visit our brothers in
jail in Abu Salim,” she told them. “We have nothing to hide from them,
so allow them to visit the detainees.”
The doors were opened, and we were allowed inside. We soon established
that the poor detainees were not mercenaries, but African workers caught
up in a violent wave of xenophobia. Salwa arranged for their release.
For many Libyan women, Salwa provided the role model of a confident
professional that they craved. When a young Libyan friend decided to
abandon her studies in London and go to Benghazi to assist the
revolution, Salwa was the first person she met, and under whose wings
she would remain.
Iman told Human Rights Watch in 2012:
“The revolution was an earthquake to the cultural status of women in
Libya. We don’t want to lose what we’ve gained as Libyan women.”
Salwa echoed this view: “We had never participated before in protests.
They were taboo. The revolution made us proud to be there on the front
line and men were forced to accept us. But now there are some who think
it is time for women to go home.”
As large parts of Libya are outside of government control, and instead
under militia rule, Iman and Salwa soon found themselves struggling in a
society where the rule of the gun had grown stronger. They continued to
raise “uncomfortable” truths, trying to keep the uprising to its
original idealism when things started going badly off track, and became
more violent. But they never gave up, insisting that those who gave
their lives during the Libyan uprising did so in the hope for a better,
more open, and human rights respecting future for all, and that it would
be a betrayal of their sacrifice to give up on that dream.
Salwa firmly believed in dialogue and democratic processes as a way out
of the quagmire Libya has become. As deputy head of the preparatory
committee for the national dialogue initiative, she never ceased to
campaign for that.
Tragically, casting a vote for the parliamentary elections in Benghazi yesterday was her last public act.
It is hard to come to grips with the reality that Salwa, that beacon of
hope and determination for so many Libyans, will no longer be walking
the streets of Benghazi, flaunting convention and being, well, Salwa.
She leaves behind a husband, who is still missing after the ambush on
their home in Benghazi, and three children. But as we promised her in
Benghazi during the first days of the revolution, we will remain
alongside Libyan activists, fighting for a better human rights future
for all Libyans. As she always reminded us, anything else would be a
betrayal.
Peter Bouckaert is the emergencies director at Human Rights Watch.