09TRIPOLI942 Date01/12/2009 05:21 OriginEmbassy Tripoli

Excerpt from document
(S/NF) Summary: The two detained Swiss citizens, now held in
Libya for approximately 16 months, were each sentenced to 16
months in prison by a Libyan immigration court on November 30.
According to Swiss Charge Stefano Lazarotto, the Swiss citizens,
who were sentenced in absentia, most likely will not leave the
embassy to attend hearings for tax-related violations, scheduled
for December 5 and 6.



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RUEHTRO/AMEMBASSY TRIPOLI 6064
Content
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 TRIPOLI 000942

NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/1/2019
TAGS: PREL, PHUM, SZ, LY
SUBJECT: LIBYAN IMMIGRATION COURT SENTENCES SWISS TO 16 MONTHS IN
PRISON

REF: A) TRIPOLI 900, B) TRIPOLI 901, C) TRIPOLI 910, D) BERN 504

TRIPOLI 00000942 001.2 OF 002

CLASSIFIED BY: Joan A. Polaschik, Charge d'Affaires, U.S.
Embassy Tripoli, Department of State.
REASON: 1.4 (b), (d)
1. (S/NF) Summary: The two detained Swiss citizens, now held in
Libya for approximately 16 months, were each sentenced to16
months in prison by a Libyan immigration court on November 30.
According to Swiss Charge Stefano Lazarotto, the Swiss citizens,
who were sentenced in absentia, most likely will not leave the
embassy to attend hearings for tax-related violations, scheduled
for December 5 and 6. Concerned that the Libyans might up the
ante and declare him persona non grata, Lazarotto requested
December 1 that the U.S. Embassy provide material assistance to
the detained Swiss if/if that were to occur. Lazarotto said he
had been instructed by Bern to make the request of our embassy
and several EU embassies in Tripoli. Given other sensitive
issues currently pending on the bilateral agenda, we believe a
visible U.S. role in assisting the Swiss could be highly
detrimental to our own interests. Department's guidance is
requested. End Summary.

2. (C) Swiss Charge Stefano Lazarotto expressed his continued
concern to Pol/Econ Chief November 30 about the welfare of the
two detained Swiss citizens, who have not been allowed to the
leave Libya for over 16 months. Earlier the same day, an
immigration judge sentenced each of the two men, in absentia, to
16 months in prison. Lazarotto related that the lawyer for the
Swiss appeared before the court alone November 30, to request a
formal statement of the immigration charges; the judge refused,
claiming that the Swiss had appeared before his court shortly
after their release from Libyan custody on November 9. The
judge said he had heard their arguments at that time and had
informed them that he would issue a sentence the following week.
According to Lazarotto, the lawyer argued that to sentence the
accused without a proper trial and without the presence of legal
counsel, was a miscarriage of justice -- an argument that was
lost on the judge. The Swiss have asked their lawyer to file an
appeal to the decision.

3. (C) Lazarotto said that the Swiss were prepared to appear
before the court on November 30, but were advised by their
lawyer not to go unless they were assured that a proper trial
would take place. According to Lazarotto, three representatives
of (unspecified) EU embassies were prepared to accompany the
detained citizens to the trial. Lazarotto noted that three
additional EU embassy officials had been "on standby." [Note: A
UK political officer told poloff November 25 that the EU
embassies had decided to send lower-level representation, if
any, to the Swiss hearings, but that the decision to send a
representative would be made by the individual embassies. End
note.]

4. (C) Given the sentence, the Swiss citizens most likely will
not attend hearings before the tax court, scheduled for December
5 and 6, although they have been provided with a copy of the
tax-related charges held against them. Lazarotto noted that
execution of the sentence would pose a threat to other foreign
business interests in Libya, demonstrating that the GOL was
willing to exact retribution on businesspeople in response to
political disagreements. [Note: A few General Managers of U.S.
companies operating in Libya recently expressed similar
concerns. End note.]

5. (S/NF) In a separate meeting on December 1, Lazarotto
informed Pol/Econ Chief that he had been discussing with Bern
the various worst-case scenarios that could come now that a
sentence has been issued. He expressed his fear that the
Libyans could declare him persona non grata if he did not hand
the detained Swiss over to Libyan authorities, although he
claimed that he had not been threatened in such a way.
Lazarotto noted that in a meeting several weeks ago with the
MFA, he was told that the GOL would do "anything" to make sure
that the detained Swiss completed their sentences once verdicts
were reached. Lazarotto was accused in the same meeting of
trying to help the Swiss escape. Lazorotto continued that this
hypothetical situation would remove the last Swiss diplomat from
the country and would effectively force the detained citizens to
leave the protection of the embassy premises when their food
supply ran out. In order to protect the Swiss citizens,
Lazarotto explained that Bern had instructed him to request
third-country commitments of assistance to deliver food supplies
and to monitor their health and well-being. He confided that he
did not expect a single embassy to respond positively to the
request. Pol/Econ Chief undertook to convey the request but did
not offer any promises of assistance.

6. (C) Lazarotto did not believe the Libyans were interested in
moving forward with the bilateral relationship. Instead,
Lazarotto surmised that the GOL was now focused on pressuring EU
countries not to support the Swiss, rather than achieving a

TRIPOLI 00000942 002.2 OF 002

bilateral resolution. He explained that the EU ambassadors had
been convened by the Foreign Minister November 29 to hear his
complaints about Switzerland's continued use of its Schengen
veto on Libyan visa applicants and how that would negatively
affecting larger EU interests.

7. (S/NF) Comment: The sentencing of the Swiss businessmen
without trial underscores the serious shortcomings in Libya's
judicial systems and will send a chilling warning to foreign
investors. In the wake of this escalating, high-profile
dispute, the Swiss-Libyan political relationship continues its
downward spiral. The recent Swiss move to ban Libya from the
World Economic Forum will not improve matters, and it is not
outside of the realm of possibility that the Swiss Charge could
be asked to leave the country. If/if the Swiss Charge is in
fact PNG'ed, we believe that a direct USG role in providing
assistance to the Swiss citizens could be detrimental to our own
bilateral interests. Although we appreciate the gravity of the
humanitarian situation, we believe a visible U.S. role in
assisting the Swiss could undermine our efforts to resolve the
outstanding HEU shipment. Department's guidance on the Swiss
request for support is requested. End comment.
POLASCHIK