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| 2 Dec, 2025

In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful,
Peace and blessings be upon our Prophet Muhammad, the trustworthy messenger, and upon his family and companions.

To proceed…

In these blessed days, we extend our congratulations and greetings to the Libyan people, its legislative, judicial, and executive institutions, and the entire Islamic nation on the occasion of Eid al-Fitr. May Allah return it to us with goodness, prosperity, and blessings, and may He grant our country, and all Muslim countries, security, safety, unity of decision, and stability.

Referring to what we previously informed you of through the press conference held on 05/02/2025, and what we revealed of crimes and actions affecting national security, backed by hostile intelligence activities and their extensions represented in some non-governmental organizations, which plan to spread atheism, Christianity, homosexuality, moral decay, and settlement.

Today, we present to the Libyan people and its institutions the latest security follow-ups regarding suspicious activities involving some international NGOs within an international project hostile to Libya, aiming to settle illegal migrants in the country.

The agency has monitored hostile foreign activity intended to permanently settle illegal migrants. Investigations confirmed the involvement of certain international NGOs in executing this activity, after being mobilized by foreign entities to achieve international agendas at the expense of Libyans and the sovereignty of the state—exploiting the political, economic, and security instability caused by foreign intervention.

Below is clarification and detail on this matter:

First:
It is necessary to explain what is meant by “hostile activity”. This term refers to any crime or suspicious action targeting the state’s structure and internal security.

Second:
The agency continued to monitor international NGOs engaged in activities against Libyan interests, and took deterrent action including shutting down their offices for violating Libyan sovereignty—and forgetting that Libyan citizens affiliated with this agency have the competence, capability, courage, and determination to stop such suspicious organizations, whose activities fall exclusively under Libyan laws and regulations.

Third:
It must also be clarified to the Libyan citizen that international NGOs receive their licenses and authorization to operate from the Civil Society Commission, and any violation or crime they commit subjects them to Libyan law. All their employees, whether foreign or local, are subject to Libyan legal consequences if they commit any crime punishable under Libyan law, as these organizations do not enjoy diplomatic immunity under international treaties.

Fourth:
Reference must be made to the principle of state sovereignty, which is a fundamental principle affirmed by the international system and the UN Charter to ensure global peace. Every state has the right to choose its political system and formulate laws aligned with its religious, moral, social, economic norms, customs, and cultural heritage—and no state or international governmental or non-governmental organization has the right to interfere in a state’s sovereignty or its internal laws; rather, they must respect them to ensure global peace.

Fifth:
The agency has detected additional hostile activities involving international NGOs under the guise of providing support to Libya, while their real goal was the planned settlement of illegal migrants—part of a project they began implementing years ago and have unfortunately accomplished stages of.

Here are the details of the agency’s actions related to closing the offices of some implicated NGOs and the findings of investigations:


1. International Relief Organization

Monitoring confirmed this NGO’s involvement in hostile activity aiming to settle illegal migrants. It received a license from the Libyan Civil Society Commission under the pretext of supporting the Libyan state. It presented a health support project and signed a protocol with the Ministry of Health limited to supporting public health facilities with equipment and training, ending in 2024.

However, the investigation revealed that the organization did not adhere to the agreement—contacting the UNHCR to provide healthcare services to illegal migrants without permission from Libyan authorities. It contracted private clinics to deliver treatment based on UNHCR referrals.

Thus, both organizations were implicated in:

UNHCR performing actions that violate Libyan sovereignty by using an NGO to deliver services without Libyan approval—breaching sovereignty and international law, requiring Libya’s Foreign Ministry to take action.

The International Relief Organization committed:

  1. Actions harmful to Libya’s interests by providing healthcare services aiming at settlement—falling under Law No. 24 of 2024 on Anti-Settlement and crimes against national security.
  2. Using Ministry of Health employees and paying them without authorization, falling under Article 169 of the Penal Code (accepting foreign bribery).
  3. Using part of its office as a medicine storage facility without legal compliance with storage standards.

Norwegian Refugee Council

This NGO also operated under Libyan authorization and is fully subject to Libyan law. Its office was shut down for:

• Working to settle illegal migrants through financial aid, food supplies, hygiene products, clothing, and medicines—coordinated with UNHCR without notifying Libyan authorities, violating Law No. 24 of 2023 and constituting crimes against state security.

UNHCR, despite its diplomatic immunity, was also involved—requiring Libya’s Foreign Ministry to take necessary action.


Italian Terre des Hommes Organization

This organization covertly supported settlement by providing electronic financial services to migrants and contracting Libyan companies to provide cash salaries to people working in health and education without legal residency or authorization—confirming violations mentioned above.


In addition, the following NGOs were closed for similar hostile activities:

• International Medical Corps
• Danish Refugee Council
• Médecins Sans Frontières (France)
• German CARE Organization
• Italian INTERSOS
• ACTED
• Italian CESVI

All these organizations were also linked to suspected money laundering and smuggling, evidenced by opaque financial transfers and even frozen funds by an international financial institution due to suspected money laundering.


In conclusion

The project to settle illegal African migrants in Libya represents hostile activity targeting Libyan demographics, creating a mixed society with conflicting religious, moral, and social components leading to unrest—as seen recently in Tunisia between citizens and migrants.

If such events occur in Libya—Allah forbid—the consequences will be severe due to the widespread presence of weapons.

This project is not new. The European Union previously sought agreement with Libya under the former regime, mediated by Italy, for a phased settlement plan with financial support.

After the 2011 revolution, wars, and political and security instability, the EU exploited the situation through development programs while using NGOs as tools to execute phased settlement—avoiding legal consequences since NGOs operate as civilian institutions, allowing political pressure to protect them when needed.

This is happening today: when the Internal Security Agency uncovered this activity and acted, EU states and the UN began applying pressure to obstruct the agency from protecting Libyan sovereignty, identity, religious values, and social norms.

But there is no retreat. The agency is moving forward to combat and foil this project and punish anyone involved—whether individuals or entities.

May Allah protect Libya.

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