Euro-Med Monitor in Lebanon

The security situation in Lebanon deteriorated in 2013 with violence spilling over from the armed conflict in Syria. Sectarian tensions led to deadly clashes in Tripoli and Saida amidst a climate of impunity for gunmen. Internal Security Forces (ISF) subjected suspected drug users, sex workers, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people in their custody to ill-treatment and torture. Migrant domestic workers were excluded from the labor law and subjected to restrictive immigration rules based on employer-specific sponsorship—the kafala system—which put workers at risk of exploitation and abuse. Discriminatory provisions that significantly harm and disadvantage women continued to exist in personal status laws, determined by an individual’s religious affiliation.

Methods and tools of torture used in prisons and detention centers

At Euro-Med Monitor webinar: experts urge to criminalize torture in the Middle East

Syria in the lead.. Euro-Med Monitor report: Widespread torture in the Arab region

At HRC: Euro-Med Monitor says racism in Lebanon reached alarming levels

Activist murder means Lebanon reached serious level of assassinations intimidation

Lebanon: Cracking down on protests exacerbates crises amid continued government inaction

Lebanon: Setting Syrian refugee camp ablaze & authorities’ slow response reveal alarming racism

Euro-Med Monitor warns of possible assassinations chaos after Lebanese photographer killed

As Syrian young man killed, Lebanese authorities should protect refugees from reprisals

Restricting banking transactions threatens Lebanese expatriate students’ education