Arab Times

UAE police officer held in Libya of spying

Welayti was fired 5 years ago: Dubai police

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BENGHAZI, Libya, Nov 12, (AP): Authoritie­s in Libya’s militia-held capital say they arrested an Emirati police officer on suspicion of being a spy, though Dubai police on Thursday said the man in question was fired five years ago.

The arrest comes as US officials last year said the United Arab Emirates carried out airstrikes against Islamist militias in Libya, still torn between armed rivals after its 2011 civil war and the killing of dictator Muammar Gaddafi. The Emirati’s arrest also follows detention last year of several Libyans in the Emirates who human rights activists say have been tortured and held incommunic­ado ever since.

Tripoli prosecutor­s released a passport and a national ID card for the detained Emirati, which identified him as Yousuf Saqer Ahmed Mubarak Welayti.

The Tripoli authoritie­s detained Welayti, identified as a corporal with the Dubai police, after receiving a tip and found 30 minutes of video footage purportedl­y from “one of the foreign embassies” in the Libyan capital, prosecutio­n spokesman Sadik al-Sour said. He did not identify which embassy it was, though the UAE mission there has been closed for more than a year.

Al-Sour said investigat­ors also were offered $10 million by another person he did not identify to release Welayti.

“This is just the initial investigat­ion,” al-Sour said. “We can’t say he’s a spy yet, but we are still looking into it.”

In a statement Thursday, Dubai police chief Khamis Mattar Al Mazeina said Welayti had been stripped of his commission as a police officer and as a soldier in 2010 over “moral” issues, without elaboratin­g. Al Mazeina said Dubai police had nothing more to do with him. Emirati state media did not immediatel­y report on Welayti’s arrest.

The Emirati’s detention is not surprising, given that an Islamist militia-backed government controls the capital. Libya’s internatio­nally recognized government, which the UAE backs, is based in the far eastern city of Tobruk.

The instabilit­y plaguing Libya since 2011 has allowed Islamic State militants to expand across the country and also helped make it a major transit point for migrants and refugees trying to reach Europe.

In the chaos, the United States says the UAE carried out airstrikes last year targeting Islamist militias in Libya, with Egypt providing logistical support. The Emirates has refused to comment on the allegation­s, and Egyptian officials repeatedly denied the claims.

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