UN tells Tunisia to release Libya sanctions expert

Moncef Kartas was arrested in Tunis on Tuesday

(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 24, 2015 international flags fly in front of the United Nations headquarters  before the start of the 70th General Assembly meeting.  North Korea and Iran will dominate this week's gathering of world leaders at the United Nations, where President Donald Trump will be in the spotlight as he continues to upend global diplomacy. After warming up to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and ditching the Iran nuclear deal, the unpredictable Trump takes the podium on September 25, 2018 to face foes and increasingly uneasy allies at the UN General Assembly.
 / AFP / DOMINICK REUTER
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The United Nations has urged Tunisia to release a UN expert charged with investigating sanctions violations in Libya following his arrest on suspicion of spying, a spokesman said Friday.

Moncef Kartas, a Tunisian national and member of the UN panel of experts for Libya, is entitled to diplomatic immunity, said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.

Mr Kartas was arrested on his arrival in Tunis on Tuesday along with a second Tunisian national on suspicion of "spying for foreign parties," Tunisian authorities said.

"Confidential documents containing sensitive detailed data capable of harming national security were seized, along with technical equipment for jamming and intercepting communications that is banned in our country," the interior ministry said in a statement.

Asked if the United Nations had asked Tunis to release Mr Kartas, Mr Haq said: "We have informed the authorities that his actions are covered by the conventions on privileges and immunities, so yes, we have made that point clear."

"Experts on mission for the United Nations, as Mr Kartas is, are covered by the convention on the privileges and immunities of the United Nations," he added.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is due to arrive in Tunis to attend an Arab summit at the weekend, with the conflict in Libya high on the agenda.

The spokesman declined to say whether Guterres would raise Mr Kartas's case directly with Tunisian leaders.

"We are in touch with the Tunisian authorities to ascertain the reasons for his arrest and detention, as well as the conditions under which he is being held," said Mr Haq.

Mr Kartas was appointed to the panel of experts in 2016, tasked with investigating violations of the arms embargo on Libya.

The panel reports to the UN sanctions committee on Libya and details its findings in an annual report. An interim report is due in June.

Previous reports by the panel have found that arms and ammunition continued to be delivered to the warring parties in Libya in violation of the UN embargo, with the involvement of member states.