Rebels in Libya fight accused of torture and killings

Rebels fighting to topple Muammar Gaddafi carried out unlawful killings and torture, human rights group Amnesty International has said.

A report based on three months of investigation in Libya, said the crimes of Gaddafi loyalists were far worse than those of the former rebels, who now hold power in Tripoli.

But it said the crimes of the rebels were not insignificant.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“Members and supporters of the opposition, loosely structured under the leadership of the National Transitional Council (NTC)...have also committed human rights abuses, in some cases amounting to war crimes, albeit on a smaller scale,” the Amnesty report said.

It said opposition supporters “unlawfully killed” more than a dozen Gaddafi loyalists and security officials between April and early July. And just after the rebels took control of eastern Libya, the report said, angry groups of rebel supporters “shot, hanged and otherwise killed through lynching” dozens of captured soldiers and suspected mercenaries, with impunity.

Mohammed al-Alagi, justice minister for Libya’s transitional authorities, said that describing the rebels’ actions as war crimes was wrong.

“They are not the military, they are only ordinary people,” al-Alagi said. While he acknowledged that rebels had made mistakes, he said they “cannot be described as war crimes at all.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In addition, the report said both sides stirred up racism and xenophobia, causing sub-Saharan Africans to be increasingly attacked, robbed and abused by ordinary Libyans.

“In February, there was this rumour about Gaddafi using black people as mercenaries; that’s wrong,” Nicolas Beger, director of the Amnesty International European Institutions office, said. “But the NTC has not done a lot to curb that rumour and now there is a lot of retaliation against sub-Saharan Africans. Whether they were or they weren’t involved with the Gaddafi forces, they are at real risk of being taken from their work or their homes or the street to be tortured or killed.”

He also said abuses were continuing under the new government and also listed an extensive list of crimes allegedly committed by Gaddafi’s regime.