Monday, August 29, 2011

Qaddafi forces killed detainees, says survivor

Qaddafi forces killed detainees, says survivor

By AGENCIES

TRIPOLI: A man has told The Associated Press he survived a massacre by Muammar Qaddafi loyalists who opened fire on about 130 civilian detainees. On Sunday, an AP reporter saw at least 50 charred bodies at the site near a military camp held by Qaddafi supporters until rebels took Tripoli.

Mabrouk Abdullah, who was at the site Sunday, said he and other prisoners were told by a guard they would be released Tuesday. Instead, guards threw hand grenades and opened fire at detainees huddling in a hangar.

Abdullah said he had been crouching along a wall and was shot in his side. He said that as survivors of the initial attack tried to flee, they came under fire again.

Human rights groups have accused both sides in Libya of abuses against detainees. Tripoli's streets are littered with rotting corpses and the debris of war after heavy fighting by rebels to end Qaddafi's 42-year rule, though the deposed leader remains at large.

But the Human Rights Watch on Sunday said the Qaddafi's forces may have executed scores of prisoners and killed civilians as rebels overran the Libyan capital last week. 

Reuters reporters in Tripoli have also seen evidence of several mass killings, including several bodies with their hands bound. Amnesty International said last week it had found evidence of Qaddafi's fighters killing prisoners. Amnesty International also said it had received reports of rebels abusing their detainees.

"The evidence we have been able to gather so far strongly suggests that Qaddafi government forces went on a spate of arbitrary killing as Tripoli was falling," Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's North Africa director, said in a statement in the Tunisian capital, Tunis.

Some 18 bullet-riddled bodies, two with their hands bound, were found in a riverbed near Qaddafi's Bab Al-Aziziya complex and witnesses told HRW they had been killed by Qaddafi fighters, the statement said.

A further 29 corpses were found in a makeshift medical clinic near the compound, also showing signs of execution, HRW said. Four were lying dead on cots in the clinic, and at least one had been tied up.

HRW said it interviewed three survivors of alleged executions by pro-Qaddafi forces, including a man who said he had been shot three times as mercenaries fired into a room of 25 prisoners after receiving orders to "just finish them off."

The sounds of advancing rebels had been heard just before the prisoners were shot, the witness told HRW.

"These incidents, which may represent only a fraction of the total, raise grave questions about the conduct of Qaddafi forces in the past few days, and whether it was systematic or planned," said Whitson. "If these incidents are proven to be extra-judicial killings, they are serious war crimes and those responsible should be brought to justice."

 

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