Arab and international condemnations against GNA militias in Tarhuna
A number of countries and regional, international, and Arab
organizations have condemned the Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA)
militias and the Turkish mercenaries for committing serious abuses and torture
of civilians in Tarhuna, Bani Walid, Al-Asabea and Sabratha.
GNA militants posted video and audio clips on social media
documenting their brutal passage to a number of Libyan cities, including field
executions, arrests, torture, breaking into homes and looting and burning their
contents, looting public and private property, and sabotaging installations.
According to jurists, hundreds of crimes amounting to
genocide have been committed in Tarhuna, Bani Walid, Al-Asabea, and Qasr bin
Ghashir.
More than 4,000 members of the Al-Nusra Front and
pro-Turkish extremists entered Tarhuna, causing the displacement of thousands
of civilians, while those who remained in the city were killed.
Media reports have stated that the violations in Tarhuna and
south of Tripoli not only targeted civilians and their property, but also
caused the displacement of 16,000 people, according to United Nations
estimates.
In this context, Libyan Justice Minister Mohamed Lamloum
announced that massacres had been committed against families in the city of
Tarhuna, amounting to "genocide", adding that certain families such
as Al-Taji and Herodah were particularly targeted. He expressed shock at
"the scale of violations and the number of dead."
Lamloum pointed out that the Ministry of Justice "has
formed a committee headed by a forensic doctor specialized in mass graves, and
it works under the supervision of the Attorney General's Office to preserve
evidence."
For its part, the United Nations Mission to Libya called on
the GNA to open an investigation into the looting and destruction of property
in Tarhuna and Al-Asabea, while the German ambassador to Libya expressed his
shock at the reports received about terrible human rights violations in Tarhuna
after the militias loyal to Fayez al-Sarraj's GNA entered the region.
For its part, the Arab League announced that it was
following with great dismay the reports of the discovery of a number of mass
graves in recent days.
The Arab League called for an integrated investigation in
this regard in accordance with international law. It also warned against the
illegal methods of detaining, insulting, and torturing civilians, whether
Libyans or non-Libyans.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg expressed his
concern over the situation in Libya, which he described as extremely difficult
and dangerous, stressing the need to reach a political solution to the crisis
under the umbrella of the United Nations.
"We support the United Nations' call for an
investigation into all violations in Libya. A peaceful political solution to
the Libyan crisis must be found," he said.
"NATO supports the efforts led by the United Nations,
as well as the initiative and outputs of the Berlin Summit," he added.
France, meanwhile, has called for talks with NATO countries
about Turkey's aggressive role in Libya, as relations have become tense with
Ankara because of its policies regarding several files, most recently the
Libyan file.
The Libyan National Army (LNA) liberated areas controlled by
the GNA militias, and then it liberated the cities of Tarhuna and Bani Walid
east of the capital, in addition to all cities on the West Coast, the Al-Watiya
air base, and towns in the western mountains.
For years, Libya has been suffering from an armed conflict
over legitimacy and authority in the oil-rich country, which has left many civilians
dead or injured and caused extensive material damage.




