Libya militias linked to Tripoli government used machine guns on protesters
A prominent human rights organization Thursday accused
Libyan armed groups linked to the Tripoli-based government of using heavy
weapons to disperse anti-corruption rallies last month in the capital and of
detaining, torturing and forcibly disappearing protesters.
Between Aug.
23-29, Libyan militias used machine guns and vehicle-mounted anti-aircraft guns
against protesters, allegedly killing one and wounding others, a statement from
Human Rights Watch said. At least 24 people, including a local reporter, were
detained and beaten, it said.
Political
divisions and security concerns do not justify armed groups coming at
protesters with machine guns and anti-aircraft weapons to intimidate them and
disperse protests,'' said Hanan Salah, senior Libya researcher for HRW.
Tripoli
authorities should investigate and publicly disclose the names of the armed
groups and commanders who failed to comply with basic policing standards and
hold them to account.''
A government
spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment Thursday.
Last month,
hundreds of Libyans took to the streets of Tripoli and other cities that fall
under the control of the U.N.-supported government of Prime Minister Fayez
Sarraj to protest deteriorating economic conditions. At the time, Interior
Minister Fathi Bashaga acknowledged that a militia group, which he did not
name, had fired live ammunition at peaceful protesters and that an
investigation was underway. Subsequently, Sarraj briefly relieved Bashaga of his
duties for questioning.
Earlier, Sarraj
had said in a televised speech that protesters did not have a permit to gather
and announced a 24-hour curfew to fight the coronavirus pandemic, a move that
protesters believed was meant to keep them from rallying.
The New York-based rights group named three militias with
ties to Sarraj's government as the perpetrators of the rights violations,
including the Interior Ministry-linked Al-Nawasi Brigade, the Special
Deterrence Force and General Security.
Militias have
played a key role in the country's civil war, with the U.N.-supported
government employing an array of militiamen to fight their rivals in the east.
They have proved difficult for the Tripoli government to control in the past.
Libya was plunged
into chaos when a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled longtime dictator
Moammar Gadhafi, who was later killed. The county has since split between rival
east- and west-based administrations, each backed by armed groups and foreign
governments.
Human Rights Watch said it interviewed 19 people,
including demonstrators, their relatives and friends and examined photos and
video of security forces using excessive force.
Relatives and
friends of two released protesters who were held in a military base for four
days said both men told them they were tortured and forced to sign pledges that
they would not engage in any future anti-government rallies, the HRW statement
said.
The statement cited a recent media report as saying that
13 protesters were released and that around eight remain in custody.
Criminal justice
authorities should promptly present all remaining detainees to a judge to
determine the legality of their detention and should either charge them
promptly with a crime or release them, as detention before trial should be the
exception not the rule,'' the HRW report said.



