The Jerusalem Post

UN: Armed groups control Libyan prisons

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GENEVA (Reuters) – Armed groups in Libya are killing and torturing detainees in prisons, some nominally under government control, where thousands of civilians are being unlawfully held, the UN said on Tuesday.

Successive government­s in Tripoli have allowed the armed groups to arrest opponents, activists, journalist­s and politician­s, while paying the fighters salaries and giving them equipment and uniforms, it said.

“As a result, armed groups’ power has grown unchecked and they have remained free of effective government oversight,” the UN human rights office and UN Support Mission in Libya said in a report. “Men, women and children across Libya are arbitraril­y detained or unlawfully deprived of their liberty based on their tribal or family links and perceived political affiliatio­ns.”

UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein denounced “appalling abuses” and “the sheer horror.”

Zeid urged authoritie­s to release people held in custody without cause and to prosecute crimes including torture, kidnapping and executions to help reestablis­h the rule of law.

The report said many detainees have been held without charge or trial since the 2011 revolution that overthrew Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Disputed elections in 2014 resulted in Libya being split between competing political and military factions in the west and east of the country. Political turmoil and sporadic armed conflict have led to economic collapse, giving space to armed groups, including Islamist insurgents.

“Torture and ill-treatment are systematic in detention facilities across Libya, particular­ly in the initial period of detention and during interrogat­ions,” the UN said. Methods include beatings with metal bars, flogging, and electronic shocks, it said, based on interviews, prison visits, legal and forensic records, and visual evidence.

Official prisons overseen by the justice ministry hold an estimated 6,500 inmates, and thousands more are in facilities nominally under government control but run by armed groups, the report said.

The detention facility at Mitiga airbase in Tripoli is run by the Special Deterrence Force armed group, allied to the Government of National Accord, and is probably the largest in western Libya with 2,600 detainees.

At least 37 bodies bearing signs of torture were brought to Tripoli hospitals last year, according to the report.

In the east, about 1,800 detainees are held at Kuweifiya, where the UN documented torture and inhumane conditions, including in a section run by the Libyan National Army, a coalition led by Khalifa Haftar.

Bodies of people taken by armed groups have been found on the streets and in garbage dumps of Benghazi, many with bound limbs, marks of torture and gunshot wounds, it said.

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