Times of Suriname

Twelve bodies found in Libya mass graves

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LIBYA A factfindin­g mission to Libya was establishe­d by the United Nations’ top rights body in June after prosecutor­s from the Internatio­nal Criminal Court said that mass graves discovered recently may constitute war crimes.

At least eight mass graves were discovered at the time, in an area retaken by Libya’s internatio­nally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) from renegade military commander Khalifa Haftar’s forces.

According to the based GNA, most

Tripoliof the graves were found in Tarhuna, Haftar’s last stronghold in western Libya.

The city was used by his forces as a launchpad during an illfated 14month offensive to seize Tripoli from the GNA.

A total of 86 bodies have since been recovered in Tarhuna, and 28 others in Tripoli since the beginning of a search in June, according to Libyan media.

Libya, a significan­t oil producer, has been mired in turmoil since 2011, when longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi was toppled in backed uprising.

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Since 2015, a power struggle has pitted the GNA in Tripoli against easternbas­ed Haftar, with both sides backed by rival foreign powers.

Hundreds have been killed and some 200,000 people were displaced in Libya since the latest escalation, which began in April 2019, when Haftar’s selfstyled Libyan National Army (LNA), backed by the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, launched an offensive against Tripoli, the seat of the internatio­nally recognised GNA. (AlJazeera)

 ??  ?? Forensic specialist­s at the mass grave. (Photo:tabadul)
Forensic specialist­s at the mass grave. (Photo:tabadul)

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