Army to investigate ‘troop abuses’ in Benghazi
benghazi — An eastern Libyan force says it will investigate abuses by its troops after images showing the public display of corpses and allegations of summary killings surfaced with the end of a siege in Benghazi last week.
The self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA) said dozens of its militant-led opponents were killed as the siege at unfinished tower blocks in the eastern city was broken on Saturday. Fighters and their families tried to escape.
Unverified photos and videos emerged on social media appearing to show LNA troops posing with corpses and parading the rotting body of a prominent opponent on a vehicle, as well as carrying out summary killings.
Eastern military figures, separate from internationally recognised officials in Tripoli in the west, present the LNA as a force that will eventually control the whole of Libya.
The LNA’s general command called on unit commanders to hand over to military police all those filmed carrying out abuses.
“The actions carried out by members of the Libyan National Army after the liberation of west Benghazi are considered individual acts and do not represent the instructions of the army,” it said in a statement late on Monday.
“Those who committed these violations will be held accountable for their actions.”
Hanan Salah, a senior researcher on Libya for Human Rights Watch, said the LNA had failed to publicly crack down on similar abuses in the past. “What we need to see is a real investigation.” “We need to see that they are arresting people, investigating them and holding them accountable,” she said.
The suspected abuses raise fresh questions over the coherence of the LNA as a professional fighting body. Its leader, Khalifa Haftar, is widely assumed to be seeking national power. He has spurned a United Nation-backed government in Tripoli that has sought to unify political and armed factions that splintered into rival camps in the east and west in 2014, three years after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi. —