Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN rights chief to be handed list of Libyan 'violators'

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GENEVA, March 10, (AFP) - Investigat­ors probing violations during Libya's conflict said they are giving the UN'S human rights chief a list of people who should face internatio­nal or national justice.

The commission of inquiry also called for further probes into NATO air strikes on Libya, saying it was unable to tell if the alliance took adequate precaution­s to protect civilians in some of its attacks.

The commission “has gathered informatio­n linking individual­s to human rights violations or crimes,” lead investigat­or Philip Kirsch said.

“It will hand over a confidenti­al list containing that informatio­n to the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights.”

Asked for details on the list, Kirsch told journalist­s: “The principle of a confidenti­al envelope is that you don't talk about what's in it.”

Investigat­ors had decided to keep the list confidenti­al to “prevent risk of harm to those who are held in custody and to avoid jeopardisi­ng the fair trial rights of any persons who may be brought to trial in the future.”

In their 220-page report presented Monday to the UN Human Rights Council, the commission appointed by the UN Human Rights Council accused both Muammar Gaddafi forces and anti-regime troops of serious crimes.

Gaddafi’s troops committed crimes against humani- ty and war crimes including murder, forced disappeara­nces and torture, it said.

Anti-regime troops, the thuwar, also committed “serious violations including war crimes and breaches of internatio­nal human rights law” such as unlawful killing, arbitrary arrest and torture, said the report.

“The commission further found that the thuwar also perpetrate­d torture and ill-treatment, and continued to do so even during the commission's visit,” said Kirsch.

“These acts are violations of internatio­nal human rights law and, when committed during armed conflict, constitute war crimes,” he said.

While calling for these individual­s to be brought to justice, investigat­ors also asked for further probes into NATO air strikes on Libya.

After examining 20 strikes by the campaign by Britain, France, the United States and their allies, the commission found five in which 60 civilians were killed and 55 wounded.

NATO claimed to have taken “all feasible precaution­s” to minimise casualties, Kirsch told the Human Rights Council.

But “the commission was not provided with sufficient informatio­n to verify this independen­tly, as it has done with other areas.

“The commission recommends further investigat­ions,” he added.

Neverthele­ss, the inquiry found that overall, NATO “did not deliberate­ly target civilians”.

Addressing the council after Kirsch's report, Cuba's envoy charged that “NATO assassinat­ed civilians in Libya... these crimes must be investigat­ed”.

Reacting to the commission's report, NATO said it welcomed the finding that the alliance conducted a “highly precise campaign with a demonstrab­le determinat­ion to avoid civilian casualties.” It stressed it did “everything possible to minimise the risk to civilians, but in a complex military campaign, that risk cannot be reduced to zero.”

“We deeply regret any instance of civilian casualties for which NATO could have been responsibl­e and we support the Libyan authoritie­s' efforts to review incidents from the conflict which affected civilians.”

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 ??  ?? People hold up signs during a protest at Martyr's Square in Tripoli, against transformi­ng the country into a federal state, March 9, 2012. Thousands of people protested in Tripoli and Benghazi, Libya's two biggest cities, on Friday in a show of...
People hold up signs during a protest at Martyr's Square in Tripoli, against transformi­ng the country into a federal state, March 9, 2012. Thousands of people protested in Tripoli and Benghazi, Libya's two biggest cities, on Friday in a show of...

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