Amnesty warns on Libya war crimes

Forces on both sides of the Libyan war have committed war crimes and the country risks descending into a bloody cycle of attacks…

Forces on both sides of the Libyan war have committed war crimes and the country risks descending into a bloody cycle of attacks and reprisals unless order can be established, human rights group Amnesty International said today.

Muammar Gadafy's attacks on civilian protesters were a crime against humanity, while arbitrary detentions, torture of prisoners and widespread abductions were war crimes, the London-based charity said in a report.

Amnesty also criticised Libya's opposition forces and said Col Gadafy's fall from power after 42 years had left a "security and institutional vacuum" that they exploited to carry out revenge killings and torture.

It urged Libya's interim rulers, the National Transitional Council (NTC), to investigate abuses on both sides and to put human rights at the top of their agenda.

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"Those responsible for the dreadful repression of the past under Col Gadafy will need to be held accountable." said Claudio Cordone, senior director at Amnesty. "The (NTC) must be judged according to the same standards. Without this, justice would not be done and a vicious cycle of abuses and reprisals risks being perpetuated."

The 112-page report was compiled by an Amnesty team after visits to Libya between February and late July.

Amnesty collected evidence of indiscriminate attacks on civilians by pro-Gadafy forces using rockets, mortars, artillery and tanks.

In one incident in the northwest city of Misrata, a barrage of rockets hit a house and killed two children aged three and one in their bedroom.

"I heard an explosion and ran back to the children's bedroom when a second rocket smashed into the house," their mother Safia Abdallah Shahit told Amnesty. "I found them buried under the rubble."

The report also accused pro-Gadafy fighters of hiding tanks in civilian areas to protect them from air strikes, a practice that Amnesty said breaches international humanitarian law and constitutes a war crime. It also criticised their indiscriminate use of anti-personnel mines.

Amnesty officials saw the bodies of opposition fighters who had been shot in the back of the head with their hands tied behind their backs with metal wire, the report said.

They also saw video footage - filmed on mobile phones seized from captured Gadafy soldiers - of opposition prisoners being shot dead.

Amnesty said anti-Gadafy soldiers were also guilty of human rights abuses, although on a smaller scale. They have abducted, arbitrarily detained, tortured and killed Gadafy loyalists and foreign nationals wrongly suspected of being mercenaries, the report said.

A spate of lynching and murder in the first days of the uprising had given way to organised attacks by vigilante groups who act with impunity, the report said. Detainees said they had been tortured, threatened with rape and given electric shocks.

The NTC has been struggling to impose its authority on Libya, a sprawling desert state of 6 million people, since rebel fighters entered the capital Tripoli on August 21st.

Once the fighting is over, Amnesty said Libya would need new human rights laws after decades of abuses.

Reuters