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Updated 05 Oct, 2021 08:20am

UN investigation finds war crimes committed in Libya

GENEVA: War crimes and crimes against humanity, including the use of child soldiers, have been committed in Libya since 2016, a United Nations investigation revealed on Monday.

The Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Libya, established by the UN Human Rights Council, said Europe-bound migrants face abuse in detention centres and at the hands of traffickers, while detainees languishing in horrific conditions are tortured.

“There are reasonable grounds to believe that war crimes have been committed in Libya, while violence perpetrated in prisons and against migrants there may amount to crimes against humanity,” the mission said in a statement.

Their report documents the recruitment and direct participation of children in hostilities, plus the enforced disappearance and extrajudicial killings of prominent women.

The mission established that from late 2019, Turkey facilitated the recruitment of Syrian child mercenaries aged 15 to 18 to fight alongside the Government of National Accord’s forces.

The unrest in the north African country has had a dramatic impact on Libyans’ economic, social and cultural rights, said the mission.

“All parties to the conflicts, including third states, foreign fighters and mercenaries, have violated international humanitarian law, in particular the principles of proportionality and distinction, and some have also committed war crimes,” said Mohamed Auajjar, who chaired the three-person mission.

The mission said it had identified individuals and groups — both Libyan and foreign — who may bear responsibility for the violations, abuses and crimes.

The list will remain confidential until it can be shared with appropriate accountability mechanisms.

Rights situation ‘dire’

In June 2020, the Human Rights Council — the UN’s top rights body — adopted a resolution calling for a fact-finding mission to be sent to Libya. The move had Tripoli’s support.

The experts were charged with investigating alleged violations and abuses of international human rights and humanitarian law in Libya since 2016.

Auajjar was joined by fellow human rights experts Chaloka Beyani and Tracy Robinson.

The experts said more time is needed to probe further allegations of the direct participation of children in hostilities.

Oil-rich Libya has been torn by conflict since the 2011 toppling and killing of dictator Moamer Qadhafi in a NATO-backed uprising, with rival administrations vying for power.

“The findings unveil a dire human rights situation,” the report said.

The experts said civilians had paid a heavy price, notably due to attacks on schools and hospitals, while anti-personnel mines left by mercenaries in residential areas have killed and maimed civilians.

The report said reliable information indicated that people from the Russian private security firm Wagner were operating as mercenaries.

There are “reasonable grounds to believe that Wagner personnel may have committed the war crime of murder” in the shooting of detainees south of Tripoli in September 2019.

The investigation established that hundreds of mostly Russian-made landmines had been planted in April-May 2020 next to houses and other civilian buildings.

‘Mass murders’

Meanwhile migrants seeking passage across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe are subjected to a litany of abuses in detention centres and at the hands of traffickers, said Beyani.

Violations are committed “on a widespread scale” by state and non-state actors, “with a high level of organisation and with the encouragement of the state — all of which is suggestive of crimes against humanity,” the Zambian expert said.

Meanwhile in jails, some prisoners are tortured on a daily basis, the report said.

“Arbitrary detention in secret prisons and unbearable conditions of detention are widely used by the state and militias,” said Robinson.

The mission said there were allegations of “widespread abductions, systematic torture and mass murders” in the town of Tarhuna southeast of Tripoli. Their report included images of several potential mass grave sites.

“The scale of the atrocities in Tarhuna demands far more focused attention,” Robinson told a press conference.

The report will be presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday.

Published in Dawn, October 5th, 2021

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