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WAR REPORT
Rights group accuses Libyan rebels of abuse
by Staff Writers
Benghazi, Libya (AFP) July 13, 2011

Libyan rebel forces have been responsible for looting, arson and the abuse of civilians in their push toward Tripoli, Human Rights Watch alleged on Wednesday.

The group said it "witnessed some of these acts, interviewed witnesses to others, and spoke with a rebel commander about the abuses."

The abuses were said to have taken place in June and July -- as recently as last week -- as rebel forces pushed through the Nafusa Mountains to the south of Tripoli.

"In four towns captured by rebels in the Nafusa Mountains over the past month, rebel fighters and supporters have damaged property, burned some homes, looted from hospitals, homes, and shops, and beaten some individuals alleged to have supported government forces," said HRW.

The allegations threaten to undermine the rebels' carefully guarded image as the champions of human rights in a country that has been run by Moamer Kadhafi with an iron fist for nearly 42 years.

The revelations could also raise difficult questions for NATO countries, who have provided military support to the rebels as part of a UN-mandated mission to protect Libyan civilians.

France earlier this month admitted air dropping weapons to rebels in the Nafusa Mountains, raising the hackles of Russia and others critical of NATO's operations.

"The rebel authorities have a duty to protect civilians and their property, especially hospitals, and discipline anyone responsible for looting or other abuse," said the organisation's Joe Stork.

The group said locals reported at least one person was shot in the foot by rebel soldiers.

The rebel commander in the region, named by Human Rights Watch as Colonel El-Moktar Firnana, was quoted as admitting some abuses had taken place and that some fighters or supporters had been punished.

"If we hadn't issued directives, people would have burned these towns down to the ground," HRW quoted him as saying.

In the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, the National Transitional Council on Tuesday did not respond formally to questions about whether abuses may have taken place.

Human Rights Watch said two of the towns in question were home to a tribe close to Kadhafi.

"Al-Awaniya and Zawiyat al-Bagul are home to members of the Mesheshiya tribe, known for its loyalty to the Libyan government and Moamer Kadhafi," the group said.

Libyan rebels in the Nafusa highlands are currently preparing to advance toward the capital, eyeing the town of Asabah as their next stop after capturing a string of hamlets.

"This will be the most important battle of the Nafusa Mountains," rebel commander Wael Brachen told AFP at the front. "This is the last town before Garyan and... it is full of armed Kadhafi supporters."

Since guerrillas took the village of Gualish on Wednesday, 17 kilometres (11 miles) from Asabah, they have been awaiting NATO air strikes that will clear their way for an advance.




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WAR REPORT
With 'God's eyeview' on Libya, NATO strikes
Aboard A Nato Awacs (AFP) July 12, 2011
Two F-16 fighter jets prowling the skies over Tripoli pinpoint a missile launch site near a building in the capital. They ask for clearance to drop a pair of 500-pound bombs. Flying off the coast of Libya, a large AWACS relays the request to a team of analysts and legal advisers in a NATO air operations centre in Italy to weigh whether there is a risk to civilians. Around an hour later, ... read more


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