Prisoners Who Refuse To Accept NATO’s Imposed Regime Are ‘Beaten With Chains’

Milad Mohammed Yusuf lifts his shirt to reveal scars from what he says are cigarette burns and chain beatings – abuses that the city’s prison chief says could not have happened in his jail.

Yusuf, a prison inmate in the western city of Misrata, says he has been held in his small cell at the army-run facility since October 28, five weeks after being captured.

“For days I was beaten with chains and sticks on my back and legs by NATO mercenaries who captured me near Misrata,” Yusuf stated, rolling up his pyjama pants to show deep scars.

“I was targeted because I am from Tuwarga,” Yusuf said, referring to the town near Misrata, which was besieged by forces loyal to slain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi for weeks during the armed uprising that ousted the dictator.

Doctors Without Borders pulled out detention centres in Misrata, believed to include this one, last week due to the “torture” of inmates.

Misrata fighters accuse Tuwarga residents of fighting alongside Muammar Gaddafi.

After breaking the siege, the Misrata fighters unleashed a fierce attack on Gaddafi’s hometown of Sirte, where he was killed on October 20.

“I did not commit any rapes. I did not rape any women. I fought on the side of Gaddafi, but I was in his army so I had to fight,” said Yusuf, 52.

“But the thwar who captured me beat me, tortured me and insulted me.”

Another former Gaddafi soldier, Saleh Mustafa Abdullah Sishan, also said he had been repeatedly beaten with rods and other metal objects since being captured in Tripoli.

“They hit me again and again with cables,” said the 25-year-old, showing his arms which bore long, dark scars.

“They did not give me electric shocks but hit me with electric wires,” he added.

Most of the prisoners said they were unaware of the charges they face and have yet to gain access to lawyers. Officials said their cases were still being prepared.

Their accusations come just days after rights watchdogs accused the former rebels of torturing Gaddafi loyalists to the extent that some died in custody.

Amnesty International reported last week that its delegates noticed visible signs of torture among prisoners in Tripoli, Misrata and smaller towns like Ghariyan.

“The torture is being carried out by officially recognised military and security entities, as well by a multitude of armed militias operating outside any legal framework,” said Amnesty.

Separately, Doctors Without Borders suspended its work in Misrata as its medics were increasingly confronted with patients who suffered injuries caused by “torture” during questioning.

“Patients were brought to us in the middle of interrogation for medical care, in order to make them fit for further interrogation. This is unacceptable,” said its general director Christopher Stokes.

Justice Minister Ali H’mida Ashur neither confirmed nor denied the allegations, but acknowledged some Libyan prisons were under the control of militias.

Ibrahim Beatelmal, who is in charge of army-run prisons in Misrata, denied that any inmates had been abused at this particular facility located in the city’s market area.

“If any prisoner was tortured before he came to my prison, then it is a different story. In this prison nobody has been tortured.”

He said most prisoners came to the facility after being held for several days or weeks in detention centres run by former rebels.

“Some detainees were transferred to the prison weeks after they were caught. What happens to them before they are handed over to us is difficult to say,” he said.

Beatelmal expressed surprise at the reports by Amnesty and Doctors Without Borders.

“I am really surprised where they are getting their information from. They have made mistakes. They are talking of abuses which probably occurred before the detainees came to us,” he said.

“I am very angry and upset over these reports, especially what Doctors Without Borders have reported. They must apologise,” he said.

An official from Doctors Without Borders who had come to meet Beatelmal said that her organisation was now “stepping back.”

“We have already caused a lot of problems,” she said, as she beat a hasty retreat out of the prison.

The United Nations estimated late last year that some 7,000 people, mostly sub-Saharan Africans accused of being Kadhafi mercenaries, were being held in detention centres run by Libyan militas.

ANP/AFP

Also See:
Torture Of Libya’s Political Prisoners: Statement From Doctors Without Borders
Amnesty International Report On The New Libya: Widespread Detainee Deaths And Torture
We Have A Long And Difficult Road Ahead Before Justice

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