Revenge Trials And Judicial Chaos In Libya

Editor’s Note:
These trials are nothing less that brutal, politically motivated revenge killings. No charges, no legal representation, no justice.

~Alexandra

MAGGIE MICHAEL and RAMI AL-SHAHEIBI
Associated Press

BENGHAZI, Libya – One of the first trials for thousands of Libyans detained on suspicion of links to the ousted regime of Moammar Gadhafi is turning into a prime example of how unequipped the country’s justice system is to handle the cases.

At a hearing in the eastern city of Benghazi Wednesday, a Gadhafi-era judge in a Gadhafi-era military courtroom planned to hear evidence against 50 people accused of the Gadhafi-era crime of “treason against the revolution.”

But the judge postponed the hearing because the militia that has detained the defendants refused to bring them to court.

The case underlines how much power still lies with the hundreds of militias that fought Gadhafi’s troops during the eight-month civil war, which ended when the longtime dictator was captured and killed last October.

It also indicates how, one year after the start of the anti-Gadhafi uprising, the National Transitional Council now ruling Libya has made little progress in filling the void left by the collapse of Gadhafi’s regime with effective state institutions like courts and organized security forces.

The NTC has so far failed to extend its control over the hundreds of militias that fought in the war. Nor has it taken control over the scores of detention centers these groups run for people accused of links to the Gadhafi regime. Human rights groups say these centers hold thousands of people, some of whom have been tortured.

The NTC’s head, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, acknowledged the body’s shortcomings in an interview with Al-Jazeera television Wednesday.

“After the liberation, the national council’s deficits surfaced,” he said. He said the 72-member body was “very slow” in making decisions, largely because “everybody is afraid that if they speed up, financial corruption will take place.”

While highly respected among Libyans, Abdul-Jalil has faced mounting criticism since the war’s end for being unable to impose the council’s authority. But he also blamed the fighters themselves for refusing to return to civilian life or integrate into the new government’s security forces.

“Why didn’t employees return to their jobs? Why didn’t police return?” he said.

Wednesday’s hearing was the second for 50 men detained by a powerful Benghazi militia known as the Feb. 17 Martyrs. The men are accused of having links to Gadhafi’s regime. The judge served under Gadhafi before the war but defected to the rebels early in the uprising. Since the NTC has yet to write new laws, the defendants were being tried under the Gadhafi-era legal code.

The trial’s first session on Feb. 6 was postponed because the defendants didn’t have a lawyer. On Wednesday, their lawyer arrived, but the military prosecutor informed the judge that the militia had refused to bring the 47 accused men in its custody to court, citing security reasons.

Militia leaders could not be reached for comment Wednesday, but a brigade commander close to them said the militia had received tips about a possible attack on the court. Fears of attacks have risen across Libya with the approach of the 1-year anniversary of the insurrection.

“We can’t risk a prison break or an attack on the courts,” said Abdel-Basit Haroun. “We have deployed our fighters and raised security alert because we expect an attack any minute from now until Feb. 18.”

However, the defendants’ lawyer, Saleh Omran, said the militia has too much power.

“The brigade controls everything in this part of Libya,” he said. “If they wish, they can release prisoners or keep them as long as they want.”

3 of the accused have been put under house arrest and attended the hearing. 1 of them, Sherif al-Ashafi, said the militia beat him and tortured him with electric shocks.

The judge scheduled the next hearing for Feb. 22.

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