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Libya: Campaign of enforced disappearances in Nafusa region must end
Published in Bikya Masr on 01 - 06 - 2011

Scores of people have vanished from Libya's Nafusa Mountain area apparently at the hands of forces loyal to Colonel al-Gaddafi, Amnesty International said Tuesday as it released a new report into deteriorating conditions in the western region of the country
Libya: Disappearances in the besieged Nafusa Mountain as thousands seek safety in Tunisia details a number of cases of people who have disappeared and are believed to have been taken Tripoli from Nafusa Mountain, which has been under siege and fire from pro-Gaddafi forces since early March 2011.
“It is outrageous that the families of these men have absolutely no idea what has happened to them,” said Amnesty International.
“Given what we know about the treatment of prisoners by the Tripoli authorities, there is every reason to fear for their safety and wellbeing.”
Nafusa residents believe that soldiers have targeted people they believed were involved in protests, supported of the opposition, or were organizing supplies to the besieged region.
Family members told Amnesty International of relatives who were detained by al-Gaddafi forces when they went to buy basic necessities. Some have subsequently appeared on Libyan state television “confessing” to being pressured to act against the country's best interests, but most have simply vanished.
A 37-year-old father from the town of Nalut, who had taken part in peaceful protests, disappeared after he went with a relative and a friend to get spare parts for his car in early March.
His family repeatedly called his phone until he finally answered, hastily saying: “I am going to Tripoli, take care of the kids.” Since then his phone has been switched off. His family believes that he is being held in Ain Zara Prison in Tripoli.
The organization called on the Tripoli authorities to immediately release all those detained solely for peaceful protest, and to ensure that any alleged or known fighters were treated humanely and in accordance with the requirements of international law.
In March, Amnesty International documented a campaign of enforced disappearances against opponents of Colonel al-Gaddafi in eastern Libya.
Amnesty International also called on Tripoli to cease the almost daily indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas in Nafusa Mountain by pro-al-Gaddafi forces, including the use of Grad rockets, which are inherently indiscriminate weapons.
In early April al-Gaddafi troops surrounded the town of al-Qalaa and fired Grad rockets at it. According to reports, the hospital and mosque as well as several houses were shelled, farms were destroyed and livestock killed.
The organization said there was an urgent need for all parties to the conflict to guarantee the safe passage of humanitarian organizations to the area as conditions for those living there grew more and more difficult.
People who had fled the area to Tunisia told Amnesty International of dwindling food supplies, particularly fresh produce and baby milk.
They said that water was running short as al-Gaddafi forces had deliberately destroyed some water wells and that the main water wells, in areas controlled by al-Gaddafi forces, were damaged.
“The Tripoli authorities cannot hope to starve the Nafusa Mountain into submission,” said Amnesty International.
“They must immediately lift restrictions on access to water, electricity, fuel and other basic necessities.”
The report is largely based on a fact-finding visit to Tunisia between 6 and 20 April 2011, when Amnesty International met people who had fled from the Nafusa.
Amnesty


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