'No
food, no drugs': Libyan troops siege ex-Gaddafi stronghold
RT,
7
October, 2012
Armed
Libyan forces continue to surround the city of Bani Walid, Libya. As
tension between government troops and opposition supporters continues
to mount, residents have been left without food and other supplies –
and are calling on the UN for help.
Human
rights group Amnesty International has asked authorities to avoid
unnecessary force, and to allow medical and other vital supplies into
the city.
It
comes after Libya’s General National Congress gave the Ministries
of Interior and Defense permission to use force to arrest those
suspected of killing Omran Shaaban – the man who is credited for
capturing the country’s ex-leader, Muammar Gaddafi, last year.
Over
the past week, government troops have surrounded the city.
“Right
now, the armed forces are attacking our city at the eastern boundary
between us and Misrata city,” Dr. Abdul-hamid Alshandoli, a member
of Bani Walid’s social council who is inside the sieged city, told
RT.
The
government also called on the release of others being detained in
Bani Walid, giving those in the city ten days to comply. The deadline
came and went on Friday.
The
chief of staff for Libya’s army issued a statement on Thursday,
calling on residents to hand over the individuals to avoid a military
assault.
According
to Amnesty International, hundreds of residents in the city have been
arrested by armed militias. Many continue to be detained without
being charged or put on trial, and have been tortured or otherwise
ill-treated, the organization said.
Libyan
protesters from the city of Bani Walid hold slogans during a protest
outside the National Congress in Tripoli on October 7, 2012 (AFP
Photo / Mahmud Turkia)
Human
rights group Amnesty International has asked authorities to avoid
unnecessary force, and to allow medical and other vital supplies into
the city.
It
comes after Libya’s General National Congress gave the Ministries
of Interior and Defense permission to use force to arrest those
suspected of killing Omran Shaaban – the man who is credited for
capturing the country’s ex-leader, Muammar Gaddafi, last year.
Over
the past week, government troops have surrounded the city.
“Right
now, the armed forces are attacking our city at the eastern boundary
between us and Misrata city,” Dr. Abdul-hamid Alshandoli, a member
of Bani Walid’s social council who is inside the sieged city, told
RT.
The
government also called on the release of others being detained in
Bani Walid, giving those in the city ten days to comply. The deadline
came and went on Friday.
The
chief of staff for Libya’s army issued a statement on Thursday,
calling on residents to hand over the individuals to avoid a military
assault.
According
to Amnesty International, hundreds of residents in the city have been
arrested by armed militias. Many continue to be detained without
being charged or put on trial, and have been tortured or otherwise
ill-treated, the organization said.
But
despite calls from the army, a large number of residents have turned
out to protest the demands.
“Many
armed groups came to main entrance of Bani Walid and they asked the
people to get out of the city. We have decided not to go because we
want to defend our rights, our homes, and our families,” Alshandoli
said.
Protesters
from Bani Walid shout slogans during a demonstration against the
decision of the National Congress besieging the city of Bani Walid,
in front of the National Congress in Tripoli October 7, 2012 (Reuters
/ Ismail Zitouny)
As
the conflict between government forces and opposition followers
continues in the former Gaddafi stronghold, the city is reportedly
suffering from a lack of necessary supplies.
On
October 4th, local doctors said that a group of armed men prevented
three vehicles carrying medical supplies, personnel, and oxygen from
entering the city. The men had set up a checkpoint about 80
kilometers away from Bani Walid, according to Bikya Masr news.
“The
situation is very bad. No fuel, no food, no drugs, no communication.
Everything is in a very bad situation,” Alshandoli said.
A
petition circulating around the city on Friday night asked the UN
Security Council to convene an emergency meeting and “to
immediately intervene to protect the civilians in the town.”
Signatories
of the petition claimed that pro-government armed militias were
trying to kill large numbers of people in Bani Walid, because of the
city’s pro-Gaddafi history.
Bani
Walid was one of the last cities to fall under the control of
anti-Gaddafi forces last year.
Libya
is still plagued with violence between pro-Gaddafi loyalists and
supporters of the country’s new government – calling into
question whether the fall of Gaddafi was indeed the beginning of a
new Libya.
According
to the UN, many pro-Gaddafi loyalists have been detained in grim
conditions, abused and tortured, since last year’s uprising.
Reports
of mistreatment serve as an embarrassment for Libya’s new
government, as well as for western powers – which fiercely
supported the rebellion


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