Bearing witness is an important part of true journalism
This
is being ignored by the western media
Siege
of Bani Walid: Foreign fighters, phosphorus bombs and nerve gas –
RT sources
The
besieged Libyan city of Bani Walid has been plunged into chaos. RT
sources say that the former Gaddafi regime stronghold is under attack
by militias bolstered by foreign mercenaries, and they used banned
weapons like white phosphorous.
RT,
27
October, 2012
The
sources denied reports of the last few days that Bani Walid was
retaken by the Libyan government. Residents said that militia forces
have continued their assault, while preventing the refugees who fled
from reentering the city.
A
man who claimed his relatives are trapped inside the besieged city
spoke with RT, saying, “There
is no food; there is nothing to support the life of people. And the
militia does not allow anyone to come back to their homes.”
“They
are demolishing homes with machinery and tanks. There is no
communication or internet so people are not able to connect with each
other,” the
source said. He is currently in Egypt, and refuses to reveal his
identity over fears of personal safety.
He
believes the real reason for the inoperable communications is that
many people have been killed inside Bani Walid by the forces
besieging the city and now they are trying to prevent information
about the killings to be leaked outside.
The
militia attackers have claimed they are battling ‘pro-Gaddafi’
forces, but the source slammed that motive as a “lie
and a dirty game.”
“They
use foreign snipers, I think from Qatar or Turkey, with Qatar
covering all the costs,” he
said. He claimed that a ship with weapons and other equipment
recently docked in the port city of Misrata, where the assault on
Bani Walid is allegedly being directed.
“There
is no government in Libya. Groups of militia control everything. They
don’t care about Libya, they don’t care about the nation,” he
said, adding allegations that the majority of militia fighters have
dual citizenship or passports from other countries.
“We
ask the envoy [Special Representative] of the Secretary-General of
the United Nations [for Libya] Mr. Tarik Mitri – where is he
now?” he
said. “Where
is the United Nations? Where is the EU? Where is the Human Rights
Watch? We ask for an intervention now as soon as possible –
please!”
In
an October 23 UN session, the US blocked a statement on the violence
in Bani Walid drafted by Russia, which condemned the ongoing conflict
in the city and calling for a peaceful resolution.
RT Photo from Bani Walid. RT source. The photo could not be independently verified.
Witnesses claim militia used chemical weapons in Bani Walid
“I
can confirm that pro-government militias used internationally
prohibited
weapons. They used phosphorus bombs and nerve gas. We have
documented all this in videos, we recorded the missiles they used and
the white phosphorus raining down from these missiles,” Bani
Walid-based activist and lawyer Afaf Yusef told RT.
“Many
people died without being wounded or shot, they died as a result of
gases. The whole world needs to see who they are targeting. Are they
really Gaddafi's men? Are the children, women and old men killed –
Gaddafi's men?”Yusef
said.
The
forces attacking Bani Walid have been ordered to use “all means
necessary” in their assault on the city, RT’s Paula Slier
reported.
“To
all parasites and leaches, a message to all of them across Libya,
wherever they are: Whoever you are, however strong you are, and
whoever your back is – the revolution should win,” a
militant said in the TV report.
RT Photo from Bani Walid. RT source. The photo could not be independently verified.
Looming humanitarian catastrophe in Bani Walid
The
humanitarian situation outside Bani Walid is reportedly nearly as
dire as that within the besieged city. Those who managed to flee the
violence now find themselves stranded on the desert roads outside the
city.
Thousands
of Bani Walid residents have reportedly tried to reenter the city,
but were stopped at makeshift militia checkpoints composed of pickup
trucks armed with mounted machine-guns.
“Look
at the people over there, they got a gun and they’re shooting at
people with it,” a
Bani Walid resident said, pointing in the direction of a checkpoint.
He claimed that those who fled the city had been forced to stay in
the desert for more than a week.
“Where
is the government?” he
said.
Photo from Bani Walid. RT source. The photo could not be independently verified.
Photo from Bani Walid. RT source. The photo could not be independently verified.
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