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    Doctors group halts work in Libyan city's prisons

    BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) — The medical aid group Doctors Without Borders said Thursday it has suspended its work in prisons in the Libyan city of Misrata because it said detainees are being tortured and denied urgent medical care.

    The group, also known by its French name Medecins Sans Frontieres, said that since August its medical teams have treated 115 people in Misrata who bore torture-related wounds, including cigarette burns, heavy bruising, bone fractures, tissue burns from electric shocks, and renal failure from beatings. Two detainees died after being interrogated, the group's director general said.

    "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," MSF general director Christopher Stokes said in a statement. "Our role is to provide medical care to war casualties and sick detainees, not to repeatedly treat the same patients between torture sessions."

    There was no immediate response from Libyan authorities, but the allegations were an embarrassment for the country's new leaders, who have promised to respect human rights and end the rampant abuses of the Gadhafi regime.

    Britain, which played a key role in the NATO-led air campaign that helped revolutionary forces overthrow longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi, urged Libya's National Transitional Council to "live up to the high standards they have set themselves."

    "They need to ensure a zero tolerance policy on abuse. We are concerned about these reports and are taking the up with the Libyans as a matter of urgency," British Prime Minister David Cameron's office said in a statement.

    Stokes told The Associated Press that those subjected to torture include ex-combatants and people accused of theft and looting.

    "There is a significant number of people with darker skin, but there is really a wide mix," he said. "Whatever the motives, it is unacceptable to do this to human beings."

    He said most of the cases date from the past three months, but that two detainees died after beatings in October and November. He said his group is not in charge of autopsies and couldn't determine what was the immediate cause of the death.

    The interrogations were carried out by Libya's National Army Security Service at facilities outside the detention centers, MSF said in a statement.

    The group, which operates in the prisons but not the interrogation centers, said it contacted the NASS as well as authorities in Misrata, the port city whose fighters played a leading role in the eight-month war that toppled dictator Moammar Gadhafi, to demand an end to the abuse, but received no official response, prompting MSF to halt its operations in the city's detention centers.

    "This is not a decision we wanted to take because we have people on treatment basically," Stokes said by telephone from Brussels. "But we are not there to patch people up so they can be tortured between torture sessions. ...This was becoming impossible and unacceptable."

    In its statement, MSF said the most alarming case was on January 3, when MSF doctors treated a group of 14 detainees returning from an interrogation center. It said nine of the detainees had numerous injuries, including broken arms and renal failure, and displayed obvious signs of torture.

    Stokes said his group has informed the National Army Security Service that a number of patients needed to be transferred to hospitals for urgent and specialized care. All but one of the detainees were deprived of further medical care and hospitalization, and instead taken back to interrogation centers.

    "Some of them couldn't even stand up, they were so badly beaten," he said.

    Some officials have denied such torture is taking place, while others dismissed it as prevalent in all countries around the world, Stokes said.

    ___

    El Deeb reported from Cairo.

     

    9 comments

    • ann  •  27 days ago
      I fail to see where the NTC has set any standards. They consistently marginalize all the accomplishments of the Gadhafi administration that they have destroyed for their personal gain. The only people I saw on video looting, destroying property, and committing murder were the Rebels. Misrata doles out the same type of hospitality that was given to Gadhafi, his sons, and his cabinet of officers. Gadhafi managed to run a prosperous country without needing around the clock support from NATO countries. The Rebels and NTC were given a license to kill by NATO which is not democracy. They are not even capable of winning an evenly matched battle on their own which was proven in Bani Waild this week.
    • ann  •  27 days ago
      Susan Rice should be fired for congratulating NTC and the Rebels on respecting Human Rights when she was well aware of their Human Rights violation. How could anyone promote the killing of Gadhafi as an isolated and justified revenge Shari law torture murder? NATO, NTC, and ICC set the tone for the current human rights violations by not holding the Rebels accountable for their actions. The Doctors Without Borders should have been making these complaints public since August. NATO's policy authorizing the killing of anyone identified as a Gadhafi loyalist was a gross human rights violation which is still been used to justify criminal acts.

      The NTC and the Rebels make Gadhafi look like a saint of a martyr. The NTC and Rebel torture Chambers make Gadhafi run prisons look like Club Med. Thanks to cities for having the courage to revolt. When the reports showed Black Africans being abused, tortured, imprisoned, and deprived of their land and homes NATO did not care. Now that other Arabs have made their torture and abuse known and NATO is concerned about more revolts in self-defense, the abuses are slowly being acknowledged still without any solutions. I hope NATO will stop raiding other countries’ governments to just cause chaos. NATO is only concerned that this may affect the business and oil contracts in Libya which would negate the primary reason for the NATO war endorsements.

      I don’t consider all the thousands of murders and injuries as minor incidents. They will remain as minor collateral damage as long as the oil quotas continue to be met. Obama is still hailing the torture and murder of Gahafi as a Foreign policy victory. He failed to mention in his speech this week that NTC and the Rebels are still inflicting the same type of punishment freely in Libya.
    • Vote Ron Paul  •  27 days ago
      Good job muslim obama.
    • Robert W  •  Fort Collins, Colorado  •  27 days ago
      So it seems that the new and more democratic libyans are just as adept at torture and getting even with their suppossed enemies as the old nasty undemocratic regime. Another sterling example of democracy at sork in the arab world. So much for spring, huh?
    • Daniel S  •  27 days ago
      What the US Satan has done to Libya is disgusting, and it will be repayed for it.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Poway, California  •  27 days ago
      Yes, this is much better than Qhadafi. We are seeing the great accomplishments of the Arab spring in Egypt as well, where Christian Copt minority is being singled out for discriminatory practices. Will the Occupy Movement strive to learn some of these tactics and use it to make the USA a tyranny of the majority as well?
    • AKHTAL  •  Beirut, Lebanon  •  27 days ago
      Even as outsiders, we hailed the revolution from deep in our hearts following every move the alliance and rebels made to oust the tyrant. I want to tell Libyans: Let your current authority abuse humans and you are on for a worse regime than that of Qaddafi.
    • AKHTAL  •  Beirut, Lebanon  •  27 days ago
      Assad main shortcomings were not the smaller than usual number of non-Baathists in government but the brutal way his security treated detainees. When can these morons of Arab leaders understand that their enemy is human abuse and that power rises with human respect.
    • AKHTAL  •  Beirut, Lebanon  •  27 days ago
      Dear Mr. Abdeljalil. Do not shove your head away saying they were just undisciplined guys who torture detainees. That is the main issue that you should give a lot more importance than foreign relations and even housing and that you should spend most of your time preventing.
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