تقرير العفو الدولية لسنة 2013 يشير الي - TopicsExpress



          

تقرير العفو الدولية لسنة 2013 يشير الي جرائم ضد الانسانية ارتكبتها كتيبة القعقاع: Similarly, representatives of the Mashashya community have been unsuccessfully trying to establish the fate of seven persons subjected to enforced disappearance since the end of the conflict, most likely by militias from Zintan. Four relatives, Mohammad Massoud Ali Al-Sweibigh (born in 1978), Mohammad Bel Qasem Mohammad Abu Sitteh (born in 1973), Salem Ibrahim Omar Essa (born in 1984) and Khaled Ibrahim Omar Essa (born in 1984), all originally from Mashashya, disappeared following their detention in Tripoli in August 2012. According to the testimony of a relative, they were arrested during an identity check on the main road in Al-Zahra, an area on the outskirts of Tripoli. The arrest was carried out by members of the Department of Combating Crime, a body formed by former militiamen at the end of the conflict which subsequently integrated into the Ministry of Interior. After about two days they were transferred to the Qaaqaa Brigade, a Zintan militia nominally under the Ministry of Defence, in the Fellah area of Tripoli. The relative recounted the events to Amnesty International, “During the first few days, I was in telephone contact with my brother. He informed me that he was held together with the others by the Qaaqaa brigade, and that he was allowed to use the phone of a man originally from Zintan. I spoke to the Head of Brigade who told me not to worry. On 12 August, I went to Tripoli with some relatives and we were allowed to visit them in detention. During the visit, my brother and cousins complained that they were beaten with sticks by the Department of Combating Crime. One of the men was shot in his leg. The Head of Brigade promised that all would be released within one day. A few days later - it was Eid al-fitr [around 19 August] - I called him back, but no one answered. I waited for a few days, and when I did not receive any news, I went back to Tripoli, but was told that my relatives had been transferred to Zintan. They showed me a letter dated 17 August 2012 stating that the men had been transferred to the Military Police prison in Zintan. The document listed their names and personal belongings.” Too frightened to visit their relatives in detention in Zintan, the family sought the intervention of elders from Zawiya and Ghirian. The delegation of elders allegedly went to visit the military police prison in Zintan but was unable to receive any information. The men’s relatives then reported their disappearance at the Qasr Ben Ghashir Police Station in Tripoli on 2 October. The case was referred by the General Prosecutor first to the prosecution in Zawiya, then to Jadu in the Nafusa Mountain area. At the time of writing, there had been no results in the investigation of the disappearance of the four men.
Posted on: Fri, 25 Oct 2013 12:22:15 +0000

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