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Human Rights Watch documents murder of Qaddafi a war crime

The Independent reported Oct. 17 on the release of a report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) on the murder of Muammar Qaddafi, which confirms that his murder was a war crime committed with the complicity of NATO drones and other aircraft deployed ultimately by Barack Obama. The report draws on interviews with close associates of the Qaddafi who survived the final battle, and with rebels present at his capture.

The report claims that at least 66 members of Qaddafi's convoy were summarily executed by the militias after their capture—a war crime, one which the Libyan civilian and military authorities have an obligation to investigate. To date they have shown no inclination to do so. And while the Libyan authorities claim that Qaddafi, himself, was killed in crossfire during the final battle, the evidence amassed by HRW strongly suggests that he was effectively lynched. The testimony includes an admission by a key militia commander that "the situation was a mess... it was a violent scene... it was very confusing." Cellphone footage obtained by the organization shows that among other injuries he was stabbed in the anus, probably with a bayonet.

It was on the fall of Tripoli on August 28, 2011 that Qaddafi and a small entourage fled the capital and headed to Sirte, 450km east, along the coast.

Attacked from both Benghazi to the east and Misrata to the west, the siege of this city of some 70,000 people continued for nearly two months.

"We first stayed in the city centre," Mansour Dhao, head of the People's Guard, told HRW, "but then the mortars started to reach there... Finally we moved to District Two. We didn't have a reliable food supply any more... There was no medicine. We had difficulty getting water—the water tanks were targeted, or maybe they were just hit in random shelling... We changed places every four or five days."

Qaddafi himself "spent most of his time reading the Koran and praying", Dhao said. "His communications with the world were cut off: there was no television, nothing. We had no duties, we were just between sleeping and being awake. Nothing to do.

Then during the night from October 19 to October 20, the remnant of Qaddafi's forces holed up in District Two came under intensive and continuous bombardment by rebel Grad missiles and artillery. Mutassim organised a break-out, loading civilians and the wounded into a convoy of pick-ups, heavily loaded with arms and ammunition. But the planned departure time of 3:30 or 4am slipped to 8am, by which time the militia fighters were ready for them. The convoy's hopes of breaking through the encircling forces were slim. They managed to reach a road leading south out of the city, but then a drone-fired missile exploded next to the car carrying Qaddafi. "It caused such a powerful blast that the air bags inflated and I was hit by shrapnel," said Dhao.

Mutassim Qaddafi's way was blocked in every direction, and drones and war planes circled overhead. The road he now led the convoy down was blocked by a militia base but he headed straight for it. "The convoy came towards our brigade building," militia commander Khalid Ahmed Raid recalled, "and shot at our gate with rocket-propelled grenades... so we began to fight back. They tried to go around our base... we opened fire on them with our [anti-aircraft] guns."

NATO planes now dropped two 12,500lb low-altitude airburst bombs on the convoy, destroying 14 vehicles, killing at least 53 people and forcing Qaddafi and his inner circle, all of whom survived, to flee on foot.

Such air support for the murder of Qaddafi clearly had nothing to do with the creation of a no-fly zone for the protection of civilians.

They took refuge in a nearby villa compound, but again came under heavy militia fire. A survivor later reported seeing Qaddafi there, "wearing a helmet and a bullet-proof vest, [with] a handgun in his pocket and carrying an automatic weapon... Then the villa started being shelled, so we ran. There were a lot of cement construction blocks outside, so we hid among those."

Mansour Dhao now persuaded his chief that they should go under the main road by means of drainage pipes, with the hope of reaching the safety of farms on the far side. But as soon as they emerged, militia fighters were on to them. Qaddafi's guards threw grenades to force them, but the third one they threw rebounded, exploding in their midst, killing the guard who threw it and wounding Qaddafi in the head. Militia fighters poured down to the pipes, astonished to find Qaddafi there.

It was in the subsequent three minutes and 38 seconds that the rebels' lust for vengeance erupted, captured in the phone footage obtained by HRW. "The situation was a mess," local militia commander Khalid Ahmed Raid admitted. "It was a violent scene. He was put on the front of a pick-up truck that tried to take him away and he fell off. It was very confusing. People were pulling his hair and hitting him. We understood there needed to be a trial, but we couldn't control everyone." When Qaddafi was eventually loaded into an ambulance, he was "nearly naked and apparently lifeless," HRW states. By the time he arrived in Misrata, a journey of at least two hours, he was "almost certainly dead."


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