Sunday, November 17, 2013
Sunday, November 17, 2013 by DXTR corporation
A day after dozens are killed, mourning in Tripoli
By Jomana Karadsheh, CNN
November 16, 2013 -- Updated 1932 GMT (0332 HKT)
Militia fires on protesters in Libya
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- At least 43 people were killed in fighting, health minister says
- Fighting broke out after protesters marched on militia headquarters in Tripoli
- A stream of ambulances delivered injured people to hospitals
- Militia leader says they will not leave until a constitution is approved
At least 43 people were
killed and 460 others wounded on Friday in the bloodiest day of fighting
here since the fall of Tripoli in 2011, the state run Libya News Agency
LANA reported.
The fighting broke out after protesters arrived at the Tripoli headquarters of militias from the coastal city of Misrata.
Protesters and witnesses
said militiamen opened fire on the protesters who marched on Gharghour, a
southern district of the capital where Misrata militia are based, in an
effort to evict the armed groups.
TV footage aired on the
privately owned al-Nabaa channel showed militiamen, in a truck equipped
with what appeared to be an antiaircraft mounted on the back, opening
fire directly at protesters.
The armed confrontation lasted for hours as protesters returned with weapons and militiamen from different parts of the capital.
The sound of heavy
gunfire, artillery and explosions echoed across Tripoli on Friday night
and clashes erupted Saturday east of the city.
Libyan officials said
fresh fighting broke out in the district of Tajoura, an eastern entrance
to the capital, where heavily armed militiamen from Misrata were trying
to enter Tripoli.
At least one person was
killed and eight other were wounded in the early morning fighting, LANA
reported. More fighting was reported in the area in the afternoon.
Prime Minister Ali
Zaidan warned Saturday in a news conference that the arrival of any
forces from outside Tripoli would lead to a serious escalation.
"The coming hours and days will be decisive for the future of Libya," Justice Minister Salah Marghani told reporters.
Tensions were running
high Saturday on the streets of Tripoli as militiamen fortified parts of
the city, setting up roadblocks and closing off some roads leading into
the capital.
The scene at Martyrs
Square was an emotional one as people gathered for the funerals. Hours
earlier, the government announced a three-day, nationwide period of
mourning.
Some families marched through the square carrying pictures of the dead and coffins covered by the Libyan flag.
A local official read a statement to the crowd blaming the prime minister and the government for the situation.
"We will continue on this path to liberate Tripoli from these militias," the official said.
Meanwhile, much of the
international community, including the United Nations and the European
Union, condemned the violence and called for restraint and calm.
"The United Nations
Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) strongly condemns the violence which
took place in Tripoli on Friday 15 November, resulting in the tragic
loss of life among civilians, and calls for its immediate cessation as
well as supporting the efforts by authorities to restore calm, stop the
bloodshed and ensure security and stability for all Libyans" UNSMIL said
in a statement on Saturday.
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry called for restraint. "Libyans did not risk their lives in
their 2011 revolution for this violence to continue," he said in a
statement. "If a free people are going to succeed in forging a peaceful,
secure, and prosperous country with a government based on the rule of
law and respect for human rights, then there can be no place for this
kind of violence in the new Libya."
Anger against the
various militias has been mounting for months in Tripoli and other parts
of the country, including in the eastern city of Benghazi, which has
been gripped by increasing violence, including political assassinations.
Friday's protest, which
was organized in part by the Tripoli Local Council, occurred after heavy
fighting in the heart of the capital last week between the Misrata
militiamen and other groups from Tripoli.
Militiamen from Misrata
and a number of other Libyan cities entered Tripoli during the fight for
the capital in August 2011 and have stayed, establishing bases in
different parts of the capital.
On Saturday, Zaidan
renewed the government's calls for armed groups to leave the capital,
reiterating a decision passed by lawmakers months ago, one that has yet
to be implemented.
"The government has
decided to contact all armed groups in Tripoli and inform them about the
(General) National Congress's decision for them to leave Tripoli and it
should be implemented as soon as possible" Zaidan told reporters.
But many observers were
skeptical about the ability of the weak central government to enforce
this decision. The government has not been able to rein in militia
groups with various regional, tribal and political loyalties.
Last month, Zaidan was kidnapped by a militia in Tripoli group and released a few hours later by another militia group.
The government has also
been struggling with its plans to build an army and police. Many militia
members are on the state's payroll, but continue to operate freely with
no government control or accountability.
"As long as militias and
armed groups are not held to account for crimes they commit, innocent
people will continue to die" Said Hanan Salah, a Libya researcher for
Human Rights Watch "The government has a responsibility here to bring
the perpetrators of these crimes to justice and hold them accountable
for their acts."
Source:CNN News International
Tags:
Conflict
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