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Libya: Bodies Raise Specter Of Mass Killings In Tripoli

First Posted: 08/25/11 04:53 PM ET Updated: 10/25/11 06:12 AM ET

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The bodies are scattered around a grassy square next to Moammar Gadhafi's compound of Bab al-Aziziya. Prone on grassy lots as if napping, sprawled in tents. Some have had their wrists bound by plastic ties.

The identities of the dead are unclear but they are in all likelihood activists that set up an impromptu tent city in solidarity with Gadhafi outside his compound in defiance of the NATO bombing campaign.

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It is impossible to know who killed them, but the discoveries raise the disturbing specter of mass killings of noncombatants, detainees and the wounded.

Between Bab al-Aziziya, seized by rebels on Tuesday, and the Gadhafi stronghold neighborhood of Abu Salim, where fighting raged Thursday, AP reporters saw about two dozen bodies Thursday. Five or six were in a tents erected on a traffic circle that housed the activists and were decorated with the flags of many African nations.

One had an IV in his arm, and another body was completely charred, its legs missing.

At least a dozen other bodies were found in a grassy area and a canal nearby. Several of the dead had been shot in the head, with their hands tied behind their backs. A body in a doctor's green hospital gown was found in the canal. The bodies were bloated.

One of the dead had a strip of cloth in bright green, the national color of Gadhafi's Libya, tied around his wrist. The man was darker skinned than most Libyans. Gadhafi had recruited fighters from sub-Saharan Africa.

According to the rebel Military Council of Misrata, a western port city, prisoners held by Gadhafi forces at Metiga air base in Tripoli were locked up and had grenades thrown into their cells. The council said rebels have so far retrieved 13 badly burned bodies.

Gadhafi's regime held thousands of political prisoners.

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Al Jazeera has exclusive video of Libyan rebels ambushing Gaddafi loyalists at a checkpoint. According to the news outlet, "this Al Jazeera Exclusive footage gives an inside view of the struggle as the fighters push towards Sirte, the last stronghold of Gaddafi."

Video below (via Al Jazeera):

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CNN reports:

Muneer Masoud Own, 33, who made a living doing manual labor, said forces loyal to longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi slaughtered nearly 150 prisoners as rebels closed in on Tripoli last week.

Charred bodies littered the ground around a warehouse -- roughly 30 feet by 45 feet -- where the detainees were kept. A volunteer who helped remove them, Bashir Own, estimated that he had seen about 150 bodies. He is not related to Muneer Own, who said he barely escaped an ordeal that started about a month ago.

Full story here.

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Dozens of Libyans perform the last late afternoon prayer of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at Freedom Square in the eastern Libyan port city of Benghazi on August 29, 2011.

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Libya rebels claim to have "almost certain information" that Gaddafi's intelligence chief was killed.

@ Reuters : FLASH: Libya rebels have "almost certain information" that Gaddafi intelligence chief killed on Sat. -Spokesman tells al-Arabiya TV

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Al Jazeera's James Bays filed a dazzling report from Libya on the situation of African migrants in the embattled country. Migrants claim to be assaulted and are locked up in prisons until rebel fighters made sure they did not work as mercenaries for the Gaddafi regime.

Watch Bays' report here:

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The rebel commander in Tripoli Al Mahdi Al Haraqi told Reuters that he had confirmation that Khamis Gaddafi has been killed in a clash near Ben Walid.

Reuters writes:

He was taken to a hospital but died of his wounds and was buried in the area, Al-Haragi said, without giving the timing. No independent confirmation of the death was available.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the United States could not yet independently confirm Khamis' death but said similar information was being received in Washington from "reliable sources."

Rebels claimed twice before Khamis Gaddafi was killed.

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Libya's National Transitional Council reacted strongly on the message that relatives of Gaddafi would have arrived in Algeria, Reuters reports.

A spokesperson for the NTC said it considers sheltering members of Gaddafi's family an act of aggression.

"We have promised to provide a just trial to all those criminals and therefore we consider this an act of aggression," spokesman Mahmoud Shamman told Reuters.

"We are warning anybody not to shelter Gaddafi and his sons. We are going after them in any place to find them and arrest them," he said.

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A rebel commander in Tripoli claims Gaddafi's son Khamis has been killed in clashes in southern Libya.

Khamis was claimed killed twice before.

@ Reuters : FLASH: Gaddafi's son Khamis killed in clashes in southern Libya -Rebel commander in Tripoli

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AFP reports Italian energy company ENI reached an agreement with the Libyan National Transitional Council to take up gas supplies to Italy.

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Libyan rebels they seek the extradition of Gaddafi's family members who fled to Algeria.

@ Reuters : FLASH: Libya rebels say will seek extradition of Gaddafi family from Algeria

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Rebel commanders say Khamis Gaddafi, one of Colonel Gaddafi's most feared sons, has been killed in an air strike south of Tripoli.

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Algeria confirms two of Gaddafi's sons, his daughter Aicha and his wife are in the country.

@ Reuters : FLASH: Algeria confirms two of Gaddafi's sons, wife and daughter are in the country - Al-Jazeera TV

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Reuters reports Khamis Gaddafi, the Colonel's infamous ... son, may be next to be places on the ICC's most wanted list. The International Criminal Court earlier approved warrants for Gaddafi and his son Saif al-Islam.

ICC prosecutor Luis-Moreno Ocampo told Reuters in an interview that "Khamis should also be prosecuted because Khamis was the commander of the brigade that was more active on some of the crimes."

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Official reportedly confirm three of Gaddafi's sons, his daughter and wife have arrived in Algeria.

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From the Associated Press:

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — The chairman of the African Union says Libyan rebels may be indiscriminately killing black people in Libya because they have confused innocent migrant workers with mercenaries.

Chairman Jean Ping told reporters Monday that this is one of the reasons the AU is refusing to recognize the National Transitional Council as the country's interim government.

He said "We need clarification because the NTC seems to confuse black people with mercenaries .... They are killing normal workers."

Libya's rebel National Transitional Council appears to have secured Libya's capital after a week of fierce fighting with loyalists to Col. Moammar Gadhafi.

He said there was no doubt the council now controlled the capital city and called on both sides to "stop the killing."

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Libyan rebels captured Gaddafi's personal 'Afriqiyah Airbus' in Tripoli.

Libyan rebels leave Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's 'Afriqiyah One' Airbus A340 plane at Tripoli airport on August 29, 2011.

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The tribe of Abdel Fattah Younes said it will take justice into their own hands if rebel leaders do not identify the commander's killers, Reuters reports. "After Eid, that is the final deadline," Tarek, one of Younes' sons said in an interview with Reuters.

Abdel Fattah Younes was killed on July 28 after he was summoned by rebel leaders for questioning. Libyan authorities identified two people who allegedly carried out the assassination, but head of the NTC Mustafa Abdel Jalil had told reporters on Wednesday the suspected killers would be arrested "when the higher interests of this revolution will not be damaged."

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Al Jazeera reporters in Tripoli said rebels have surrounded Gaddafi's hometown Sirte. The main push in the battle for Sirte is expected to come from the east, the channel reports.

Al Jazeera's Hoda Abdel Hamid reported from the eastern front near Sirte that rebels are holding off attacks, as they want to give tribal leaders in the city time to negotiations.

Andrew Simons, on the western front near the city, reported small fights between rebels and Gaddafi loyalists.

On Monday, NATO intensified airstrikes on Sirte.

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The rebel flag waving over the Libyan embassy in Moscow.

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A leaked United Nations report proposes elections in Libya within nine months, Al Jazeera reports. The UN would be looking to send a small contingent of 'Blue Barrets' to the country, if requested by the Libyan authorities and authorized by the Security Council.

"If requested by the Libyans and authorized by the Council, the UN could contribute to confidence-building and to the implementation of agreed military tasks, through unarmed UN military observer (UNMOs)," Al Jazeera quotes the document.

Read more on Al Jazeera.

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France reopened its embassy in Libya, a spokesperson for the French foreign ministry said. France had closed the embassy six months ago.

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Libyan rebels asked NATO to keep up pressure on the Gaddafi regime. The Associated Press reports NTC head Mustafa Abdul Jalil told a NATO delegation that former regime supporters who are now in hiding could still cause trouble.

"Gaddafi is still capable is doing something awful in the last moments," Abdul-Jalil said.

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Tyler Hicks, photographer for the New York Times, found what seems to be a photo album from the Gaddafi family.

Watch the album on the NYTimes Lens Blog Website

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Internet has returned in many areas in Tripoli.

@ feb17voices : LPC #Tripoli: Internet has returned in many areas of the city. #Libya

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CNN correspondent in Libya Nic Robertson reports the Lockerbie bomber, Abdel Basset al Megrahi, is comatose and nearing death.

Read Robertson's full report on the CNN website.

The National Transitional Council announced earlier it will not extradite the Libyan.

CNN's report contradicts statements made earlier by a cancer specialist, who said Abdel Basset al Megrahi was in good health and could live for years.

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Libya's National Transitional Council will not extradite the Lockerbie bomber

@ Reuters : Minister in National Transitional Council says Libya will not extradite Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset al-Megrahi

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An Iranian newspaper wrote on Sunday that foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi claimed Iran "discreetly" provided humanitarian aid to rebels in Libya.

According to AFP the minister told the newspaper that Iran was "in touch with many of the rebel groups in Libya before the fall of (Moamer) Gaddafi, and discreetly dispatched three or four food and medical consignments to Benghazi."

The minister also said the head of the NTC sent a letter to Teheran, thanking Iranian president Ahmedinejad for his help.

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AFP reports Libyan rebels have freed more than 10,000 prisoners since they captured Tripoli. 50,000 prisoners would still be missing.

Ahmed Omar Bani, a spokesperson for the rebels, told reporters during a press conference that between 57,000 and 60,000 people have been arrested over the past months.

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Libyan rebels declined an offer by Muammar Gaddafi to negotiate, saying they do not recognize him and are looking for Gaddafi as a criminal.

On Saturday, a spokesman for Gaddafi had offered the rebels by phone to start talks lead by Gaddafi's son Saadi.

Mahmoud Shamman, the NTC's information minister said in a news conference:

"I would like to state very clearly, we don't recognize them. We are looking at them as criminals. We are going to arrest them very soon .. Talking about negotiations is a daydream for what remains of the dictatorship."

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Al Jazeera English has more on the latest overtures from the Gaddafi camp:

Moussa Ibrahim, the spokesperson for Muammar Gaddafi, has reportedly told the Associated Press news agency that the Libyan leader is ready to negotiate with the rebels to form a transitional government.

Ibrahim called AP headquarters in New York late on Saturday, and told them he was calling from Tripoli, the Libyan capital, and that Gaddafi was still in Libya.

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TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The bodies are scattered around a grassy square next to Moammar Gadhafi's compound of Bab al-Aziziya. Prone on grassy lots as if napping, sprawled in tents. Some have had their...
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The bodies are scattered around a grassy square next to Moammar Gadhafi's compound of Bab al-Aziziya. Prone on grassy lots as if napping, sprawled in tents. Some have had their...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
melchar
Stop the Genocide in Libya, Now!
11:14 AM on 08/26/2011
"The man was darker skinned than most Libyans. Gadhafi had recruited fighters from sub-Saharan Africa" HP contributing to the genocidal killings of Black indigenous Libyans by slandering them as mercenaries.
10:17 AM on 08/26/2011
Whoa! What have we got ourselves mixed up in. Have we been made an accomplis in murder.
What will we do with the frozen assets in our possesion.
While Libya is at its weakest point, I believe that nato and the free world should put boots on the ground and take the country over. Set up a government run by nato for 40 years. It is becoming obvious that this the only way the people of libya will ever be free.
09:52 AM on 08/26/2011
Another disgraceful revelation in this war that isn't a war, officially (shades of Vietnam). The specter of mass killings anywhere where there is a conflict raging should not come as a surprise to anyone. Under many guises - putting down insurrection, fighting for freedom (from what? add your own pet theme), seizing what belongs to someone else, protecting the oil, in the name of an other country's "security" ad nauseam - the innocent are slaughtered. Say what you want, the rebels have the right label. They are no different from the supporters of Gaddhafi (as these victims obviously were). War is war. NATO can put what spin they want on all this, their bombers are murderous. So are the rebels who killed the opposition with the same abandon as Gaddhafi did. They may well pay a higher price than they know. It is conceivable that a fundamentalist Muslim group will take over with all the horrors of their Sharia law, their fundamentalist intolerance for even a squeak out of the oppressed people. It is a matter of time. Then these rebels will feel the same boot on their throats and retribution. Living by the sword has its downside. These whooping killers have a day of reckoning coming.
09:49 AM on 08/26/2011
Didn't Obama justify getting involved because Gadaffi was killing innocent people, so will he now bomb the rebels? And we helped arm these rebels without really knowing who they are and what they will ultimately do.
10:21 AM on 08/26/2011
These people of libya can not create a free libya as their minds have been filled with hatred for to long.
ssyankeeclipper
Glen Beck rules
09:11 AM on 08/26/2011
the libiyian rebels on a mass killing spree, how do they know who is on their side? if you've seen some of the photo's they look pretty radical
09:07 AM on 08/26/2011
Listen to the last words of the report carefully. Since no one knows where he is even a child would assume he is hiding wouldn't they?
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PermanentVacancy
Those who do not move, do not notice their chains.
08:51 AM on 08/26/2011
Do we really need another example of mans inhumanity to man.?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
twystd69
08:02 AM on 08/26/2011
Americans need to stop thinking that people in other countries are just like them. One oppressive governemnt will be replaced by another one. they kill us, we kill them. It is a vicious circle.
09:08 AM on 08/26/2011
As long as we aren't sucked into the killing or being killed I am cool with that.
10:03 AM on 08/26/2011
>>>twystd69 - I had to answer this comment, the irony of it struck me. People in other countries are not just like Americans? First off, all people in all countries are the same human beings, living, breathing air, bleeding when wounded,etc. But if you refer to killing, lack of regard for another's life, look no further than the Oklahoma bombing, the soldiers killed at Fort Hood, the mayhem and killing on our streets. Such actions have no nationality, no special face. They are everywhere. Let's get off our pedestal and see things as they really are.
07:39 AM on 08/26/2011
The Foreign Policy decisions of the U.S. Government are certainly rather interesting to say the least. I would remind everyone that back when 9/11 happened hundreds of thousands of Libyans were dancing in the streets (as was true in many Arab countries) in celebration of the attack against the U.S.. Now we are helping these people.
Beyond that, in the years leading up to this, Libya/Gadhafi was held up as an example of the power of diplomacy (in terms of U.S. Policy), and during his Presidential campaign, Obama himself used the Libyan situation as an example of the power of diplomacy versus war. Through U.S. and European diplomacy, Gadhafi had given up his nuclear program, had paid I believe $1 billion in reparations to the families of the flight that was bombed over Lockerbie, and Gahdafi had renounced terrorism. The fact that the U.S. and Europe turned on Gadhafi and supported the rebels, cannot be lost on people like Kim il Jung in North Korea, where we are trying to negotiate a diplomatic situation similar to Libya from years ago.
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jfsteelejr
Rock N Roll Rebel.
08:09 AM on 08/26/2011
I don't think it was so much about helping the people that "danced in the streets" after 9/11 but more about plundering Libya's wealth and natural resources. We are in a worldwide recession, expect to see mere shakedowns and muggings by the G8.
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PermanentVacancy
Those who do not move, do not notice their chains.
08:53 AM on 08/26/2011
Exactly. Gaddafi was trying to nationalize their oil industry...................................
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Rozgonyi
Writer and traveler
09:14 AM on 08/26/2011
Yup yup and yup. Other regimes take note: if you turn into our lapdog, we will STILL dest.roy you at our pleasure, if you have something we want.
06:00 AM on 08/26/2011
maybe the "rebels" arent so nice
07:58 AM on 08/26/2011
Is that why obama wanted them in power? They are more ruthless that the guy obama wanted out.
The obama lovers will somehow oversee this latest atrocity commited by him
09:16 AM on 08/26/2011
No victor, including these rebels, are nice after the blood letting and gore they seen and caused. Something happens in war to people and those of us that are back home watching on TV shouldn't judge. Don't think you wouldn't do the same if you lost your home and family and friends to a brutal enemy.
10:31 AM on 08/26/2011
We had our revolution and we didn't.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MUDPUPPY
04:30 AM on 08/26/2011
Saddam had his share of secret tunnels in Iraq. Those tyrants had to have their hide holes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
05:57 AM on 08/26/2011
YOu are aware that there are layers of tunnels below the Capitol building, the white house, probably every city hall in the U.S. In case our representatives are attacked? As for holes to hide in, camp David is only the most famous, not the only one.

Let me ask, if rebels attacked our military bases, went to Washington and demanded the president to step down, went to the pentagon and sought to lay siege ... What do you think would happen? Just look at what happens in our country to peaceful protesters at world bank and G-8/20 summits...so we should not think we are so much better than the democratic regime of Libya when we would react very much like them...or harsher in a similar situation.
02:17 AM on 08/26/2011
This is definitely President Obama's fault. And so is the hurricane heading towards North Carolina and every losing season the Cleveland Indians have ever had.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jones
Dances with Weims
08:17 AM on 08/26/2011
Dang right!!!
12:40 AM on 08/26/2011
I don't understand why Syria and Libya wouldn't allow elections. The leaders had all the money they can ever need, they can retire on the French coast and live it up. If they are truly good leaders and popular they would be re-elected. Instead they chose war against their own people.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
05:51 AM on 08/26/2011
It is sad that this is the understanding most Americans have of Libya. They were very much a democratic nation...more so than our own. They had regular elections and councils from the neighborhood to national level...Qaddafi himself held no official position and this is why he couldn't step down, he had no title to step down from!

Two more points to be made, 1.)Qaddafi took control without spilling a drop of blood! 2.)the rebels want the return of the sanusiyya kingdom and a western backed central bank (read western style puppet government) at the same time...French leaders stated, this rebellion would have never happened except for them.

We Americans really need to be better informed, our country is faking apart around us and we keep criticizing nations when we don't know either the basics of their systems or their histories.
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ewd4610
Commerce with all nations, alliance with none
12:39 AM on 08/26/2011
Libya reminds me of Jurassic Park. We just deactivated all the electric fences and bypassed all the safeties.
12:36 AM on 08/26/2011
I can't believe how many of the Right Wing that support Gadhaffi a dictator but did not support Saddam Hussein who was also a dictator. Isn't it odd?
04:26 AM on 08/26/2011
Nobody is supporting Ghaddafi. The rebela are Al Qeada. We have NO business taking sides.
08:04 AM on 08/26/2011
Saddam insisted the he had WMDs. Our govt intelligence insisted he had WMDs. Saddam threatened the U.S. Gadhaffi was of no threat to the U.S. There are other dictators worse than Gadhaffi that we do nothing about.