17.02.2012
As Libya
marks the first anniversary of its revolution on Friday, the dozens of
well-armed militia groups operating across the vast country have slipped well
out of the control of the nascent government in Tripoli , making the country ever more
fractured as well as dangerous to ordinary Libyans attempting to adjust to the
end of Muammar Gaddafi's 41-year dictatorship.
That assessment came on Thursday from Amnesty International,
whose latest research on the country documents at least 12 Libyans who have
died in militia custody since September, allegedly after being beaten,
suspended upside down and given electric shocks. In a chilling 38-page report
published on the eve of the anniversary, Amnesty describes a wave of terror and
widespread abuse by militia groups, whose members in recent months have dragged
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Libyans from their homes or from roadside
checkpoints into makeshift jails on suspicion of being Gaddafi sympathizers or
having fought alongside the regime's forces during the civil war.

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