World leaders condemn
Muammar Gaddafi
after army launches violent
crackdown on pro-democracy
protesters in Benghazi
Jo Adetunji, Peter Beaumont and Martin Chulov in Bahrain guardian.co.uk, Sunday 20 February 2011 11.39 GMT
More than 100 people have died over four days of anti-government protests in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi as Colonel Muammar Gaddafi confronts the most serious challenge to his 42-year rule as leader.
The Libyan army is reported to have fired into unarmed crowds of protesters, killing about 20 people on Saturday while 35 people were believed to have been killed on Friday. Human Rights Watch said estimates of the death toll were conservative. About 15 of the deaths were reported to have been after government forces opened fire during a funeral.
A doctor in Benghazi, Libya's second city, said victims had come to hospital with wounds caused by high-velocity rifles used by security forces.
Foreign journalists have been banned from entering the country since the start of the protests. Gaddafi has so far made no comment on the escalating violence despite growing condemnation from western leaders.
Benghazi and the towns of Bayda, Ajdabiya, Zawiya, and Derna have drawn much of the focus of the political unrest although there have been reports of minor clashes in the capital, Tripoli.
Unlike the rulers of neighbouring Egypt, Gaddafi has refused to countenance the politics of disobedience. The pro-government Al-Zahf al-Akhdar newspaper said the authorities would "violently and thunderously respond" to protests. Those opposing the regime risked suicide.
William Hague, the foreign secretary, condemned the violence as unacceptable and horrifying, even as Libyan special forces, backed by African mercenaries, launched a dawn attack on a protest camp in Benghazi.
Britain is scrambling to extricate itself from its recently cosy relationship with Gaddafi, initiated by Tony Blair in 2004. That rapprochement saw Libya open its doors to British oil companies in exchange for becoming an ally in the "war on terror". Britain also sold Gaddafi arms.
Hague's comments came after the government revoked arms export licenses to both Bahrain and Libya for their use of deadly force against protesters calling for change.
With internet services in Libya shut off for long periods, foreign journalists excluded and access already blocked to social networking sites, Gaddafi appeared determined to quell a revolt centred in the country's east, which has long suffered a policy of economic exclusion. Libya has jammed the signals of Al-Jazeera, the Arab broadcaster, to the country.
Reports from inside Libya claimed security forces had deliberately aimed at protesters' heads. That allegation appeared to be supported by video footage smuggled out of the country which appears to show two unarmed protesters being shot in the head.
Hague said: "Governments must respond to the legitimate aspirations of their people, rather than resort to the use of force, and must respect the right to peaceful protest.
"I condemn the violence in Libya, including reports of the use of heavy weapons fire and a unit of snipers against demonstrators. This is clearly unacceptable and horrifying.
"Media access has been severely restricted. The absence of TV cameras does not mean the attention of the world should not be focused on the actions of the Libyan government."
At least five cities in eastern Libya have seen protests and clashes in recent days. Special forces tried to break up a protest camp that included lawyers and judges outside Benghazi's courthouse. "They fired tear gas on protesters in tents and cleared the area after many fled carrying the dead and the injured," one protester said.
A mass funeral for 35 people who died on Friday came under fire from pro-government snipers who killed one person in the procession and injured a dozen more, according to sources in the city.
The shootings came amid credible reports of a round-up of government opponents who were taken from their homes in raids by security forces.
The crackdown has been led by the elite Khamis Brigade, led by Gaddafi's youngest son. Unconfirmed reports claim that force has been backed by African mercenaries brought into the country in five separate flights. A video on the Libya 17th February website appeared to show an injured mercenary who had been captured by anti-government protesters.
Events in Libya have come against the background of continuing protests across the Middle East and North Africa. In Bahrain, which has also seen attempts to put down pro-democracy protests with lethal force, anti-government protesters swarmed back to a symbolic square on Saturday, putting riot police to flight after the army was withdrawn.
Thousands of anti-government protesters camped out in the capital's Manama square awaiting the outcome of talks between opposition leaders and the gulf state's crown prince, Sheikh Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa.
In Yemen, riot police shot dead a protester and injured five others after opening fire on thousands of marchers.
In Algeria, police brandishing clubs broke up a rally into isolated groups to keep protesters from marching.
Write a comment