Dozens of relatives and loyalists of jailed former Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi protested outside a Tripoli prison on Thursday, alleging detainees were being mistreated by former rebel fighters now in charge of the lockup.
A Libyan official, Mahmoud Shammam, said most prisons are still under the control of semi-autonomous groups of fighters, not the interim government.
Human rights groups have reported mistreatment of detainees in lockups run by former rebels and Shammam, the information minister, acknowledged that “we have a lot of problems in the prisons.”
He said the latest allegations underscore the need to speed up the period of transition in Libya, following the fall of Qaddafi’s regime and his capture and death on Oct. 20.
Under the current timetable, a national assembly is to be elected within just under eight months.
Shammam said he believes the national assembly could be chosen within six months to shorten the period of limbo.
“The clock is ticking, and we have to move faster than we are doing right now,” Shammam said.
Shammam said he was expressing his personal view.
On Thursday, angry relatives of former Qaddafi loyalists protested outside a prison in the Tripoli suburb of Tajoura, demanding that the detainees be freed for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which begins this weekend. According to a list of names posted outside the gate, about 1,000 detainees are being held there.
Salah Shambo, 53, said he visited two cousins, a former member of the security services and a hospital employee, in the prison earlier this week.
Shambo said the former hospital employee told him he had been held in a small bathroom in the prison for a month, with his hands cuffed to a wall, and that his head was dunked in a toilet during interrogation.
Other relatives said they were told by detainees that they were beaten, particularly after guards got drunk, and that cells were crowded.
One released prisoner, who said he had been held for 50 days, said his cellmate was tortured with electrical shocks. The ex-detainee, a former intelligence agent under Qaddafi, spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
Relatives said conditions have improved since a new group of guards arrived a week ago.
Mohammed Garghouti, 25, a neighborhood resident, said he initially supported anti-Qaddafi forces, but was becoming disillusioned.
“A lot of people died for a nice future,” he said of the eight-month civil war that brought down the dictator.
“Why do you do bad again, like Qaddafi?” he said, referring to the former rebels now running the prison.
Prison officials declined to comment.
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