Iraqi journalist in Libyan custody | ||
Guardian correspondent was detained while covering fighting in the west of the country, the British newspaper says. Last Modified: 10 Mar 2011 14:34 GMT | ||
Abuse condemned On Thursday, Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, condemned the abuse suffered by three BBC journalists after they were detained by Libyan soldiers and secret police and said that their treatment could amount to torture. "For them to be targeted, detained and treated with such cruelty, which could amount to torture, is completely unacceptable and in serious violation of international law," Pillay said in a statement. The three were beaten and subjected to a mock execution on Monday at a checkpoint 10km south of Az Zawiyah, the BBC said. Chris Cobb-Smith, a British journalist and part of the crew, said the group were moved between several locations, in some cases alongside civilian captives who had visible injuries from heavy beatings. The BBC reported that the crew's identity cards were inspected at the first checkpoint, which stated clearly that they were members of the press. On Tuesday, the crew were driven to a building in Tripoli which they believed was the headquarters of Libya's overseas intelligence service. The men were told to bow their heads and lined up along a wall by soldiers. The BBC said the men were held for 21 hours before they were released, and have since left Libya. |
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Libyan government officials say they are holding an Iraqi journalist who was reporting on fighting in the west
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