clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Pro-Haftar militia leader receives treatment in Germany

September 10, 2020 at 8:50 am

A member of the self-styled Libyan National Army, loyal to the country’s east strongman Khalifa Haftar, fires a machine gun during clashes with militants in Benghazi’s central Akhribish district on 19 July 2017. [ABDULLAH DOMA/AFP via Getty Images]

A militia leader fighting for Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar has received medical treatment in Germany, a local newspaper reported Wednesday, Anadolu reports.

Abdurrahim al-Kani, who runs a militia with his brothers, is accused of kidnapping, torturing and murdering civilians in Libya’s southwestern city of Tarhuna, the Suddeutsche Zeitung daily reported, adding he is also accused of carrying out bomb attacks in the capital Tripoli and other civilian areas.

Al-Kani was treated in January and February this year at the University Hospital Bonn after being injured in an explosion in Libya’s northwestern city of Misrata, the report said. The Federal Prosecutor’s Office and the Federal Criminal Office were informed about Al-Kani’s stay in Germany and the accusations against him.

“Eight mass graves containing at least 230 bodies were found in Tarhuna after government forces recaptured the city in June and the Al-Kani militia fled,” the report said.

It said the UN Human Rights Commission appointed an investigative commission on mass graves and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres demanded that a comprehensive and transparent probe be conducted and that the perpetrators be brought to justice.

READ: Second mass grave found in Libya’s Tarhuna as Haftar under fire for war crimes 

The German Foreign Ministry said Al-Kani was given a German visa in 2017 and he was able to enter Germany for cancer treatment, the report said.

It was reported that Al-Kani, who continued his massacres after his return to Tarhuna, personally directed the abduction of three women from a family and that the women were killed after being tortured.

It was also noted that the German authorities, the University of Bonn and the International Criminal Court declined to issue statements on the matter.

Libya has been torn by civil war since the ouster of late ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. The Government of National Accord (GNA) was founded in 2015 under a UN-led agreement, but efforts for a long-term political settlement failed because of a military offensive by Haftar’s forces.

The UN recognizes the government headed by Fayez al-Sarraj as the country’s legitimate authority as Tripoli has battled Haftar’s militias since April 2019 in a conflict that has claimed thousands of lives.