UN investigators, who had periodic access to various detention centers, said there is evidence that 27 people have been tortured to death in the prisons, 11 of them this year, according to a report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and the UN Support Mission in Libya.
The office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and the UN Support Mission in Libya said in a report released today that the problem is rampant in jails run by militias that triumphed in the eight-month civil war in 2011.
Last month, Libya adopted a new law that requires conflict-related detainees to be screened and processed within 90 days.
Conditions are improving for detainees held in prisons run by officers trained by Libya's Judicial Police, the report found. But many detention centers are still run by militias that have links to particular Libyan government ministries.
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The UN investigators urged the Libyan government to accelerate the process of taking over the militia-run jails and installing trained police and corrections officers.
They are usually held without access to lawyers and have only occasional access to families, the investigators found.
Torture "is most frequent immediately upon arrest and during the first days of interrogation as a means to extract confessions or other information," the report said.