Recent fighting in Libya has killed hundreds of civilians and forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes, the UN said today, demanding justice for serious rights violations and possible "war crimes".
In a joint report, the UN human rights office and the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) warned of surging violence across the country since May and widespread human rights violations, including abductions of civilians, torture and executions.
"Violations are continuing with impunity. There has been no effort to stop them," Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the UN human rights agency, told reporters in Geneva.
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Three years after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed revolt, Libya is awash with weapons and powerful militias, and run by rival governments and parliaments.
Today's report pointed to an escalation in fighting since mid-October in Benghazi, where forces loyal to General Khalifa Haftar have been battling Islamist militiamen who have taken control of much of Libya's second city.
Some 450 people were killed there in the two months leading up to mid-December, and some 90,000 people had fled, including more than 9,000 seeking shelter in schools, unfinished buildings and open spaces like parking lots, the report said.
Clashes in Benghazi on Monday meanwhile killed another 16 people and wounded dozens, security sources and medics said.
In the western Warshafana area, fighting between rival armed groups had killed some 100 people and injured 500 others between mid-August and mid-October, the report found.
It warned of "a humanitarian crisis" with at least 120,000 people displaced in the area facing "severe shortages of food and medical supplies".
Fighting in the neighbouring Nafusa mountains had also left a reported 170 people dead, and displaced around 5,700 families, it said.
People displaced by the fighting had told UNSMIL that hundreds of houses, farms and businesses had been looted, shelled, burned down, or destroyed by bulldozers.
In the capital Tripoli the humanitarian situation had improved since late August, but activists, journalists and public figures continued to be abducted and threatened, the report found.
"One prominent human rights defender received text messages from armed groups warning him to stop his advocacy work or else his children would be abducted and killed," it said.