Perilous Times
26 August 2011 Last updated at 14:55 ET
More than 200 decomposing bodies have been found abandoned
at a hospital in a district of the Libyan capital, Tripoli,
that has seen fierce fighting.
The BBC's Wyre Davies: "When injured people were brought to the
hospital there were no hospital staff left to treat them... people
were left to die"
More than 200 decomposing bodies have been found abandoned at a
hospital in a district of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, that has
seen fierce fighting.
A BBC correspondent found corpses of men, women and children on
beds and in the corridors of Abu Salim's hospital.
Doctors and nurses fled after clashes erupted nearby between rebel
forces and those loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi.
Some residents accused the regime of murdering those at the
hospital, but it is not yet clear how exactly they died.
Meanwhile, rebel forces faced stiff resistance as they advanced on
Sirte, Col Gaddafi's birthplace and the town regarded as his last
stronghold.
Rebel commanders said they were consolidating their frontline at
the oil port town of Ras Lanuf, after withdrawing from positions
nearer Sirte to put themselves out of range of rockets fired by
pro-Gaddafi forces.
The UK said its planes carried out an overnight missile attack on
a large command-and-control bunker in Sirte.
There were also reports of intense fighting in and around
Tripoli's international airport, although the centre of the city
is mainly quiet.
'No government'
The BBC's Wyre Davies in Tripoli says the scene at the hospital in
Abu Salim was one of the most appalling and distressing he had
ever seen.
“We need professional help, from the international Red Cross,
because there has been a massacre in Abu Salim” - Osama Pilil Abu
Salim resident
Around the hospital, on trolleys and in corridors, there were
hundreds of dead people - men, women and children, our
correspondent says.
It is not known exactly who they were, but some were civilians,
some fighters, some apparently African mercenaries, he adds.
Residents said some had been alive when they were brought to the
hospital, albeit with very bad injuries. Others had already died.
However, the hospital was closed because nearly all medical staff
had fled the fighting, and the people were left there to die, they
added.
The AFP news agency reported that the hospital was occupied by
pro-Gaddafi snipers on Saturday, and that it was only on Thursday
after days of intense fighting that it was secured by the rebels.
The father of a 10-year-old boy who was shot in the back near Col
Gaddafi's compound said he had to lie in the heat for almost a
week with no help, while the stench of decomposing bodies grew
around him.
"My son was wounded outside Bab al-Aziziya, but we didn't know
where he had been taken," he told AFP. "It's the first time I've
seen him in five days. But today we have got him back."
The boy was one of 17 survivors taken away for treatment by the
Red Cross, one of whose workers described the conditions as
"dreadful".
A team from the International Committee of the Red Cross prepare
to evacuate injured people from the general hospital in Abu Salim,
Tripoli (26 August 2011) Seventeen survivors taken away from Abu
Salim's hospital for treatment by the Red Cross
Osama Pilil, a local, told the BBC: "These bodies have been here
in the hospital for five days. Nobody has taken care of them - to
bring them to the mortuary, to identify them, to bury them."
"We need help. It is very urgent. There is no government here. We
need professional help, from the International Red Cross, because
there has been a massacre in Abu Salim," he added.
Our correspondent says the stench was appalling. People were
trying to clean up some of the mess and return the hospital to
normality, but that was an impossible task because of the sheer
number of bodies, he adds.
Human rights group Amnesty International earlier said it had
evidence that both pro-Gaddafi forces and the rebels had abused
detainees.
Guards loyal to Col Gaddafi raped child detainees at Abu Salim
prison, Amnesty said. It also accused rebels of beating prisoners,
including a boy conscripted by Gaddafi forces who surrendered to
the rebels at Bir Tirfas.
The UN is to investigate reports of summary killings and torture
through its existing commission of inquiry on Libya. It has
previously said some reports could amount to war crimes or crimes
against humanity.
'Free Libya'
As news about the hospital in Abu Salim emerged on Friday, rebel
leaders said they were now in almost complete control of the
capital, with just a few pockets of resistance from forces loyal
to Col Gaddafi.
There has been some fighting, mainly in and around the
international airport, but the centre of the city is mostly quiet.
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Residents in Tripoli have told the BBC's Lyse Doucet that they
have no water
Hundreds of people crowded a central mosque for the first Friday
prayers since Tripoli fell to the rebels. Afterwards they poured
onto the streets, chanting "Down with Gaddafi" and "Free Libya".
The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, who has travelled around
Tripoli, says there is no working government and almost no running
water, but some police are returning to the streets and shops are
starting to reopen.
Libya has plenty of problems ahead, but for now at least people
here seem content to celebrate and to hope, he adds.
"We have been waiting for this for 42 years, so of course we're
going to be happy and we're going to win," one man said.
Meanwhile the rebel administration, the National Transitional
Council (NTC), said half of its leaders had moved from the eastern
city of Benghazi to Tripoli.
Officials said they had been flying to a makeshift airstrip set up
on a wide stretch of road in the western Nafusa mountains. They
are reported to be staying outside the capital and only visiting
it during the daytime.
But the chairman of the NTC, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, and other key
leaders are staying in the east because of the lack of security in
Tripoli, and because of the stream of foreign dignitaries wanting
to meet them.
The BBC's Jon Leyne in Benghazi says the situation is unlikely
change for some days or even possibly weeks.
Nevertheless, the rebels are continuing to secure more money from
Libya's frozen assets and are gaining increasing international
recognition as they prepare to take control of the country, he
adds.
Separately, the person appointed by the NTC to protect Libya's
assets, Mahmoud Badi, told the BBC that at least $2.9bn (£1.8bn)
was missing from the sovereign wealth fund, the Libyan Investment
Authority (LIA).
"It seems that there was a misappropriation of funds and misuse of
funds and misconduct of funds," he said, adding that he suspected
former government ministers and their relatives were responsible.