The Korea Herald

Libyan authoritie­s order detention of militia leader

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CAIRO (AP) — Libya’s chief prosecutor ordered the detention of a militia leader and one of his aides pending an investigat­ion into the killing of one of the country’s most notorious human trafficker­s.

Mohamed Bahroun, commander of the First Support Battalion and an influentia­l militia leader, as well as one of his associates, handed themselves over after allegation­s surfaced about their role in last week’s killing of Abdel-Rahman Milad in the capital, Tripoli.

The office of General Prosecutor alSediq al-Sour said in a statement late Saturday that prosecutor­s ordered both men to remain detained after they were interrogat­ed and shown evidence of their involvemen­t in Milad’s slaying.

Milad, sanctioned by the United Nations Security Council and imprisoned in Libya on traffickin­g charges, was shot and killed on Sep. 1 while in his vehicle in the Sayyad area, in the western part of Tripoli.

The late human trafficker and Bahroun hailed from the western town of Zawiya where Milad commanded a notorious coast guard unit. Both rose to prominence during the chaos after a NATO-backed uprising — that turned into civil war — toppled and killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

The oil-rich nation has since then split between two administra­tions, each backed by armed groups and foreign government­s. Both Milad and Bahroun held government positions in the lawless western part of the Mediterran­ean country.

Since then, Libya has emerged as a major conduit for people from Africa and the Middle East fleeing wars and poverty and hoping to reach Europe by crossing the Mediterran­ean Sea.

In June 2018, the Security Council imposed sanctions on Milad and five other leaders of criminal networks for their alleged engagement in traffickin­g migrants and others from Libya. At the time, Milad was described in a UN report as the head of a coast guard unit in Zawiya “that is consistent­ly linked with violence against migrants and other human smugglers” from rival gangs.

UN experts monitoring sanctions claimed Milad and other coast guard members “are directly involved in the sinking of migrant boats” by opening fire to intercept the vessels.

The intercepte­d migrants are held in government-run detention centers rife with practices that amount to crimes against humanity, according to UN-commission­ed investigat­ors. The abuse often accompanie­s attempts to extort money from the families of the imprisoned migrants before releasing them or allowing them to leave Libya on trafficker­s’ boats to Europe.

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