Hehehe... tentara Libya disuruh ngebantai dan merkosa.

Ini tentunya sesuai dgn ajaran Islam, krn nabi Islam dkk itu tukang ngebantai 
dan merkosa. 



http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/we-were-just-told-to-kill-says-libyan-teen-soldier/story-e6frg6so-1226062270303


We were just told to kill, says Libyan teen soldier 
        * Marie Colvin 
        * From: The Times  
        * May 25, 2011 12:00AMTHE young Libyan soldier showed  almost no 
emotion as he 
described how his unit had raped four sisters,  the youngest about 16, after 
breaking into a home in the besieged port  of Misratah.  

"My officer sent three of us up to the roof to guard the house  while they tied 
up the father and mother and took the girls to two  rooms, two each to a room," 
said Walid Abu Bakr, 17.
"My two  officers and the others raped the girls first," he recalled in a  
monotone, still dressed in the camouflage uniform he was wearing when he  
surrendered 12 days ago. They were playing music. They called me down  and 
ordered me to rape one of the girls."
Abu Bakr, from Traghen, a poor southern town, claimed he had been given hashish 
and was not responsible.
"She  did not move much when I raped her," he said, admitting the girl had  
already been gang-raped. "She said in a low voice, 'There is Allah. He  is 
watching you.' I said, 'Yes, Allah is watching me'."
Abu Bakr seemed to regard himself as a victim, however. He said he  had become 
his family's breadwinner after his father left his sick  mother and his 
siblings.
He joined the army when he was offered  200,000 dinars ($155,000), payable on 
victory for Libyan leader Muammar  Gaddafi, he said. But he had received only a 
week's training at Yarmouk  camp in Tripoli before being sent to Misratah as 
part of a militia  attached to the elite Khamis brigade, named after Gaddafi's 
youngest  son. Their mission was simple. "We were just told to kill," Abu Bakr  
said. The teenager said he did not keep track of how many times the four  girls 
in the house had been raped. The soldiers in his unit had stolen  12,000 dinars 
and jewellery from the family, but he had not received a  penny, he said.
When rebel forces began closing in on the airport  road, the officers sent the 
family to Zliten, the next town controlled  by Gaddafi's troops, and left, 
ordering Abu Bakr and eight others to  guard the house. They never returned.
"The rebels surrounded us and we threw away our guns and surrendered," he said.
Abu  Bakr, who is now held in a Misratah school with other former Gaddafi  
soldiers while the rebels decide what to do with them, said he had  decided to 
speak about the rapes after talking to an Islamic cleric.
Misratah  officials said the ruthless assaults by Abu Bakr and his unit had 
been  
repeated across the city. Gaddafi's soldiers, they said, had engaged in  an 
orgy 
of rapes that mirrored their destruction of the city's homes and  buildings.
Nothing would have prepared the women of Misratah or  their families for the 
ferocity of the onslaught that occurred when they  were trapped amid the 
fighting, mostly in districts that were  controlled by Gaddafi's forces for two 
months.
The brutality  emerged only when the rebels broke through loyalist lines and 
chased  Gaddafi's troops beyond the city limits. In their wake, they found  
horror stories. Doctors at Hekma hospital found some of Gaddafi's  soldiers had 
recorded video footage of rapes on their mobile phones.  "They made the girls 
identify themselves to the camera and show their  faces. Then they raped them," 
one doctor said. The phones were found on  loyalists who had been wounded or 
killed.
"In one of the videos, there's a woman. She's moaning, 'Oh, no, no, the sixth 
one, God help me'," said one doctor.
Another  video shows a group of Gaddafi's soldiers in camouflage uniform  
breaking down a door and confronting a frightened family - a man, a  woman, 
five 
girls whose ages range from about  five to early 20s, and a  boy aged about 7. 
The soldiers, shouting and waving their guns, stripped  the four older girls in 
front of the family and took them into the next  room where they raped the 
young 
women. The girls screamed and cried for  mercy, calling on Allah. A soldier at 
one point yells: "Gaddafi is our  Allah."
The video was found on the phone of a loyalist soldier.
A  Filipina nurse said her best friends had fled to Tunisia after their  four 
daughters and 13-year-old son were raped repeatedly after the  family was 
trapped in their flat on Tripoli Street, the scene of some of  the heaviest 
fighting in Misratah.
"I spoke to their mother," the nurse said. "She said the boy was terrible. She 
said, 'Don't even ask about my girls'."
So  horrified is Misratah by the rapes that young rebel soldiers have  offered 
to marry the victims, who face ostracism in this deeply  traditional society.
"The rebels feel guilty that they did not  arrive in time to save these 
families 
from Gaddafi's men," said Ismael  Fortia, an obstetrician who estimates that up 
to 1000 women may have  been raped.
Hardly any of those attacked have come forward because  a raped woman is 
regarded as virtually unmarriageable if she is single,  or a shame to her 
family 
if she is married.
Doctors and  psychologists in Misratah have banded together to help. They will 
check  victims for sexually transmitted diseases and offer abortions. One of  
their concerns is that unless they are treated, the women will suffer  from 
depression or post-traumatic stress disorder, and may commit  suicide rather 
than live with their memories.
"The images of their  rape will go around and around in their heads, like an 
endless  nightmare, unless they receive counselling and help," said Mustafa  
Shigmani, a doctor.
The terrible revelation comes as Misratah's  rebels fight on three fronts 
around 
the city, loyalists try almost daily  to mine the port and explosions 
reverberate day and night.
The  people of Misratah have suffered the greatest toll in the Libyan  
conflict, 
largely because their city has been so bitterly contested by  Gaddafi. It is 
the 
only population centre in the west of the country  that is under rebel control.
In districts liberated by the rebels, residents described a reign of terror 
under Gaddafi's soldiers.
"The soldiers ordered our family out of the house while they searched," said 
Fatima, 47, of the Zreig neighbourhood.
"They  said they were looking for weapons, but they took our money, our  
jewellery, everything they could carry while we waited for three hours."
Families  were forced to fly the green flag of the regime. Foot patrols raided  
homes at all hours. "They would shoot up the television if you were  watching 
anything other than the state channel," said Fawzi Damir, 21.
Men  disappeared. "They caught my husband and two of my sons," said Fatima,  
explaining that the men would usually flee if they spotted loyalists on  their 
street. Two weeks ago, however, they had been taken unawares early  in the 
morning. One son escaped by hiding under her bed.
City officials have said more than 1000 men, women and children have 
disappeared.
Some  residents took to the streets last week to celebrate an end to the  
shelling of the city centre. They waved flags and shouted with joy. They  were 
the lucky ones. One unforgivable legacy of Gaddafi is that many  women of 
Misratah will never again emerge from their homes and think  only of the 
beautiful sunshine.The Sunday Times 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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