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Latest Update: Friday10/7/2009July, 2009, 10:02 PM Doha Time


Somali rebels may have committed war crimes 
Reuters/Geneva, Switzerland


Pillay: the UN has received credible reports of what may amount to war crimes
The UN human rights chief said yesterday that Islamist insurgents in Somalia 
had executed civilians and set off bombs in residential areas, violations which 
she said may amount to war crimes. Navi Pillay, UN High Commissioner for Human 
Rights, cited credible reports that rebels had also set up tribunals which have 
handed down death sentences by stoning and decapitation and also ordered 
amputations.

Civilians, especially women and children, are bearing the brunt of the latest 
violence in the lawless Horn of Africa country, she said, as government troops 
try to drive insurgents out of their bases in the capital Mogadishu. "Witnesses 
have told UN investigators that the so-called Al Shabaab groups fighting to 
topple the transitional government have carried out extrajudicial executions, 
planted mines, bombs and other explosive devices in civilian areas and used 
civilians as human shields," Pillay said in a statement. "Fighters from both 
sides are reported to have used torture and fired mortars indiscriminately into 
areas populated or frequented by civilians," she said. "Some of these acts 
might amount to war crimes".

Al Qaeda-linked fighters in Al Shabaab control much of southern and central 
Somalia and all but a few blocks of the capital.
Neighbouring countries and Western governments fear if the Somali government is 
overthrown, the country will become a safe haven for Al Qaeda training camps 
and militants will destabilise the region.

Hundreds of civilians are believed to have been killed and wounded since the 
offensive led by Al Shabaab and Hisbul Islam militia began in May, Pillay said. 
 Insecurity has prevented aid agencies from reaching many of the more than 
200,000 people who have fled Mogadishu during the period. The former UN war 
crimes prosecutor said rights activists, aid workers, journalists and the 
displaced are especially vulnerable. Six journalists have been killed in 
Mogadishu this year, including four apparently assassinated, she said.

There was also increasing evidence that "various forces" in Somalia are 
recruiting child soldiers, a serious violation of international human rights 
and humanitarian law, she said. "Once order has been restored - and one day 
order will be restored - those responsible for human rights violations and 
abuses should, and I hope will, be brought to justice," said Pillay, who is 
from South Africa. Her spokesman Rupert Colville, asked whether a case could be 
brought to the International Criminal Court (ICC) amid raging conflict, noted 
that the Hague-based tribunal had indicted leaders of Uganda's Lord's 
Resistance Army (LRA) and warlords from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. 
Regular judicial institutions have ceased to function in Mogadishu and southern 
and central areas, Pillay said.

"UN human rights staff have received credible reports that in areas controlled 
by insurgent groups, ad hoc tribunals are judging and sentencing civilians 
without due process and in violation of Somali as well as international law," 
the UN rights chief said.
"The punishment handed down by these tribunals include death sentences by 
stoning or decapitation, as well as amputation of limbs or other forms of 
corporal punishment," Pillay added.

In the Somali town of Baidoa yesterday, witnesses described how hardline 
Islamist rebels beheaded seven people for being "Christians" and "spies" in the 
latest implementation of strict shariah law by Al Shabaab.

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