Libya rebels fear for Gaddafi prisoners

The notorious Abu Salim prison was stormed by rebels earlier this week
Rebel military spokesman Col Ahmed Omar Bani said almost 50,000 people arrested in recent months were unaccounted for.The rebels believe they may be being held in underground bunkers, which have since been abandoned.Rights groups have seen evidence that dozens of people have been massacred near prisons, but Col Bani did not accuse anyone of killing the prisoners."The number of people arrested over the past months is estimated at between 57,000 and 60,000," he said in a news conference in Benghazi."Between 10,000 and 11,000 prisoners have been freed up until now... so where are the others?"The colonel appealed for anyone with information to come forward, and said it would be "catastrophic" if they had been killed.
Hunt for Gaddafi
The BBC's Jon Leyne in Benghazi says many rebels and their supporters were detained by fighters loyal to fugitive leader Col Muammar Gaddafi during the struggle for Benghazi and other cities.He says many other activists - and even those just suspected of supporting the revolution - were arrested in waves of security crackdowns, particularly when Col Gaddafi was trying to stop the revolution from spreading to Tripoli.Human Rights Watch has said it has evidence that pro-Gaddafi forces killed at least 17 prisoners and carried out "suspected arbitrary executions of dozens of civilians,

including professionals" in the days before Tripoli fell to the rebels.Reuters news agency claimed earlier this week to have discovered an apparent massacre site in Tripoli; and separately about 50 charred corpses were found in a warehouse south of the capital on Saturday.But it was unclear who was responsible for any of the killings.The rebels stormed Tripoli earlier in the week and took control of almost all of it after two days of fighting.Although sporadic gunshots could be heard in the capital on Sunday, the rebels say they are now in control and are trying to restore basic utilities such as water supply.However, Gaddafi loyalists are continuing to fight in other parts of the country - particularly around Col Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte.Some rebel commanders believe the colonel and his inner circle are likely to have fled to Sirte.But other rumours swirling
around include allegations that the Gaddafis are hiding in Tripoli; that some of them fled to Algiers; or that some have already taken refuge in Europe.On the weekend, a spokesman for the Gaddafi regime offered to open talks with the rebel government, the National Transitional Council.But the NTC rejected the offer, describing the colonel as a criminal who should be put on trial.The UK Foreign Secretary William Hague described the offer of talks as delusional.
Libyan rebels head to the captured town of Bin Jawad, 62 miles from Gaddafi's last coastal stronghold of Sirte. Photograph: Gianluigi Guercia

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