A Libyan prison boss accused of overseeing murder, rape, and torture at a notorious detention centre appeared at the International Criminal Court on Wednesday to face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Khaled Mohamed Ali El Hishri was sent to the Netherlands on Monday by Germany, where he was arrested in July on a sealed ICC warrant. Prosecutors allege that he was a senior commander at Tripoli's Mitiga prison and ordered or oversaw crimes there between 2015 and 2020.
On Wednesday, Mr El Hishri, 47, sat impassively before the three-woman judging panel and confirmed his name and date of birth. He is accused of six counts of war crimes and six crimes against humanity, including torture, murder, rape, sexual violence and persecution.
The ICC, which tries individuals for the world's worst crimes, believes there are βreasonable groundsβ to believe he personally killed one detainee at the prison, which he ran with an iron fist.
It was the first ICC appearance by a Libyan suspect since the court began investigating atrocities committed during the country's civil war in 2011, and the court has nine outstanding arrest warrants for Libyan suspects.
A βsignificant numberβ of people died during Mr El Hishri's time there, either from torture, being left outside in winter, untreated injuries, or starvation, the court said.
ICC judges believe at least five detainees, including a 15-year-old boy, were raped by guards or other prisoners. Women prisoners were also subjected to sexual abuse, the court alleged.
The court alleges Mr El Hishri took part in βpersonally torturing, mistreating, sexually abusing and killing detaineesβ and also βexercised h
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