In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, suspected mercenaries sit in a room in a school as they are held by anti-government protesters in the east Libyan city of Albayda Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011.
Xinhua, Nasser Nouri) NO SALES, Associated Press
BENGHAZI, Libya — Packed together in two holding cells in an eastern Libya courthouse, 20 suspected mercenaries accused of fighting for Moammar Gadhafi looked disheveled and frightened Friday as a heavy, iron door opened.
They had reason to be.
Anti-Gadhafi forces said they had captured the men in their successful fight for control of Benghazi, the country's second-largest city, where mercenaries are being blamed for killing scores of protesters. Outside the building, three effigies were hanging from lampposts and flagpoles — all depicting mercenaries.
"If people knew they were up there, they would tear down the door," said Atif el-Hasiya, a spokesman for the local organizing committee, which has taken control of the area after security forces were ousted.
How to handle the cases presents a sensitive challenge for the city's new leaders in the days after they threw off the long and punishing rule of Gadhafi. Mercenaries have become particularly hated and feared figures during the revolt, both for their brutality and because they represent Gadhafi's ability to buy protection for himself in lieu of gaining genuine loyalty.
New York-based Human Rights Watch says many of the mercenaries come from Chad, citing sources in both countries. The international advocacy group is pushing for a legal procedure to be followed in determining what happens next but the process is still somewhat uncertain.
Peter Bouckaert, HRW's emergencies director, who is in Benghazi, said the Chadian consul to Libya had visited Thursday to discuss the treatment of prisoners from the central African nation.
Bouckaert described the fighters from Chad as men "who were not mercenaries specifically recruited to defend Gadhafi but members of (a Chadian) rebel movement Gadhafi has been funding and training for many years who would lose that support if he fell."
"The use of foreign fighters is really Gadhafi's last stand," he added.
It's also possible that African immigrants in the country for work or other reasons have been caught up in the sweeps targeting mercenaries as the young revolutionaries have seized control of several cities.
Gadhafi has long used fighters from other African countries to prop up his regime. But laborers from across the continent have also come to oil-rich Libya in search of work, or on the way to or from jobs — or the hope of jobs — in Europe.
Roland Marchal, a researcher at the national Center for Scientific Research at Sciences-Po in Paris, said that in a sparsely populated country fractured along tribal lines, Gadhafi would want outsiders both to bolster his forces and to ensure tribal loyalties did not undermine loyalty to him.
Many witnesses to the government's failed crackdown on protests described the government militia as including sub-Saharan Africans, and a brief visit with the accused mercenaries, included a group of detainees who seemed to be from farther south in Africa.
In one of the rooms, where seven dark-skinned men were being held, the prisoners spoke English with a distinctly African accent. "It is very dangerous here, we are innocent," shouted one man who did not give his name. "We cannot express ourselves, we are here with our wives. We are not bad people."
All dressed in civilian clothes, the men described themselves as working in the area but didn't — and couldn't — give a greater accounting of themselves as local authorities, calling themselves prosecutors, yelled at them to be silent.
Thirteen Arabic-speaking men, who said they were from Libya, were being held in the other room. They, too, proclaimed their innocence. One, Mohammed al-Damawi, said he was "born in Benghazi." Another said he was from the southern city of Sabha.
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