Revolutionary fighters, collectively known as the National  Liberation Army (NLA) ran into a minefield when they recaptured a  frontline village from Muammar Gaddafi’s forces, they said today,  providing fresh evidence Gaddafi troops are using mines in the uprising.
Libya is not party to the international treaty that bans the use of  landmines, but rights groups say its use of the weapons violates  established norms, especially if they are laid in areas where they pose a  threat to civilians.
NLA mine-clearers showed Reuters a pickup truck with a mounted  anti-aircraft gun they said had been destroyed by an anti-vehicle mine  during a assault to recapture the village of al- Qawalish, which was  briefly seized by Gaddafi’s troops yesterday.
Several dozen anti-personnel mines and anti-vehicle mines were lined  up nearby. The NLA said they had piled them after digging them out  earlier today.
A revolutionary vehicle was also destroyed by a landmine in the area  last week when the village was first captured by the revolutionary  fighters.
Libya denies it has used landmines during the five-month uprising in areas where civilians could be harmed.
New York-based Human Rights Watch, in a report released last month, said  it had found evidence Gaddafi forces have laid dozens of landmines in  the same Western Nafusa Mountains region where Al- Qawalish is located.
“These anti-personnel landmines pose a huge threat to civilians,”  Steve Goose, arms director at Human Rights Watch, was quoted as saying  in the report.
“More than 150 countries have banned landmines, but Libya continues to defy this global trend.”
 
 
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