Libyan militias are out
of control and holding thousands of people in secret detention centres,
while the weak interim government struggles to assert its authority, the
UN has heard.
The Security Council was told recent violence in Tripoli, Bani Walid and Benghazi highlighted the problem.
More than 8,000 pro-Gaddafi supporters are being held by militia groups, amid reports of torture, officials warned.
Four died in clashes in Bani Walid, a former Gaddafi stronghold, on Monday.
The UN's Libya envoy, Ian Martin, told the Security Council
in New York on Wednesday that those clashes between armed residents of
Bani Walid and revolutionaries had been misreported as pro-Gaddafi
forces retaking the city.
Nevertheless, he
said, it highlighted the challenge of reconciling the former leader's
supporters and the rebels that had defeated them.
Militias were responsible for fatal clashes in Tripoli and fighting in other towns this month, he said.
"The former regime may have been toppled, but the harsh
reality is that the Libyan people continue to have to live with its
deep-rooted legacy," said Mr Martin.
He described that legacy as "weak, at times absent, state
institutions, coupled with the long absence of political parties and
civil society organisations, which render the country's transition more
difficult".
Mr Martin said some steps had been taken towards demobilising ex-combatants.
But the government was struggling to establish its
legitimacy, he added, with weapons freely available and various armed
brigades having unclear lines of command and control.
While authorities had so far successfully contained any
outbreaks of violence, they could escalate and widen in scope, he
warned.
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