UN accuses Gaddafi/government forces of systematic war crimes in Libyan conflict
UN investigators find evidence of systematic war crimes and crimes against humanity by Col Muammar Gaddafi's government forces in Libya.
Rights experts said they had found evidence of crimes including murder and torture, in a pattern suggesting Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was behind them.
The UN mission also said opposition forces were guilty of abuses that would constitute war crimes, although they were not as numerous.
The findings, released on Wednesday in Geneva, come after the NATO three-man mission extended its mission in Libya by a further 90 days. The UN investigators' report.
The trio of investigators travelled to Libya to carry out the investigation, and met both sides in the conflict, as well as human rights groups and medical professionals, and families of those detained.
"In accordance with its mandate to look also at crimes committed in Libya, the commission has... reached the conclusion that crimes against humanity and war crimes have been committed by the government forces of Libya," the commission said in a statement.
"The commission received fewer reports of facts which would amount to the commission of international crimes by opposition forces, however, did find some acts which would constitute war crimes."
The report raised concerns about alleged acts by Libyan rebels of torture and cruel treatment, particularly against migrant workers.
It will be debated by the UN human rights council in Geneva on Monday.
Earlier on Wednesday at a meeting in Brussels, 28 NATO member states unanimously agreed to prolong the alliance's mission in Libya.
The Libyan intervention was mandated by the UN - and led by France, Britain and the US until 31 March - when NATO took over.
It was given an initial 90 days, which would have run out on 27 June.
The group based its findings on interviews with 350 people in government- and rebel-held areas of the country, as well as in refugee camps outside its borders.
Aside from NATO members, the talks at alliance headquarters included ambassadors from the five non- NATO countries participating in the Libya campaign - Jordan, Qatar, Sweden, the United Arab Emirates and Morocco.
The decision was seen as practical in part - to accommodate the military planners of the contributing forces - but correspondents say it also aims to send a message of support to the rebels.
NATO intervened in Libya after the UN passed a resolution for the protection of civilians, amid a two-month revolt inspired by other uprisings in the Arab world.
It has intensified raids in recent weeks with attacks on command-and-control structures in the capital Tripoli.