http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/23/libya-original-freedom-fighter


Libya's original freedom fighter vows to carry on battle for peace
Death threats from the Libyan militias have driven Gaddafi's former nemesis, 
Hassan al-Amin, to take refuge in London


  a.. Chris Stephen 
  b.. The Observer, Saturday 23 March 2013 14.33 GMT 
  c.. 
 
Hassan Al Amin at his home in London. Photograph: Richard Saker /For The 
Observer
For three decades, Hassan al-Amin was one of Libya's foremost dissidents. He 
organised and agitated against the Gaddafi regime from a tiny office in a 
converted bedroom in his house in south London. When the Arab spring swept the 
country, he returned to a rapturous welcome, being elected last year to the new 
congress and appointed head of its human rights committee. But today he is an 
exile again, chased from Libya by some of the same militias he once hailed as 
heroes.

Amin's story of triumph and banishment is also the story of Libya's slide from 
post-revolutionary triumph to a land ruled by the gun. "I returned to Libya 
with tears in my eyes. I was so hopeful," he says now. "But our revolution has 
been hijacked."

I first met him one baking hot day at the tail end of that revolution, when he 
came to address hundreds of wives, mothers and sisters of Misrata's slain 
militiamen in a mosque at Zarouk, one of the city's battered southern suburbs. 
Rockets were still landing in the city, but the reception was thunderous as he 
outlined the bright future for a country free of dictatorship and able to enjoy 
the riches of Africa's largest oil reserves. "I had a lot of hope then; I 
thought everybody was going to live up to the responsibility." However the guns 
never fell properly silent in Libya. Militia violence is Libya's curse, 
exploding last September with the murder of America's ambassador, Chris 
Stevens, when jihadist gunmen stormed the US consulate in Benghazi.

This month, the violence finally caught up with Amin. He had already clashed 
with some militia leaders in Misrata when he visited jails, demanding that 
prisoners be released to government care. Then, on 5 March, parliament met to 
debate Libya's most contentious issue, the planned purge of Gaddafi-era 
officials from public office.

After days of protests, congress moved to Libya's meteorological office, hoping 
the out-of-town location would spare it violence. Instead, armed protesters 
ringed the building, police melted away and gunmen broke in and held MPs 
hostage for 12 hours. Some female members barricaded themselves in an office; 
others ran for their lives. Trying to escape, speaker Mohammed Magariaf's jeep 
was hit by a fusillade of machine-gun fire.

Amin was on his way to congress when an MP phoned him to warn him of the chaos. 
He diverted to Tripoli's television station, making a live broadcast urging the 
people to save their congress. The decision made him a lightning rod not just 
for protest, but for the anger of rogue militias. Death threats followed, so he 
resigned from congress, the first MP to do so, fleeing back to Britain.

I met him last week back in the small room in his home, its location kept 
secret at his request, and from where he did so much to galvanise support for 
the revolution. His website, Libya Al Mostakbal, Libya The Future, is humming 
again, this time with demands that the militias respect congress. The 
bookshelves are crammed with law books in English and Arabic, the ashtray is 
full, and his lean frame is hunched over a computer as messages of support come 
in from Libya and abroad. "I never thought this would happen. The country is 
now full of militarised groups; some of them are out of control. Thousands of 
prisoners are in jail – they are not charged with anything. I was the chairman 
of the human rights committee and I couldn't do anything."

Life as an exile is a familiar role: Amin, 53, fled Gaddafi's Libya in 1983, 
after being caught up in a purge of his university. He was beaten and tortured, 
then freed with orders to spy on fellow academics. Instead, he escaped to 
London. He arrived on 4 July to find the city bedecked in the Stars and 
Stripes. "I thought I had arrived in the wrong place, everywhere was the 
American flag," he remembers. "Then someone said it was the American 
independence day, and I thought 'Bloody hell, this is my independence day'."

Amin settled in London, marrying a fellow Misratan and starting a family of 
three children, and after getting a master's degree in comparative education at 
London University he began a teaching career at a Surrey school.

Meanwhile, he became a leading activist: each Saturday he would hold vigil with 
a small band of fellow exiles in Trafalgar Square, handing out leaflets against 
Gaddafi. "Sometimes just me and my son were there, in the rain, in the snow. It 
was important to be there."

A year after arriving in Britain, Libyans protested outside the London embassy, 
to be met by a burst of machine gun fire that killed WPC Yvonne Fletcher. Amin 
missed it because his own group had decided that as the protest was organised 
by rival dissidents, its members should stay away. "After that I decided: no 
groups, I would protest as an individual," he says.

When Gaddafi's son Saif Al Islam was invited to speak at the London School of 
Economics in 2009, after he arranged a controversial payment of £1.5m, Amin and 
a handful of activists turned up to demonstrate, to be attacked by pro-Gaddafi 
thugs on the university steps. "I never ever lost hope. I always knew Gaddafi 
would go. What I did not expect was for it to happen in this manner, for the 
people to do it in this big way."

The ubiquity of a revolution that was fought by more than 500 militias has 
proved latterly to be its weakness. While many militias have evolved into 
quasi-police forces, others have turned to gangsterism, with a weak government 
in no position to confront them. The result is a fragmented country and 
economic stagnation; foreign investors have been frightened off and Libya's 
leaders are too divided to tackle the chaos left by Gaddafi's four decades of 
erratic brutal rule.

In February, hamstrung by protests, congress abandoned the so-called Road Map, 
a constitutional declaration devised two years ago that gave it the job of 
supervising Libya's constitution. A new body is to be elected to do the job, 
but with arguments raging over the place of Sharia law in that constitution, 
and with regional leaders squabbling for influence, there is no sign of when 
those elections will happen. "We need a new road map, " says Amin. "Congress is 
the highest legal body in the country: if this legislature is finished, the 
whole country is finished."

For the moment, he is back to a familiar role, and says he is grateful for the 
sanctuary. "Britain is my second home. This country educated me, my children 
were born here, it sheltered me when I was in danger. You know, the ordinary 
people in Libya want peace and stability. "It is up to us, the people, to 
confront the militias."


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