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yang puja-puji Kadafi sampai ada mesjid diberi nama Kadafi pun turut 
berpihak untuk menjatuhkan rezim Kadafi.

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/4958/19/Libya-out-of-spiralling-violence.aspx


17-12-2013 08:33PM ET
Libya out of spiralling violence

Ever-entrenched militias, political assassinations and massacres marked 
2013 for Libya, a scene driven and compounded by interwoven ethnic, tribal 
and economic conflicts, writes Kamel Abdallah




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'The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or 
religion ... but rather by its superiority in applying organised violence. 
Westerners often forget this fact; non-Westerners never do'

– Samuel P. Huntington


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This past year brought a marked increase in violence throughout Libya, 
which does not bode well for this Arab Spring country. Violence began to 
escalate following the fall of the Gaddafi regime and the end of the war 
of liberation. By the end of 2012 it had reached a level that drove 
thousands of citizens to stage the “Friday to Save Benghazi” demonstration 
in protest against the proliferation of armed groups in that city. When 
protesters marched against the headquarters of the Ansar Al-Sharia 
militias in mid-December, the ensuing clash resulted in 11 dead and dozens 
wounded. That set the tone for 2013. In January, radical Islamists 
bristling with arms paraded through the city in a display of military 
strength. Another round of clashes erupted, causing three deaths and many 
injuries.

Targeted assassinations of military and security officers had already 
begun in July 2012 with the assassination of then Chief of General Staffs 
of the National Liberation Army Abdel-Fattah Al-Obeidi. General Al-Obeidi 
had been called back from Al-Bariqa front. Yet the actual source of that 
summons and the identity of the assassin remain unknown. In 2013, there 
have been more than 120 assassination attacks against former and present 
military and security personnel, political activists and judges. Perhaps 
the best-known incident was the drive-by shooting of the prominent 
political activist Abdel-Salam Al-Mismari in August as he was coming out 
of a mosque after Friday prayers.

The violence this year was at its most intense in Benghazi and Derna in 
the east, Tripoli, Al-Jamil and Raqdalin in the west, and in Al-Kafra and 
Sabha in the south. The flare-up of conflicts, for the most part tribal in 
nature, revealed long suppressed tensions in these areas, and the fear is 
that if they persist at the current rate they will jeopardise the future 
of the country as a whole.

During the first quarter of 2013, gun battles erupted between affiliates 
of the Tabu Al-Zawiya tribes in the vicinity of Al-Kafra in southeastern 
Libya. More than 20 were killed and over a 100 were wounded in the 
skirmishes. The conflict has ethnic and economic dimensions. The “Arab” 
Al-Zawiya tribes believe that the “African” Tabu, which have extensions in 
Chad, are bringing in fellow tribal members in order to create a new 
demographic balance with the Arabs in that area. They charge that the Tabu 
is forging Libyan identity papers for their relatives in Chad. The Tabu 
accuses the Zawiya of engaging in smuggling and human trafficking. In 
addition, Libyan Tabu leaders have accused the Arabs of waging a war of 
genocide against their tribes. Indeed, Eissa Abdel-Majid, perhaps the 
best-known Libyan Tabu leader, issued this charge against the Interim 
National Council that ruled in the first post-revolutionary phase. The 
council responded by ordering the arrest of Abdel-Majid in August 2012 on 
the charge of “disrupting the social peace”, in spite of the fact that 
Abdel-Majid, himself, was a member of that council.

In spite of ongoing efforts to restore calm in that area, tensions between 
the Zawiya and Tibu still seethe and fighting between them can be sparked 
by the most trivial incident. The most recent flare up of violence 
occurred at the outset of December, following the abduction of five Libyan 
border guards near the Chadian border and the kidnapping of five camel 
herders from the Zawiya tribe.

In the northeast, the wave of political assassinations has remained 
unabated in Derna, now the foremost bastion of jihadist Salafis in Libya 
and, perhaps, the world, and in Benghazi, the bastion of the revolution 
against the Gaddafi regime. In addition to coming in for the lion’s share 
of targeted killings of army and security personnel, political activists 
and judges, Benghazi was also the scene of one of the worst massacres of 
civilians perpetrated by Libyan militias this year. On 5 July 2013, now 
referred to as Black Saturday, 43 civilians were killed and more than 500 
were wounded when gunmen belonging to the so-called Libyan Shield 1 opened 
fire on demonstrators who had marched to their headquarters in the Kofiya 
neighbourhood of east Benghazi to demand the militia to leave the city. 
Citizens of Benghazi had grown suspicious of the Libyan Shield 1’s 
connections with Islamist extremists. Shortly before Black Saturday, they 
had heard reports that the Kofiya headquarters had hosted leader of 
Al-Qaeda of the Islamic Maghreb Mukhtar Belmukhtar, for whom Washington 
has posted a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest.

Like virtually every incidence of militia violence in Libya, the Kofiya 
incident had a strong tribal dimension. The people of Benghazi believed 
that the Libyan Shield 1 regiment in their city was not working on behalf 
of their interests but on behalf of its suspected commanders in Misrata. 
In fact, they are not alone in this suspicion. That the leaders of all 
seven of the Libyan Shield divisions hail from Misrata has triggered 
considerable resentment among many Libyans who feel that that city has 
come to assert excessive control over developments in the country in the 
post-revolutionary phase.

Soon after Black Saturday in Benghazi, another battle with a tribal 
dimension erupted in Mazada, south of Tripoli, in July 2013, after a 
leader from the Qantirar tribe was killed by a gunman belonging the 
Mashashiya tribe. The fighting claimed 12 dead and numerous casualties on 
both sides. The animosity between the two tribes date back to the 1960s 
when the Qantirar accused the Gaddafi regime of dispossessing them of 
property that it then handed over to the Mashashiya tribe. Hostilities 
between them resurfaced during the Libyan revolution, during which the 
Mashashiya sided with the Gaddafi regime, especially after Mashashiya 
members in the Sahban Brigade, the largest of Gaddafi’s brigades at the 
time, attacked the Qantirar tribe.

Libya has a sizeable Amazigh minority, which is primarily concentrated in 
the northwest of Libya and which was also an active force in the 
revolution. In the post-revolutionary power vacuum, this formed another 
facet in the political conflicts with ethnic/tribal dimensions. A notable 
instance occurred in May in the Raqdalin and Al-Jamil areas west of 
Tripoli where gun battles between Amazigh and Arab tribes competing over 
zones of influence and other interests resulted in numerous casualties. 
Around this time, fighting erupted again in the south, between the Tibu 
and the Suleiman tribes after a member of the latter was killed by a 
member of the former.

Apparently, there was even an ethnic/tribal element involved in the 
explosion at a large Libyan Army weapons depot in the vicinity of Sibha in 
the Libyan south. According to official sources, it was the Arab and 
African tribal members involved in thefts of weapons from this warehouse 
who set off the explosion that killed more than 20 people.

It was only natural that the capital would vie with Benghazi in numbers of 
political assassinations. It would also soon follow suit with the Tripoli 
version of Benghazi’s Black Saturday. In November, residents in the 
capital staged a demonstration to protest the continued presence of 
militias in their midst with rising incidents of shootouts between them 
and the intimidation and rights violations these militias inflicted on 
residents themselves. On this occasion, protesters marched into Gharghour, 
an upscale neighbourhood in Tripoli where one of the militias from Misrata 
had established their headquarters in the capital. In an exact replica of 
the Kofiya massacre, the militiamen opened fire randomly into the crowd of 
demonstrators, killing 48 and wounding more than 500.

Needless to say, all the deaths and injuries were caused by live 
ammunition of which the militias have abundant stores. Video footage aired 
on Libyan television documents the array of light and heavy weaponry in 
the hands of all militias and that militiamen will use as readily against 
civilians as against their rivals.

As horrific as this tragedy was, it did contain an element of poetic 
justice. The organisers of the protests had wanted certain militias in 
particular cleared out of the capital. They had in mind the militias from 
Zintan, which were vying over zones of control with the Misrata militias. 
But the demonstrators did not discriminate. They wanted to rid the capital 
of all militia tyranny and they headed to the nearest source at hand, 
which happened to be located in Gharghour where the Misrati militias had 
made themselves at home in the mansions and villas of former officials of 
the Gaddafi regime. In the aftermath of the massacre, much to the 
consternation of those that had organised the demonstrations, public anger 
suddenly honed in on the Misrata militias and the overbearing role of 
Misrata authorities in post-revolutionary Libya.

In the face of the popular outcry, Misrata announced that it would 
withdraw its militias from the capital. At the same time, however, it 
froze the membership of its representatives in the General National 
Council (GNC) and the interim government headed by Ali Zeidan — an action 
that threatened to further obstruct the transitional process. 
Nevertheless, following numerous attempts on the part of various officials 
or tribal leaders to mediate with officials in Misrata’s local municipal, 
military and Shura councils, Misrata yielded to this pressure as well. On 
15 November, it unfroze the membership of its representatives in the GNC 
and the government, “so they can take part in building the new Libya,” as 
a statement issued by the three Misrata councils put it.

Although some Libyans held that the withdrawal of the Misrata militias 
distorted the “balances of power and terror” in the capital, the Zeidan 
government seized this opportunity to push for the withdrawal of all the 
rest of the militias. Backed by an unprecedented level of public support, 
the government was able to force the GNC to issue a law requiring all 
militia groups to evacuate the capital and prohibiting weapons other than 
those in the hands of the army and police. For the first time since the 
fall of the Gaddafi regime, residents of the capital were able to see the 
deployment of the first core of a national army and police force in the 
streets of Tripoli.

After two years of political turmoil, violence and the proliferation of 
gunmen in most cities, Libyans throughout the country long for a return to 
peace and security, and they pray that the government will take advantage 
of the groundswell of popular support to eliminate the militias from the 
political and security scenes. The Zeidan government also received 
encouragement towards this end from the EU and the US, which have 
announced their readiness to help Libya restore security.

However, the challenge is complex and formidable. As the many incidents of 
violence that have punctuated this year have shown, conflicts in Libya are 
shaped by numerous interwoven ethnic, tribal, economic and other factors. 
The massacres that culminated popular demonstrations to eliminate militias 
from the cities of Benghazi and Tripoli not only underscored how 
entrenched the militias have become, but also threw into relief the 
diverse political, tribal and regional layers of this phenomenon. 
Moreover, the proliferation of Islamist extremist groups throughout the 
country further aggravates the situation.

With respect to EU and US offers to help, a recent development highlighted 
Libyan sensitivities on this score. Earlier this month, the UN Security 
Council announced its approval in principle to send in a security team to 
protect the premises and personnel of the UN Support Mission in Libya 
(UNSMIL) in light of the increased threat of terrorist attacks and because 
of the inability of Libyan security forces to perform that function. The 
decision sparked concern and anger in some Libyan quarters that felt this 
was a prelude to foreign intervention, in spite of the fact that, as 
Libyan authorities pointed out, according to the agreement signed between 
the Libyan government and UNSMIL, the UN has the right to furnish its own 
security personnel to protect its premises and personnel.

In short, if Libya’s foremost problem is its deteriorating state of 
security, the convolutions of its political crisis are conspiring to make 
it an increasingly intractable one.

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