April 24, 2011
Berber Rebels in Libya's West Face Long Odds Against Qaddafi
By SCOTT SAYARE

DHIBA BORDER CROSSING, Tunisia — For decades, the remote mountains of western 
Libya have simmered with resentment. An enclave of the Berber minority, 
mistrusted and neglected by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi's Arab nationalist 
government, the region's isolated hamlets were among the first to join the 
uprising, raising the rebel flag on the first day of the revolt.

But the Nafusah Mountain range, which rises out of the desert at the Tunisian 
border as a sudden, hazy shadow and runs several hundred miles east in a narrow 
chain, is hardly a rebel stronghold. Rebel fighters in the region estimate 
their ranks at just a few hundred ill-equipped and untrained young men.

It came as a shock, then, when they captured a border crossing near Wazen last 
week, a strategic victory for the beleaguered rebel forces that thrust the 
desert region under the world's gaze. Colonel Qaddafi has also turned his 
attention to the region, escalating a low-grade war of attrition into what may 
prove an important battlefront.

Having put down more serious challenges to his rule in Zawiyah and Zawarah, on 
the northern coast between Tripoli and Tunisia, and pulled troops out of 
Misurata, the second largest western city, on Saturday, Colonel Qaddafi has 
massed troops along the mountains and launched missiles on its towns, according 
to residents and rebel fighters.

The fighting has driven about 30,000 Libyans into Tunisia, according to the 
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Libyans there said they had been 
under siege weeks before the recent escalation. Government troops have held the 
desert plains below the mountains since mid-March, they said, cutting off 
supplies of food, gasoline and medicine, and, several witnesses said, poisoning 
the wells of at least one town.

"He has been trying to starve us," said Jamal Maharouk, 47, a gaunt, weathered 
former soldier of Colonel Qaddafi's army, now a rebel fighter. He had driven to 
a Tunisian hospital in Tataouine, about 50 miles northwest of the Libyan 
border, to visit a young cousin wounded in battle outside the town of Zintan 
and secreted across the border for treatment.

Like other fighters, Mr. Maharouk insisted that rebel actions in the area were 
purely defensive. "By my god, these are peaceful people fighting against an 
evil regime," he said.

The government denies that it has cut off food and utilities, poisoned wells or 
even that the refugees in Tunisia are really refugees.

Moussa Ibrahim, a spokesman for the Qaddafi government, said the refugees were 
lying in order to win support from NATO. He said the government had intercepted 
and recorded phone calls among rebels planning to stage a bogus refugee crisis 
by forcing members of their families to cross the border into Tunisia and 
report atrocities.

"They are fake refugee camps," he said. "Qatar is paying for them."

Before the rebels captured the border crossing at Wazen, the region seemed to 
hold little strategic value, raising questions about why the government would 
divert resources from more pressing battles elsewhere. The border crossing, 
which now gives the rebels a supply route in the west, may be part of the 
explanation.

But Colonel Qaddafi has long harbored antagonism toward the Berbers, a non-Arab 
ethnic group of mostly Ibadi Muslims in a country that is majority Sunni. He 
has accused them of being Zionists and agents of the C.I.A., said Mansouria 
Mokhefi, the director of the Middle East and Maghreb program at the French 
Institute of International Relations in Paris.

Berbers and the region in general have been largely excluded from the 
distribution of oil revenues, she said, and residents complain of little 
government investment in schools or infrastructure. "Development never came all 
the way to them," she said. "They have truly lived in a sort of exclusion."

Beyond neglect, Colonel Qaddafi has forbidden citizens from giving their 
children Berber names, disallowed the teaching of the Berber language in 
schools and banned Berber festivals and holidays. Protests in the 1990s 
demanding the right to practice their culture openly were put down forcibly by 
the police and followed by a series of public hangings, instilling a profound 
animosity toward the government.

Shortly after the uprising began in mid-February, Colonel Qaddafi offered the 
families of Zintan and other towns across the Nafusah range a bribe, residents 
said, a onetime payment of about $1,200 in exchange for their allegiance. Most 
declined.

The missile strikes began soon after.

Salim Issa, 50, an electrician, fled the town of Nalut on Friday after what he 
called heavy missile strikes the night before. He arrived in Medenine, Tunisia, 
with his wife, sister and nine of his children. Fearing for the two sons he 
left behind, he declined to give his full name.

He said there were rumors that loyalist forces had orders to kill everyone in 
the city, and that soldiers had been given Viagra and explicit orders to rape.

The town of Yafren, about 100 miles east of Nalut, was reported to have been 
captured by government forces over the weekend. But by then the town was all 
but deserted. Just a handful of rebel fighters and elderly residents, too weak 
to flee, were thought to remain, hiding in basements.

Salim, 32, a nurse's assistant, said Yafren had been surrounded by Qaddafi 
forces and under fire for about a month, leaving it with no water, food or 
electricity. "No nothing," he said, adding that the only food had been smuggled 
in across the desert.

Perhaps even more than on the eastern front, the rebels in the Nafusah 
Mountains are outmatched.

Mounir Ramdan, 25, a youthful fighter from Nalut who was visiting his family in 
Tataouine, said about 40 government pickup trucks mounted with heavy machine 
guns and rocket launchers were stationed near the road between Nalut and 
Zintan, to the east. Mr. Ramdan, who has no gun, has been acting as a scout.

For each rebel fighter with a weapon, "you find 50 without guns," said Fathi, a 
rebel being treated at the hospital in Tataouine.

He had been operating a machine gun mounted in the back of pickup when he was 
tossed from the vehicle during a skirmish near Zintan, breaking his left femur 
and dislocating his right hip. At the time of his injury, the rebels in Zintan 
had four or five 14.5-millimeter machine guns, stolen from government troops, 
he said, but most were armed with antique Italian rifles, knives or home-forged 
iron swords.

The government forces have been ordered to "clean" Zintan, he said, and he had 
little doubt about their ability to do so. Without heavier NATO airstrikes 
against Colonel Qaddafi's armor and more weapons, he said, it will be "90 
percent impossible" for the rebels to hold their ground in the western 
mountains.

Colonel Qaddafi, he warned, "will kill us all."

Other fighters were less bleak. Puffing on the stub of a cigarette at the 
Tunisian border, a tall, bearded fighter named Toufik guessed that the rebels 
in the region were outnumbered by loyalist troops five to one.

Asked how they had succeeded in capturing the border post last week, he grinned 
and pointed an index finger to the sky.

"God gave us a victory," he said.

David D. Kirkpatrick contributed reporting from Tripoli, Libya.




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