http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=OTMyNTA1NTY0OQ==
 
Analysis
In Tripoli limbo, militias grow assertive
Published Date: October 04, 2011 
By William Maclean 



Rigged with belt-fed machineguns and spray-painted with the names of provincial 
towns, the militia trucks that roam Tripoli are a daily reminder to its 
residents of how militarised their new political landscape has become. In a 
country eager to swap the gun for the ballot box, the assertive presence of 
armed groups in the capital is seen by many as an unwelcome attempt to occupy 
the political vacuum created by the fall of Muammar Gaddafi six weeks ago.

In theory the heavily-armed paramilitaries are allies against Gaddafi, but in 
practice the behaviour of the various groups, their loyalty pledged principally 
to their respective home towns, suggests they are morphing into determined 
rivals. War-weary Libyans are concerned the competition remains peaceful. 
Azzedine Ageel, a columnist in February newspaper, wrote: "One of the dangers 
is that, in the absence of a strong government and firmly-rooted security and 
justice institutions, people will resort to the law of the jungle and take 
matters into their own hands.

On a visit to Tripoli last week, US Senator Lindsey Graham said Libya had a 
very bright future, "but there are fault lines. When this war is over, someone 
has to convince the militias to lay down their guns and follow the rule of 
law". "This can be a showcase for what the Arab Spring is all about. But if you 
don't watch it, it can go backwards.

Gaddafi may still be at large, but his last bastions are under siege, and so, 
Libyans say, opposition to him is increasingly unable to act, as it once did, 
as the glue that sealed the inter-provincial alliance of convenience that ended 
his rule. Many of these militias have stayed on, saying they are needed to 
provide security. Many see thinly-veiled attempts to stake rival claims to 
national power, pointing to statements by several groups extolling the exploits 
of their men during the uprising.

Aside from provincial rivalries, there is competition between the Islamist-run 
Tripoli Military Council, which has nominal control over the whole city and is 
believed to be backed by Qatar, and formations loyal to the interim Prime 
Minister Mahmoud Jibril, a Western-trained technocrat. Making political 
statements continues to be an activity pursued by men in uniform as much as by 
the civilian leaders of the country's interim authority.

A diplomat said weapons confiscated by militias from the many arsenals used by 
Gaddafi forces during the uprising had been stored in agreed locations as part 
of attempts to remove unlicensed weapons from the city. But some, he said, had 
found their way back to their respective home cities. "It's a dangerous game," 
the diplomat said. "The militias are suspicious of each other. They think 
accumulating weapons gives them a stake in political power.

At first glance, Tripoli remains a city in celebration. But as the weeks wear 
on, euphoria is receding and everyday concerns are pressing. The city wants to 
get back to business. The militias say they will be gone when the state 
institutions are restored. But residents are questioning when that will be. "It 
needs attention," said an official of the National Transitional Council, the 
country's caretaker government, referring to relations between the rival armed 
groups in the capital of two million people.


In one recent incident reported by residents, gunmen from one militia tried to 
break into a downturn office tower overnight. They were prevented from taking 
the location, a prized property which has a extensive car parking facilities, 
when local residents came onto the streets carrying guns and ordered them out. 
In another incident reported by several residents of the capital, several 
hundred militiamen mobilised for an armed confrontation when they learnt a 
colleague had been beaten up by a member of another militia. Only the 
intervention of their commander persuaded the men to back down, the residents 
said.

The NTC authorities say they are well aware of the risks and are working hard 
to ensure all parties keep talking to each other. De facto head of state and 
NTC chairman Mustafa Abdel Jalil held a successful meeting with militias last 
week to gain greater cooperation, an NTC officials said. One foreign official 
who knows the NTC leadership well said: "Jalil is not the kind of man to knock 
heads together." On Sunday evening, the February newspaper reported, all 
security and military councils of Tripoli met and agreed to unify under one 
umbrella. Militias originating in other towns should move outside the city 
limits, it said. There was no immediate comment from the NTC on the report.

The NTC has said all parties should understand that the country is still in a 
conflict and full normality cannot be expected. "Our freedom fighters are brave 
people and they cannot be called bad names. Our freedom fighters are the people 
who did their best to keep Libya free under any circumstances," Ahmed Bani said 
in September. "At the end of this period all of the people who have no relation 
to the gun will hand back their guns. There is no room for radical thought or 
disorderly behaviour in our actions
.".

The main security institution in the Libyan capital is the Tripoli Military 
Council, which is run by Abdulhakim Belhadj, a veteran Islamist foe of Gaddafi. 
Several large militias in the city say they cooperate with his council, but 
have no formal link to it. Mukhtar Al-Akhdar, leader of a militia from Zintan, 
told Reuters all were cooperating well. "Everyone has this as a mind set to 
secure the safety of Tripoli and other liberated cities. Of course there are 
violations; we are not saints or angels. These violations even took place 
during the previous regime; but generally the violations are minor. "You have 
to know that we came here based on a plan; we did not come here just like that. 
Tripoli did not move on its own. We all moved based on a plan that was agreed 
upon.

On Sunday, a revolutionary officer announced the creation of a new armed group, 
the Tripoli Revolutionists Council, to keep order in Tripoli, a mission that 
analysts say may overlap uneasily with that of Belhadj's Council. An analyst in 
Tripoli who did not want to be identified as the subject was sensitive said 
Naker's remarks suggested he was a supporter of Jibril. Supporters of Belhadj 
make little secret of their disdain for Jibril, who they say is seeking to 
exclude them from a share of power following Gaddafi's fall.

George Joffe, a Libya expert at Cambridge University, said he regarded the 
announcement of the new Council as "a very negative development". It either 
meant the NTC had lost control of the military situation or it meant a faction 
inside the NTC had decided to take on the Islamists. Some analysts say that the 
strains evident in Tripoli are a result of the fact that it fell so quickly. It 
did not have the chance, as Benghazi did, of developing a civil society and a 
tradition of post-revolutionary debate in the six months between its liberation 
and Gaddafi's fall. Tripoli's politicians, they suggest, just need practice.

On Friday, in Bengazi, for the second successive week, the imam at Tahrir 
square, the epicenter of the uprising against Gaddafi, said Libya was now one 
country for all its people and expressed gratitude for "martyrs" from different 
cities naming Misrata, Benghazi, Ajdabiyah, Garyan and many others. He said no 
one should claim credit for a specific city over another. "If you hear a tongue 
saying that, cut it," he said. - Reuters

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke