War-weary Libyans miss life under Kadhafi

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Five years after an uprising killed Libya's Moamer Kadhafi, residents in the chaos-wracked country's capital joke they have grown to miss the longtime dictator as the frustrations of daily life mount.

Those living in the capital say they are exhausted by power cuts, price hikes and a lack of cash flow as rival authorities and militias battle for control of the fragmented oil-rich country.

"I hate to say it but our life was better under the previous regime," says Fayza al-Naas, a 42-year-old pharmacist, referring to Kadhafi's more than four decades of rule.

Today, "
we wait for hours outside banks to beg cashiers to give us some of our own money. Everything is three times more expensive."

A UN-backed unity government has struggled to assert its authority nationwide since arriving in Tripoli in March, with a rival parliament in the country's far east refusing to cede power to it.

On Friday it suffered a new blow when a rival seized key offices in the capital and proclaimed the reinstatement of a third administration previously based in Tripoli.

The turmoil after Kadhafi's 2011 fall has allowed the Islamic State jihadist group to gain a foothold on Europe's doorstep after seizing the strongman's hometown of Sirte in June last year.

Forces loyal to the unity government have for five months been fighting to expel the last jihadists from the former IS stronghold, with support from US air strikes since early August.

With the loyalists weakened by the anti-IS battle, forces led by a controversial field marshal last month seized key oil terminals to its east, allowing the National Oil Company to resume crude exports.

The eastern parliament has thrown its support behind Khalifa Haftar, who presents himself as Libya's saviour in the face of a growing jihadist threat but is a hugely divisive figure.

- 'Chaos or military rule' -

While his army has ousted most jihadists from Benghazi, the birthplace of the 2011 uprising, his detractors accuse him of working towards the single goal of seizing power to establish a new military dictatorship.

"Libyans are forced to choose between two extremes: either chaos with militias and Islamist extremists as the dominant forces, or military rule," said Libya analyst Mohamed Eljarh.

"No other convincing options are on offer," added Eljarh, of the Rafik Hariri Centre for the Middle East.

Haftar's forces have fought for more than two years to expel jihadists from second city Benghazi, while pro-GNA forces are caught up in fighting IS in Sirte.

According to Libya expert Mattia Toaldo, these rival forces might then want to extend their influence in other areas of the country and be met with tough local resistance.

"It is hard to think that the country will be stabilised any time soon," said Toaldo.

"Libyans seem to have swapped a repressive centralised authoritarianism with a more decentralised and chaotic form of authoritarianism, be it under militias or under the rule of general Haftar."

The persistent chaos has also enabled human traffickers to step up their lucrative trade in the Mediterranean nation, with thousands of migrants dreaming of Europe drowning off the Libyan coast.

And Libya has been the launchpad of deadly attacks on holidaymakers in neighbouring Tunisia.
(beach shooting and Bardo Museum)

https://www.yahoo.com/news/war-weary-libyans-miss-life-under-kadhafi-055129690.html
 
Again,it is not all soon and gloom!

http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=1&i=11129

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same source again? a great many of those are Mistrata militia who aregoing upagainst ISIS in Sirte -once ISIS is kicked out, where do the loyalties lie?

And don't forget Haftar is in Bengazi with at least as many of his army. (House of Representatives)

I need to find out what this is all about:

it suffered a new blow when a rival seized key offices in the capital and proclaimed the reinstatement of a third administration previously based in Tripoli.
-is this the General National Congress?
 
yep. it's the GNC:

Presidential Guard says no longer supports Libyan political agreement
October 17, 2016 - 12:23


he Presidential Guard said on Sunday the Libyan political agreement signed in Skhirat, Morocco, was reached to reinstate the military rule after four decades of dictatorship, confirming it will now back the General National Congress.

In a statement read from the parliament building, the PG indicated that the UN-installed Presidency Council has failed to provide basic needs of people and win the Libyan consensus while security and economic crises have deepened since its arrival in Tripoli.

“We agreed with other revolutionary brigades to restore legitimacy to the GNC, the only legitimate authority in Libya after the Supreme Court ruling in November 2014.” The statement said.

Meanwhile, the High Council of State has vowed to arrest the defected members of the Presidential Guard while council member Abdul-Rahman Al-Shatar confirmed the council is still operating and it would relocate in another HQ to implement the political agreement.

The Head of Investigation Bureau at the Office of the Attorney General Siddiq Al-Soor has also issued an arrest warrant for the defected members of the Presidential Guard, similar to the one issued for renegade General Khalifa Haftar in 2014 when he staged a coup against the GNC and then-government of Ali Zidan.
http://www.libyaobserver.ly/news/pr...no-longer-supports-libyan-political-agreement

this is from the Libyan Observer: http://www.libyaobserver.ly/ -that Tripoli rag is a UN construct
 
he General National Congress and its Salvation government led by Khalifa Al-Ghawiel took control of parliament meetings compound in Rixos on Friday.

Sources said the takeover was coordinated with the Presidential Guard who have closed the HQ and prevented the administrative staff and members of the High Council of State from entering over unpaid salaries since last Monday.

The GNC and SG declared a state of emergency in Tripoli in anticipation of any counter reactions and deployed several military vehicles around Rixos for protection.

Khalifa Al-Ghawiel called his eastern rival Abdullah Al-Thanni to form a joint unity government to end the political crisis
http://www.libyaobserver.ly/news/gnc-retakes-parliament-compound-high-council-state-condemns
 
yep. it's the GNC:

Presidential Guard says no longer supports Libyan political agreement
October 17, 2016 - 12:23


he Presidential Guard said on Sunday the Libyan political agreement signed in Skhirat, Morocco, was reached to reinstate the military rule after four decades of dictatorship, confirming it will now back the General National Congress.

In a statement read from the parliament building, the PG indicated that the UN-installed Presidency Council has failed to provide basic needs of people and win the Libyan consensus while security and economic crises have deepened since its arrival in Tripoli.



Meanwhile, the High Council of State has vowed to arrest the defected members of the Presidential Guard while council member Abdul-Rahman Al-Shatar confirmed the council is still operating and it would relocate in another HQ to implement the political agreement.

The Head of Investigation Bureau at the Office of the Attorney General Siddiq Al-Soor has also issued an arrest warrant for the defected members of the Presidential Guard, similar to the one issued for renegade General Khalifa Haftar in 2014 when he staged a coup against the GNC and then-government of Ali Zidan.
http://www.libyaobserver.ly/news/pr...no-longer-supports-libyan-political-agreement

this is from the Libyan Observer: http://www.libyaobserver.ly/ -that Tripoli rag is a UN construct
Bullshit, the Tripoli Post has been going for nearly 20 years!

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Bullshit, the Tripoli Post has been going for nearly 20 years!

Sent from my Lenovo K52e78 using Tapatalk
yes. 1999. it's still garbage. look at the headlines. Oil ( the one bright spot of improvement -but still FUBAR)
and this claim of Libyan army of somehow being representative. I see no coverage of the civil war? Militias?
It's Tripoli based like the Salvation Government (GNA)

Try the Libyan Herald -or my go to source the Libyan Observer http://www.libyaobserver.ly/
 
yes. 1999. it's still garbage. look at the headlines. Oil ( the one bright spot of improvement -but still FUBAR)
and this claim of Libyan army of somehow being representative. I see no coverage of the civil war? Militias?
It's Tripoli based like the Salvation Government (GNA)

Try the Libyan Herald -or my go to source the Libyan Observer http://www.libyaobserver.ly/
Yes I look at the Libya Herald as well!!

https://www.libyaherald.com/2016/10/13/noc-chief-sanalla-says-oil-output-up-to-554000-barrels-a-day/

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Iraqis said the same thing after Shock And Awe

Well, lets give the dick & bush cred here, there are lots less ppl in Iraq complaining now~their dead, or had to leave the country/mess that was left after the unprovoked attack......:rolleyes::rolleyes:
 
War-weary Libyans miss life under Kadhafi

The same's been said about the Iraqi's.....without Saddam Hussein, around, to keep the lid on the religious-fundamentalists, there.

https://www.globalpolicy.org/iraq-c...-/us-and-british-support-for-huss-regime.html


George-Bush-Mission-accomplished.jpg
 
Well, lets give the dick & bush cred here, there are lots less ppl in Iraq complaining now~their dead, or had to leave the country/mess that was left after the unprovoked attack......:rolleyes::rolleyes:
give HRCliton some 'credit' for destruction of cites/endless civil war/poverty/currency shortages/homelessnes,and of course 10's of thousands dead in Libya.

destruction4.jpg

Bengazi
 
^ one of Bush's few foreign policy successes. Qaddaffi became a valuable allie on the war on terror -
until we decided to kill him - and destroy his country by Clinton/Obama; infesting it with ISIS
 
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