📄 Extracted Text (1,255 words)
The
Economist
Libya
So far, so pretty good
Amid trepidation, the new regime is making
a remarkably hopeful start
Sep 10th 201 1 I TRIPOLI
IN THE evening cool at a fairground on the Tripoli waterfront, giggling children chant as they
spin on a merry-go-round. But theirs is no childish rhyme. Their joyful cry is the revolutionary
mantra that has been echoing across the Arab world: "The people demand the fall of the regime!"
A fortnight after its mercifully quick delivery from six months of harsh lock-down under the
dying regime of Colonel Muammar Qaddafi, the Libyan capital is slowly coming back to life, if
not yet to full normality. Most Libyans see the 42 years of the colonel's rule as an ordeal to be
erased from memory. They are now entering something completely new, and facing it with the
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mixed trepidation and wonder of someone waking from a nightmare. It is hard to move through
Tripoli without being stopped and regaled with stories of the horrors of the colonel's rule.
Much of this city of 2m still feels half empty, with most shops shuttered. This reflects not only
lingering fears of a pro-Qaddafi fifth column, but continued shortages and the exodus of foreign
workers. Petrol queues in some areas stretch for a kilometer. Crowds throng bakeries, where
bread is scarce not for lack of flow but because the Egyptians who ran them are gone. "Libyans
expect to work behind a desk in air-conditioning, not in a hot oven," shrugs a weary customer.
There is not yet much sign of government in Tripoli. Some ministers have come over from
Benghazi, the rebels' base in the east. The National Transitional Council (NTC), a body of 40-
odd people that sets general policy, is meant to relocate soon. Meanwhile the capital is run by
groups of volunteers and policed in random fashion by cheerful bands of bearded fighters who
cruise around in pickups mounted with heavy guns and lounge at checkpoints. Tripolitanians
seem happy to see them, despite their nerve-jangling bursts of celebratory gunfire. But the NTC,
wary of alienating Tripoli's citizens, is urging fighters to return to their native regions, and is
taking steps to register and collect guns.
First, the rebel forces must finish the fighting. It
Ada TUNISIA seems to be going well. Only three isolated
pockets within Libya's vast expanse remain in
NORO(EO oMP" ° Benghazi loyalist hands. In two of them, the colonel's
O
Ban, O
Walk, sine home town of Sine, along the main coast road,
ALGERIA and Bani Walid, 160km (100 miles) south-east of
O Setha EGYPT
LIBYA Tripoli, tribal elders seem keen to capitulate but
plead for more time to persuade the colonel's
A H A
diehard supporters to give up. "They still believe
MALI NIGER the rebels are rapists and looters," says Mullah
CHAD SUDAN Rabbani, a leader of the Warfallah tribe in Bani
750km
Walid, during a pause in talks held at a roadside
NIGERIA mosque on the front-line. "Propaganda is
Qaddafi's last weapon," he adds, "but even that is
almost gone." To help persuade doubters of their good intent, rebel commanders have put local
brigades at the spearhead of the assault, repeating a tactic that has helped promote speedy
resolutions elsewhere.
Mr. Rabbani says most loyalist forces have already slipped out of Bani Walid, a town of 60,000
whose capture would place the whole of the country's fertile coastal zone, which contains around
95% of Libya's 6m people, under the control of the new authorities. Colonel Qaddafi, perhaps
with the three of his seven sons who have not been killed by NATO air strikes or taken asylum in
Algeria, is presumed to be heading farther south across the desert with his closest comrades. The
Algerian authorities, criticised for previously letting in other members of the colonel's family,
say they have turned back convoys of fleeing loyalists. But others have crossed the unguarded
border into Niger.
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This suggests they do not feel safe in the last loyalist stronghold, the oasis of Sebha. Some of the
tribes there have a history of hostility to the colonel, while the rugged Tuareg people who
populate a swathe of the Sahara desert from Libya to Mali, and were long favored by the Libyan
leader with jobs and guns, seem to be abandoning him. Tuareg elders in Mali and Niger, fearing
an influx of armed brethren, are telling the colonel's soldiers to stay in Libya and join the new
regime's forces.
NATO aircraft are continuing their patrols but are less needed, since the rebels now far outgun
Colonel Qaddafi's forces. Western aircraft have refrained from targeting fleeing loyalists. This
would fall outside their UN mandate to protect civilians, which in any case ends on September
27th. Libyans largely praise NATO pilots for their accuracy, dismissing tales of civilian
casualties as propaganda. Yet government officials say they do not want Libya now to be
overrun by foreign do-gooders. They want to rebuild the country by themselves.
The NTC has provisional plans to elect a "national congress" within eight months and draft a
constitution in its first 60 days. This process, Libyans recognize, is fraught with obstacles. The
country has little experience of democracy, no political parties, a fragile justice system and
fledgling free media. The rebel army, made up of some 50 regionally based katibas (brigades)
with remnants of the professional armed forces, is loosely organized and ill-disciplined.
Weapons proliferate, including explosives and rockets in unguarded piles. Decades of shambolic
administration have left a legacy of shoddy infrastructure, tangled bureaucracy and
administrative incompetence. Tensions persist between regions, between Islamists and
secularists, and between those demanding a purge of former officials and those counselling
pragmatic accommodation.
So far, pragmatism and dialogue seem to have prevailed. Mainstream Islamists, such as the
economy minister, Abdullah Shamia, speak not of imposing Islamic law but of respecting
contracts with foreign oil companies, diversifying the economy away from oil dependence,
wooing investment, and regulating the labor market to block a new influx of migrant workers
seeking passage to Europe. Most Libyans scoff at the notion that al-Qaeda may gain a foothold.
Libyan society is already conservative and tradition-bound, they note, as well as religiously
uniform, observing just one of the four accepted Sunni rites.
Abdel Hakim Belhaj, Tripoli's new military commander, a veteran of the Libyan Islamic
Fighting Group denounced by Western governments for having links to al-Qaeda, is widely
respected. Despite his arrest in Malaysia back in 2004, his alleged torture by the CIA and his
dispatch to a Libyan prison, he now categorically denies having any ties to al-Qaeda or animosity
to the West. "We want a civil state that respects the law and rights, a state that applies justice,"
he told Le Monde, a French newspaper. "We will give back our weapons; we are not here to
establish a Taliban-like regime through a coup."
Libya has a lot going for it. Even if, as some experts suggest, it takes many months to restore oil
production to pre-revolution levels, the country may draw on a stash of sovereign foreign assets
estimated by Mr. Shamia at more than $170 billion. Libya's large and talented exile community,
which contributed greatly to the revolution, is eager to return and invest. In the eyes of Libyans
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emerging from their long trauma, the future looks far brighter for them than for other Arab
neighbors after their revolutions.
***********
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ℹ️ Document Details
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