Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Neo-Colonial Regime in Libya Sends Counter-revolutionary Bandits to Attack Pro-Qaddafi Uprising in the South

No reversal of militia demobilization policy: government

By Sami Zaptia.
Tripoli, 20 January 2014:

Following the “state of emergency” that Libya has declared and the raised level of security as a result of the occupation by pro-Qaddafi supporters of the Tamenhint airbase near Sebha, Libyan authorities called upon all the thuwar (militias) to remobilize and head to the various hotspots to re-impose security.

These hotspots include areas in Ajilat and the general area referred to as Wirshefana south of Ajilat and Zawia and west of Zahra, where alleged pro-Qaddafi supporters were reported to have raised the old Qaddafi-era green flag.

However, the recall of militias by the Libyan state has thrown into confusion government and the GNC policy to demobilize the militias and to relocate them outside of main urban centres.

As a result of this confusion and the large number of questions directed at the government regarding laws 27 and 53, the government released a statement yesterday.

In the statement, the government assured that it had not backtracked and cancelled laws 23 and 53. On the contrary, it clearly stressed that it had “not made any requests” to the GNC to repeal the two relevant laws.

Moreover, it added that the cooperation of the GNC, the government and the public in implementing these two laws is a “patriotic matter” and that the seeking of the creation of a police and an army is a project that “should not be reversed|, irrespective of what “impediments and challenges are faced”.

Such difficulties, the statement added, should not be used as an “excuse to reverse the implementation of the demands of these two laws, whatever those difficulties might be”.

“The return to armed groups (militias) not under the command of the Ministry of Interior or Defence will lead to the extension of confused security situation”, the government statement concluded.

The government statement raises a number of questions regarding the decision to reactivate the militias in the face of a potential national security threat.

The potentially national security threat in the south of Libya, possibly threatening the unity of Libya, confirmed if ever there was a doubt, that the Libyan state is still weak and that it is still unable to deal with any major security incursion .

It also confirms that any regular police force or army that allegedly exist, including the thousands that the government alleges it has trained, exist on paper only.

The Sebha incident also further confirmed what Prime Minister Ali Zeidan admitted himself at a recent press conference that the army is not directly under his control and command, but under the GNC .

Releasing a statement to reinforce his government’s position on laws 27 and 53 on the flushing out of militias from cities and their demobilization, confirmed that the remobilization move was initiated by the GNC.

The security crises, creating a renewed need by the state for the militias, has played into the hands of the recalcitrant militias, undoubtedly strengthening and reinforcing their position.

As a result, there is a danger that the crises will make it more difficult for the government to implement laws no 27 and 53, having just gained the moral higher ground on the militias after the Gharghour incident.

Cynics have of course wondered how real the security crises in Sebha was and whether the GNC themselves was again coerced into remobilizing the militias – by the militias themselves. This fear comes after recent confirmation by Zeidan that the GNC is coerced by militias into passing laws against their will.

Read more: http://www.libyaherald.com/2014/01/20/no-reversal-of-militia-demobilization-policy-government/#ixzz2r6KFcXCv


GECOL warns of power cuts after closure of southern power station

By Libya Herald staff.

Tripoli, 21 January 2014:

The country could be facing power cuts following the temporary closure of Sarir power station in the south of the country, according to the General Electricity Company of Libya (GECOL).

The Sarir power station, which normally produces 450 megawatts, was closed on Sunday as the security situation in the region continued to deteriorate. The move followed the killing of three soldiers in an ambush in the area on Saturday.

Armed clashes in Zahra have further affected electricity supplies, after power lines linking Zahra and South Tripoli power stations were cut, GECOL said. The oil-powered Zahra power station is now running at reduced capacity.

GECOL spokesman Lutfi Ghoma told the Libya Herald that the problems at these plants would directly effect Tripoli and Benghazi which, he said, were the cities that used the most electricity in the country.

Read more: http://www.libyaherald.com/2014/01/21/gecol-warns-of-power-cuts-after-closure-of-southern-power-station/#ixzz2r6MwEptI


Sebha violence continues with no end in sight

By Jamal Adel and Taziz Hasairi.
Tripoli, 19 January 2014:

Sebha officials said that violence in the southern city continued today as Tebu gunmen fired mortars into the city in ongoing clashes with the army.

Despite media reports that violence was subsiding in Sebha, sources on the ground told the Libya Herald that fighting has remained at a constant, although no casualties were reported today.

Head of Sebha Local Council, Ayoub Al-Zaroug, told this newspaper that there had been frequent mortar fire by Tebu militants from the Jabal Arif Gate on the northern edge of the town.

Social affairs coordinator for Sebha Local Council, Zahra Ahmed Dazi, said: “The situation is much the same, no matter what the government is trying to prove, we are still going through challenging times”.

As military leaders in Sebha pledged not to negotiate with the gunmen, fighting looked set to become more entrenched. Sebha’s Military Commander, Mohammed Al-Ayat Al-Busaif, said that the army was unwilling to compromise or negotiate.

Tebu militants have been clashing with the army forces in Sebha since Friday when tribal fighting restarted following a brief truce. Yesterday, Qaddafi loyalists used the spreading instability in the region to gain a foothold at the nearby Tamenhint airbase which they relinquished this morning.

Mohammed Al-Mubasher, a member of the Zintani delegation which arrived in Sebha on Wednesday to try to broker a ceasefire, said that groups previously in Tamenhint had relocated with a large convoy to the road between Barak Shati and Sebha. He called on all [counter] revolutionaries to reassert their efforts.

Read more: http://www.libyaherald.com/2014/01/19/sebha-violence-continues-with-no-end-in-sight/#ixzz2r6NQhKKw

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