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A militia from the Souk el-Juma neighborhood in Tripoli paid out cash last month to members who had fought in the revolution.Credit...Jehad Nga for The New York Times TRIPOLI, Libya — The militia leaders who have turned post-Qaddafi Libya into a patchwork of semiautonomous fiefs are now plunging into politics, raising fears that their armed brigades could undermine elections intended to lay the fo
Few of us had much clue what we would find as we drifted past a deserted border post into a country run for as long as I could remember by a man regarded as part monster, part clown. What would these newly liberated areas of Libya, under the shaky control of the fledgling revolutionary government, be like after 42 years in the grip of Muammar Gaddafi? Some of what we found as reporters was of litt
The clashes in the oasis region some 400 miles south of Tripoli highlight the fragile authority of the Libyan government, particularly in the isolated settlements that dot the southern desert. With only a nascent national army and police force, Libya's ruling National Transitional Council relies on militias composed of former rebels to keep the peace, and the country's vast distances make it diffi
SOMETIME late last Aug. 8, NATO warplanes flying from Europe arrived over the Libyan farming village of Majer, where forces loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi were withdrawing and anti-Qaddafi forces were claiming ground. Civilians were in motion, too — seeking pockets of safety away from the roaming sides, neither of which fought with precision or clear rules. This is the type of situation in which
Just a year has gone by since the Arab Spring first hit Libya, and celebrations of Libya's liberation from its despicable dictator aren't exactly making headlines. Indeed, has there been much to glorify? There is little semblance of a central government, and intertribal fighting shows no signs of abatement. Are the Libyan people better off now than they were before France and Britain, with the Uni
People with anti-federalization signs and banners gathered during a protest against transforming Libya into a federal state, near the court building in Benghazi on Tuesday.Credit...Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters BENGHAZI, Libya — In a symbolic gesture of defiance, militia and tribal chiefs from eastern Libya gathered here on Tuesday to demand a return to the loose federation that prevailed before Co
去年、カダフィ政権が崩壊した北アフリカのリビアで、東部の部族の指導者らが独自の議会や治安機関を設置して自治を進めると宣言し、今後予定されている議会選挙や憲法の制定など国づくりの行方にも影響を与えそうです。 リビアでは、40年余りにわたって独裁的な支配を続けたカダフィ政権が去年崩壊し、首都トリポリを中心に暫定政府による国づくりが進められています。 こうしたなか、東部の都市ベンガジで6日、部族や民兵組織の指導者らおよそ3000人が集会を開き、中部のシルトから東のエジプト国境までの地域で自治を進めると宣言しました。 宣言では、外交や軍事は中央政府に委ねるものの、独自の議会や治安機関、それに裁判所を設置するとしています。 東部地域は、リビアの主な収入源である油田が集中する一方で、カダフィ政権下では開発が遅れ、西部のトリポリを首都とする政府に対しては歴史的に根強い不信感があります。 自治を行う暫定評
BEIRUT, Lebanon — NATO has not sufficiently investigated the air raids it conducted on Libya that killed at least 60 civilians and wounded 55 more during the conflict there, according to a new United Nations report released Friday. Nor has Libya’s interim government done enough to halt the disturbing violence perpetrated by revolutionary militias seeking to exact revenge on loyalists, real or perc
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