FILE - In this Friday, July 29, 2011 file photo, Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim talks during a press conference concerning the death of Abdel-Fattah Younis, in Tripoli, Libya. The Libyan government on Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012 announced the capture of Moammar Gadhafi's ex-spokesman, Moussa Ibrahim, as he was trying to flee Bani Walid, as the oil-rich North African nation marked the anniversary of the ousted dictator's death. Bani Walid has been the site of fierce fighting between pro-government forces and fighters holed up in what was once a stronghold for Gadhafi supporters. |
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -- On the anniversary of the capture and killing of Moammar Gadhafi, Libya is still grappling with the legacy of his four decades of rule as the interim government and the dictator's former spokesman engaged in a war of words amid the ongoing chaos.
The
Libyan government said Saturday that its forces had detained Gadhafi's
high profile spokesman Moussa Ibrahim, but an online recording from a
man purporting to be Ibrahim denied that claim and said he wasn't
even
in the country.
The conflicting reports,
neither of which could be independently verified, reflect the turmoil
that has persisted over the past year, leaving the oil-rich North
African nation deeply divided. Tensions have spiked as rival forces
battle over the city of Bani Walid.
Bani
Walid, some 140 kilometers (90 miles) southeast of Tripoli, was the last
major city in Libya to fall to the uprising, thanks in part to its
protected location in a valley near the mountains. Over the past year,
it has seen periodic violence and emerged as the most significant town
in Libya still resisting the country's new authorities since Gadhafi was
slain near his hometown of Sirte last year.
"We've
lost too many people in Bani Walid and we are still losing them so I
don't think it's time for a celebration," said Abdessalem Mahfoud, a
local neighborhood council member in Tripoli, when asked about the
anniversary of Gadhafi's death.
The turmoil in
Libya, which overthrew Gadhafi last year with the help of NATO
airstrikes, has become a campaign issue in the U.S. presidential race
after an attack on the U.S. consulate in the eastern city of Benghazi
killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
For
many who fought against Gadhafi, the new Libya cannot be born until the
last vestiges of the old regime, fugitives like Ibrahim and towns like
Bani Walid, have been routed.
"I don't think
things are really moving in the right direction until we finish with
Bani Walid because it is stopping us from making a new Libya," said
Abdel-Basit al-Mzirig, a former deputy justice minister and now on
Libya's human rights council.
A statement from
the prime minister office said that Ibrahim was caught at a checkpoint
outside Bani Walid while trying to flee a recent uptick in fighting over
the town and would be taken to Tripoli for questioning.
However,
the government produced no proof of its claim and hours later, Ibrahim
had not been seen in public. State television did briefly show a
photograph of a man in a hospital bed with a bandaged shoulder which
they labeled as the former spokesman, but the veracity of the photo
could also not be confirmed.
The urbane,
English-speaking Ibrahim became the face of the regime in its final
months and was the most well-known former regime figure to remain
unaccounted for after Gadhafi's son and heir-apparent Seif al-Islam was
taken late last year. The regime's former intelligence chief Abdullah
al-Senoussi was later detained in Mauritania and extradited to Libya.
It
is not clear what charges Ibrahim might face, but officials in the past
have suggested he might be accused of incitement and disseminating
false information.
The seven-minute recording,
which was posted on Ibrahim's Facebook page, rejected the reports that
he had been captured, as well as subsequent, unconfirmed rumors about
the detention of Gadhafi's son Khamis, who was reportedly killed last
year.
"We are outside of Libya. We have no relations with Bani Walid and no contact with it. We are nowhere near Bani Walid," he said.
Libyans
have failed to overcome deep enmities between those who fought to
overthrow Gadhafi and former loyalists of the late leader, whose
eccentric and brutal rule focused on pitting tribes against one another.
Al-Mzirig
said many remnants of the old regime are still working inside the
government and only after they have been removed will the country
fulfill the promises of the uprising, which began in February 2011 as
part of the Arab Spring wave of revolts that swept the Middle East but
quickly morphed into a civil war.
This attitude, common among many who fought in the uprising, bodes ill for future efforts to bring rival groups together.
In
the year since Gadhafi's death, conflicts have broken out around the
country, and despite the unprecedented election of a 200-person national
assembly, the central government is weak and power remains with the
armed groups that sprung up with the rebellion.
A
hard-line Islamist militia in Benghazi, Ansar al-Shariah, is widely
believed to have been behind the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. consulate,
although it has denied responsibility.
These
groups, especially the armed militias, have often pursued their own
agendas, some dating back to longstanding feuds inside a country Gadhafi
controlled unchecked for more than four decades.
After
Gadhafi was killed, the former rebels negotiated a takeover of the Bani
Walid and then looted it, prompting the angry citizens to form their
own militia and throw out their new rulers in January.
The
tensions boiled over when one of the rebels celebrated for being among
those who captured Gadhafi, Omran Shaaban, was captured and allegedly
tortured by the Bani Walid militia.
He later
died in a French hospital and stencils of his name and face can be seen
painted on buildings in Tripoli. As the militias gathered for revenge,
the government authorized them to retrieve those responsible for the
killing, setting the stage for the current siege.
"We
are protecting Libya because there are pro-Gadhafi people in Bani
Walid. There are many wanted people there - they are devils," said Omar
Saleh, a militiamen with the Libyan Shield manning the Umm Rashrash
checkpoint 60 kilometers (40 miles) from Bani Walid. "We haven't started
to bombard them yet - we could if we wanted - but we are afraid of
hitting civilians."
Libya is still building a
national army and transitional authorities depended heavily on ex-rebel
forces such as Libya Shield to secure the country.
The civilians, meanwhile, streamed out of the town as the steady thump of heavy machine guns could be heard from miles away.
They said the main road was blocked but they had taken dirt roads through olive groves toward the nearby town of Tarhouna.
Trucks
piled high with mattresses and filled with children and women wearing
all-encompassing robes were searched by the militia before being sent on
their way.
"I left Bani Walid at 5 a.m. There
is random shelling there and people are dying, including women and
children," Ghaith Hadi Ghaith said as he waited for his car to be
inspected. "There is nothing to eat or drink."
He
said the shooting was coming from all sides. He claimed the city only
had 150 to 160 pro-Gadhafi people, but that was hotly disputed by the
militiamen who said there was a list of 400 wanted figures from the old
regime and hundreds more gunmen.