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Libya: A Year After Uprising Against Moammar Gadhafi, Power Held By Hundreds Of Militias (VIDEO)

By MAGGIE MICHAEL 02/17/12 06:00 AM ET AP

Libya Militias
In this Feb. 14, 2012 photo, Libyan militias from towns throughout the country's west parade through Tripoli, Libya. (AP Photo/ Abdel Magid Al Fergany)

TRIPOLI, Libya -- One revolutionary militia controls the airport. Others carve up neighborhoods of the Libyan capital into fiefdoms. They clash in the streets, terrifying residents. They hold detainees in makeshift prisons where torture is said to be rampant.

As Libya on Friday marks the one-year anniversary of the start of the uprising against Moammar Gadhafi, hundreds of armed militias are the real power on the ground in the country, and the government that took the longtime strongman's place is largely impotent, unable to rein in fighters, rebuild decimated institutions or stop widespread corruption.

The revolutionary militias contend they are Libya's heroes – the ones who drove Gadhafi from power and who now keep security in the streets at a time when the police and military are all but nonexistent. They insist they won't give up their weapons to a government that is too weak, too corrupt and, they fear, too willing to let elements of the old dictatorship back into positions of power.

"I am fed up," said the commander of a militia of fighters from the western mountain town of Zintan who control Tripoli's airport. Al-Mukhtar al-Akhdar says Libya's politicians unfairly blame the militias for the country's chaos while doing nothing to bring real change.

They believe "revolutionaries have no place in Libya now," said al-Akhdar, who was once a tour company owner in Zintan until he took up arms against Gadhafi and now sports a military uniform. "We paid a very heavy price in the revolution, not for the sake of a seat or authority, but for the sake of freedoms and rights."

As a result, Libya has been flipped upside down, from a country where all power was in the hands of one man, Gadhafi, to one where it has been broken up into hundreds of different hands, each taking its own decisions. The National Transitional Council, which officially rules the country, is struggling to incorporate the militias into the military and police, while trying to get the economy back on its feet and reshape government ministries, courts and other institutions hollowed out under Gadhafi.

In one sign of the lack of control, Finance Minister Hassan Zaklam admitted that millions of dollars from Gadhafi family assets returned to Libya by European countries – a potentially key source of revenue – have flowed right back out of Libya, stolen by corrupt officials and smuggled out in suitcases through the ports.

"The money comes for transit only," Zaklam said in a Feb. 6 interview on Libya state TV. He threatened to resign if the government didn't impose control over ports or stop unfreezing the assets. "I can't be a clown," he said.

Government spokesman Ashur Shamis blamed revolutionaries in charge of ports and middle- and lower-ranking bureaucrats from the old regime who still retain their posts, known among Libyans as the "Green Snakes," after the signature color of Gadhafi's rule.

At the airport, al-Akhdar blamed customs employees and said his fighters are keeping a closer eye on them – but he insisted stopping smuggling was the police and military's responsibility.

The militias, meanwhile, are accused of acting like vigilantes and armed gangs, fighting over turf and taking the law into their own hands. Many run private prisons, detaining criminals, suspected former regime members or simply people who run afoul of the fighters.

In a report Wednesday, London-based Amnesty International said it found prisoners had been tortured or abused in all but one of 11 militia-run facilities it visited. Detainees told the group they had been beaten for hours with whips, cables and plastic hoses and given electrical shocks.

At least 12 detainees have died since September after torture, it said.

The militias arose during last year's 8-month-long civil war against Gadhafi.

Soon after anti-regime protests first erupted nationwide on Feb. 17, 2011, Libya's second largest city Benghazi and the rest of the eastern half of the country threw off rule from Tripoli. As Gadhafi clamped down in the west, Libyan citizens formed local militias based around a city, town or even neighborhood, taking up arms to fight alongside breakaway army units.

Backed by NATO airstrikes, the militias swept into Tripoli in August, driving out Gadhafi. The militias then were at the forefront of battles for the last regime strongholds, ending with Gadhafi's capture and killing in October at the hands of a militia from Misrata, a city east of Tripoli that endured one of the bloodiest sieges of the civil war.

Since then, militias have carved up neighborhoods in Tripoli and other cities, establishing their hold with checkpoints at the entrances. There are efforts between them to cooperate: If a brigade chases a suspect into another district, it must seek clearance from the local militia, said Jalal al-Gelani, the deputy police chief of the Tripoli neighborhood of Souq al-Jomaa.

But borders often overlap. Disputes break out over personnel or relatives from one militia detained by another. Then the weapons come out and shooting begins. There are usually no casualties, but the battles terrify residents. In January, a gunbattle between Misrata and Zintan revolutionaries erupted in a turf fight over a sports complex. The two sides fired rifles and heavy machine guns, shattering the complex's windows and damaging cars.

The police have been eclipsed. When Tripoli fell, most police fled and shed their uniforms, fearful of revenge attacks. The police chief in Souq al-Jomaa never came back. Now there are about 200 police in the Souq al-Jomaa station, about a tenth of the number of militiamen, said one officer, Mustafa al-Darnawi.

At night, policemen vanish, afraid of attacks. Police stations are guarded by militiamen.

"Without revolutionaries, the police are zeros," said a Souq al-Jomaa resident, 24-year-old Ahmed Hajaji, standing next to the local police station, where a large sign over the entrance read, "No to revenge, yes to forgiveness."

Last week, top militia commanders from the western half of the country gathered in Tripoli to form a united front to coordinate their activities and avoid fights. The front mirrors a separate bloc created in the east.

The fronts also present a political force to pressure the National Transitional Council and the Cabinet it created, headed by Prime Minister Abdel Rahim al-Keib, signaling they will not lay down their arms.

NTC efforts to integrate the revolutionaries have already brought opposition.

A newly formed Defense Ministry "Warriors Committee" has so far registered 200,000 revolutionaries, who are given the option to join the army, police, intelligence or get help returning to society, such as a loan to start up a business or even travel abroad for studies.

But according to the former rebels, the committee has also registered members of Gadhafi's forces alongside the revolutionaries as part of an attempt at reconciliation, angering many in the militias.

"This is out of the question," said Farag al-Swehli, the commander of a Misrata militia operating in Tripoli. "You can't bring two people who fought against each other to sit next to each other ... There is only one way: revolutionaries are the army."

At the same time, the militias appear to be pressing for a political say as well, demanding figures they feel come from the ranks of the revolution be given government posts.

And they are confident the NTC and government has to listen to them.

"We can withdraw our troops in one second ... but who is going to protect Libya," said al-Akhdar in a defiant tone. "If they have a national army or police, let them show us. We haven't seen any so far."

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Libyan militias from towns throughout the country's west parade through Tripoli, Libya, Tuesday Feb. 14, 2012. This week, Libya will celebrate the one year anniversary of the start of the popular uprising that led to the ouster and killing of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi last October. (AP Photo / Abdel Magid Al Fergany)
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TRIPOLI, Libya -- One revolutionary militia controls the airport. Others carve up neighborhoods of the Libyan capital into fiefdoms. They clash in the streets, terrifying residents. They hold detainee...
TRIPOLI, Libya -- One revolutionary militia controls the airport. Others carve up neighborhoods of the Libyan capital into fiefdoms. They clash in the streets, terrifying residents. They hold detainee...
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04:40 PM on 02/24/2012
Looks like everything's improved since we helped them restore a peaceful administration.
Kommonman
I question because you will not
05:39 PM on 02/19/2012
Never heard tell of a revolution that was not bloody to some degree or have an aftermath that did not involve unscrupolous folk doing corrupt things soon after revolution. Point out one for me if there has ever been one. Anyone who really thought things would be fantastic afterward was only deluding themselves. Still it is for those folk to work out and hoepfully it wont spill over into other nations if things go to pot.
12:00 PM on 02/19/2012
Libya has become a paradise for rapists, head choppers, racist lynchers, haters of blacks, Al Qaeda and Western oil men on the prowl.
10:59 AM on 02/19/2012
Way to go Obama. Through your efforts the situation in Libya has really improved. Please don't help any more rebels.
Kommonman
I question because you will not
05:55 PM on 02/19/2012
Well indiscriminate shelling of cities have stopped so the effort had some good effect. As to the aftermath of revolution that is for those folk to work out. Even our nation had hiccups after the end of the revolution. And funny thing our nation is still rife with corruption 200+ years after the fact. Long list of GOP corruption out there and Dem to. Unscrupolous men will always seek to scam the system
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DAE
08:56 AM on 02/19/2012
Sounds like a Libertarian utopia.
09:25 AM on 02/19/2012
USA is the biggest war monger country in the world under Obama/Bush

Nothing but the facts.

Keep your heads in the sand.

Grow up.

For your children, at least.

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Out-of-Control-Violence-in-by-Stephen-Lendman-120217-982.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DAE
10:13 AM on 02/19/2012
I've been protesting the Kennedy/Johnson/Nixon/Ford/Carter/Reagan/Bush/Clinton/Bush/Obama war machine for nearly 50 years. So what have you done lately?
09:37 AM on 02/19/2012
Actually, libertarians believe that the major role of the government is security and keeping the peace. So this is quite the opposite of a "libertarian Utopia."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DAE
10:15 AM on 02/19/2012
Really? I thought it was that everyone should have the right to bear arms and form militias?
10:50 PM on 02/18/2012
It all helps in drawing the fracture nigh.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:40 PM on 02/18/2012
Don't worry. NATO promised that they would bring democracy to Libya and that our latest regime change adventure was going to be just peachy keen.
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Pod-gers
Jeremy Lin = Game Change
09:32 PM on 02/18/2012
Thank you Presdient Obama from bringing People Power to Lybia. Now we are seeing shock therapy follow on.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/dec/07/ukraine.comment
It is true that not every penny received by dissidents came from taxpayers. The US billionaire, George Soros, set up the Open Society Foundation. How much it gave is difficult to verify, because Mr Soros promotes openness for others, not himself.

Engels remarked that he saw no contradiction between making a million on the stock market in the morning and spending it on the revolution in the afternoon. Our modern market revolutionaries are now inverting that process. People beholden to them come to office with the power to privatise.

The hangover from People Power is shock therapy. Each successive crowd is sold a multimedia vision of Euro-Atlantic prosperity by western-funded "independent" media to get them on the streets. No one dwells on the mass unemployment, rampant insider dealing, growth of organised crime, prostitution and soaring death rates in successful People Power states.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
08:23 PM on 02/18/2012
OK, if we'd let the Libyan people overthrow Qaddafi on their own, this probably wouldn't be happening.
09:39 AM on 02/19/2012
Really? What is your basis for that statement? This was a Country whose only authority figures were tied to the regime. There is nothing to replace them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ruolivert
11:38 AM on 02/19/2012
That wasn't the state department's position. The NTC was supposed to have authority since the international community recognized them as such
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
02:11 PM on 02/19/2012
Lech Walesa wasn't tied to Poland's government and he becme the leader.
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08:21 PM on 02/18/2012
Thanks Obama. I guess that inciting riots in Egypt wasn't enough for you. You just had to provide military support for al-Qaida in Libya. Now the country is in ruins. Nice work.
Kommonman
I question because you will not
05:48 PM on 02/19/2012
Twisting the truth a bit there
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sanity Always Prevails
No more American blood for Israel!
07:19 PM on 02/18/2012
Before anyone gets too superior, I let me point out that you can find a watered-down version of the above in parts of Texas.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justitia
06:15 PM on 02/18/2012
This is one instance in which you hate your prognostications proven right.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justitia
06:08 PM on 02/18/2012
There you go, Ron Paul's paradise.
09:41 AM on 02/19/2012
Libertarians believe that the main role of government is security and keeping the peace. Your comment is nonsense.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ruolivert
11:40 AM on 02/19/2012
The fact that Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton hailed Libya as a success mean that they are secret Ron Paul supporters or that you don't understand Ron Paul's views?
05:55 PM on 02/18/2012
We have helped to create another Somalia, albeit one with oil.

And we work so hard at pretending that we have done a good thing...
05:15 PM on 02/18/2012
There we havethe UK PM and French President congratulating each other for their actions on Libya. For what? For a bunch of heavily armed hoodlums to run amok?
Kommonman
I question because you will not
05:47 PM on 02/19/2012
As opposed to the hoodlums that were running amok shelling cities and murdering innocents under the aegis of Ghaddafi
09:23 PM on 02/19/2012
My point is that we have not made things better, only a continuance of what you describe.