Photo credit: The Libya Observer |
Thousands of Libyans on
Saturday marked the seventh anniversary of the start of protests that
ousted dictator Moamer Kadhafi, with rallies and concerts despite the
country's political and economic morass.
In the capital Tripoli, and across
many cities in the North African country, thousands packed public
squares where the authorities were organizing concerts and other
festivities.
Libya descended into chaos after the
2011 NATO-backed uprising, with rival militias, tribes and jihadists
vying for influence across the oil-rich country.
A 2015 UN-backed deal to set up the unity government in Tripoli was meant to end the turmoil.
But Libya has remained riven by
divisions between the Government of National Accord (GNA) and a rival
administration backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar in the east.
The GNA has failed to assert its
authority across the oil-rich country, which is also grappling with
deadly attacks, and a migration crisis seven years since the uprising
erupted.
Internationally-backed Prime Minister
Fayez al-Sarraj acknowledged his government's shortcomings in a
televised speech on Saturday to mark the seventh anniversary, and called
for national reconciliation.
"Maybe a regime has ended, but the
truth is we have not managed to rid ourselves of a culture that has
dominated the minds and behaviour of many people, who today are at the
forefront of politics and who consider the homeland as booty," Sarraj
said.
National reconciliation, he said, was key to a solution to end divisions in Libya and ease the crisis facing the country.
Sarraj also accused countries, which
he did not name, of "fueling" the Libyan conflict and called on them to
stop intervening in his homeland.
In Tripoli, Libyans thronged the central Martyrs' Square waving the country's red-green-black flag.
Boy scouts marched and concerts as well as fireworks were planned as part of the festivities, which were kicked off on Friday.
"Maybe 2018 will be a good year for
Libya," said Mohsen Ali, a civil servant, who brought his wife and two
small children to Martyrs' Square.
"We must start the year well so that good things happen," he added.
But if some were keen on celebrating
the start, seven years ago, of protests that led to the toppling and
killing of Kadhafi, others took to social media to declare there was
nothing worth celebrating.
Every day life is a struggle for
Libyans, who face constant electricity cuts, cash shortages, a drop in
the national currency and a dire public services.
AFP
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