Libya Is In Chaos Four Years After Revolution
Members of forces loyal to Libyas Islamist-backed parliament General National Congress (GNC) prepare to launch attacks as they continue to fight Islamic State (IS) group jihadists on the outskirts of Libyas western city of Sirte on March 16, 2015. (Mahmud Turkia/AFP/Getty Images)
Competing governments and rival militias are battling for power four years after rebels with the help of Western air strikes toppled Libyas long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Peace talks are scheduled this week in Morocco, but there are very low expectations those talks will result in any agreement that ends the bloodshed. The so-called Islamic Stateis also now involved in the fight against the forces of Libyas self-declared government.
Here & NowsJeremy Hobson speaks with Peter Cole and Mary Fitzgerald, an editor and a contributing author, respectively, of the anthology,The Libyan Revolution And Its Aftermath, about how things stand now in Libya andwhat to expect from the peace talks.
Mary Fitzgerald on what life is like in Libya
In parts of the country where you dont have clashes and fighting, you have this sense of a veneer of normality, and life appears to go on. School kids are going to class. Cafes and restaurants are open, shops are open. But there is a deep undertow of unease, a sense of real uncertainty, and a real sense of fear as well. In Tripoli, there is a sense that you cannot criticize the status quo, you cannot criticize the factions that are in control of Tripoli.'
One man in Tripoli said to me last month he made a very interesting point. He said: People speak of two governments in Libya. Really, were not being governed in any real sense. Theres not government in Libya. Neither government is interested in governing in any real sense. They are more interested in continuing this political power struggle.
Mary Fitzgerald on the upcoming peace talks
[Ordinary Libyans] want a resolution, but they are quite skeptical of these peace talks because up to now, what these peace talks have involved are politicians, civil society members, no the representatives of the various armed groups. And many ordinary Libyans will say real power in Libya is not vested in elected institutions, or state institutions. Its vested in those armed groups. The men with the guns are the real power brokers in Libya. And until they are involved in the dialogue process, it really will not go anywhere.
Peter Cole on the international communitys role
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Libya Is In Chaos Four Years After Revolution