Feb 26, 2011

Protesters and army unite to restore some normality

By Catrina Stewart in Tobruk
Friday February 25 2011
Protesters still giddy with success at routing Libyan forces crowd the entrance of Tobruk's central police station, which they set ablaze just a few days ago.
Outside, people chant slogans against Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the reviled Libyan leader they accuse of turning on his own people with vicious force.
"Who thinks he is a lion, and points to us as rats?" one placard says, a reference to Col Gaddafi's defiant speech a few days earlier, when he refused to step down.
Like many parts of Libya, the north-eastern seaside city of Tobruk is now in the hands of protesters and the military. But as the initial euphoria subsides, the task now is to re-establish some semblance of order and prevent the country from plunging into a bloody and protracted civil war.
Protesters have formed civilian committees tasked with restoring some normality to Tobruk. More than 20 groups are charged with securing key installations, distributing food, collecting looted weapons, helping businesses reopen and much more.
At the helm is General Suleiman Mahmoud, a former army loyalist who defected to the opposition after seeing the carnage wrought by Col Gaddafi's forces in Benghazi.
"The people are running this city, and the army is with the people right now," Colonel Rashid al-Seinini, a senior army officer in Tobruk, told reporters.
On the outskirts, the committees have bolstered the guard at the city's only oil refinery, helping thwart what they believe was a plan by pro-Gaddafi thugs to attack the facility two days ago. They have also suspended oil exports, partly because the regime could try to bomb the refineries, they say, but also over fears that the revenue would end up in Col Gaddafi's pockets.
Other committees are working in neighbouring Egypt to bring in medical and food supplies.
Radio Free Libya, a local station, has appealed to protesters to return the weapons seized from the police during the clashes last week. About 90pc of the weapons have been returned, Abubakir Hussein Zaki, a prominent dissident, said. These are now being redistributed to security guards and the military in preparation for defending against a new crackdown.
Whether the committees will form the basis of a future civil government in the event of Col Gaddafi's fall is still unclear. They claim they are only thinking of ridding the country of Col Gaddafi.
"In our mind, there is nothing else right now -- our only wish is to see this criminal out of the country," said Hassan Abdel Rafig, a committee leader. (? Independent News Service)
- Catrina Stewart in TobrukIrish Independent
View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment

About me

Hi, my name is kim. I'm studying at the University of Amsterdam, and created a blog about the situation in the Middle East. I am currently in Egypt for my studdies. Happy reading!

The Revolution Blog

This blog will follow up the revolutionary situation in the Middle-East, e.g. countries like Libya, Bahrain, Egypt, Tunis, Morocco, Yemen and so on, including their dictators such as Hosni Mubarak, Ben Ali, Muammar Gaddafi..
Happy Reading! Kim

Would the Revolution have happened without social networking?