Tripoli, Libya.
The quality of life
continues to degrade in certain areas of western Libya while public
anxiety noticeably rises over missing Libyan children as the first week
of an unusually stressful Ramadan passes.
The shortage of gasoline has become acute and despite
government efforts to curtail price gouging, one taxi driver told this
observer yesterday that while the usual price of 'benzene' was five
liters (one gallon) for $.40 (forty US cents) he is now having to pay
as much as " 4 dinars for one liter of petrol!" That is roughly the
equivalent of 13 US dollars for a gallon of gasoline, a huge price surge
in a country long accustomed to cheap, heavily subsidized fuel.
"Informal economy" (black market) fuel arrives in car trunks from the
Tunisian border and its increasingly common to see fellows with a make
shift funnel trying to get more benzene into their vehicle tanks than
they splash and spill on neighborhood streets.
Walking around the "medina" off Omar Muktar Street
near my hotel yesterday afternoon, the angst over deteriorating
conditions is apparent. Shops, like homes, are now subject to rolling
blackouts and quickly become hot and stuffy, discouraging would be
customers from entering. Some food stores have to discard milk and other
perishable items given the up to 11 hour power cuts that send
temperatures above 100F. One gentleman on Rashid Street in downtown
Tripoli said his family had not had power for five days and the pump
that supplies water to his apartment building stopped working so they
lack two essential utilities.
NATO's arguable act of piracy earlier this week in
commandeering the fuel tanker ship Cartagena off the coast of Malta that
was bringing gasoline to Tripoli and sending it instead to rebel
militia based close to Benghazi is yet again explained from NATO HQ as
necessary for "protecting the civilian population of Libya."
According to Libya's Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled
Kaim, "The age of piracy is coming back to the Mediterranean because of
NATO."
Some frustrated shop keepers just shutter their shops
and seek relief at the beach or take a nap waiting for sundown and their
Ramadan Iftar (feast) to begin. But lack of electricity even affects
its preparation. ( note: 15 minutes ago NATO bombed the public beach
near my hotel as three other bombs landed nearby—targets unknown)
Every time a bomb blast is heard, a chorus of
passersby and kids invariably point toward the bomb site and watch the
rising white or black smoke (the color depending on the type of bomb or
missile) and some shout, "F--- NATO! F---Obama!" Etc.
If a foreigner is confronted by angry citizens who
may blame Americans for NATO's bombing, a sure fire way to quickly
reduce crowd tension is for the foreigner to make the peace sign and
make a fist with his other hand and chant a few times: "Allah!
Mohammad! Muammar! Libye! Abass!" (God!, Mohammad!, Qadaffi!, Libya!,
that's all we need!") The locals appreciate the sentiment and pre-teens
often join the popular chant and dance.
As of the morning of 8/7/11 NATO statistics show that since 3/31/11,
NATO forces have launched 18,270 sorties, mainly against Western Libya,
including 6,932 bomb/missile strike sorties. Last night (8/6/11) there
were 115 sorties including 45 bombings of which 12 were in central
Tripoli starting a 10 p.m.
To their great credit, some Congressional staffers on
the US Senate Armed Services Committee who liaise with the Pentagon,
have acted on constituent complaints and have criticized NATO's
incomplete description of its bombing of Libyan civilians.
For example earlier this week NATO reported its
bombing of the village on Zlitan, about 160 miles east of Tripoli in the
Western Mountains as follows: "In the vicinity of Zlitan:1 Ammunition
Storage Facility, 1 Military Facility, 2 Multiple Rocket Launchers."
However, still absent from this particular NATO report
on its website is the fact that its bombing attack killed the wife and
two children of Mustafa Naji, a local Zlitan physics teacher. Mustafa's
wife Ibtisam, and their two children, Mohammad 5 and Muttasim, were
pulverized. Once again, NATO said it could not confirm the "accidental
killings" but would investigate.
Where are the children?
Also of growing public and government concern in
Western Libya is the whereabouts of 53 female and 52 male children aged
one to 12 years and another group ranging from 12 to 18 years, both part
of a government-run home for orphans and abused children that until
February was operating in Misrata, now under rebel control. According to
several reports over the past three months and testimony presented last
Thursday evening to the international media gathered at the Tripoli
Rexis Hotel, by the General Union for Civil Society Organizations:
The 105 children, part of more than 1000 missing, were
"kidnapped" by rebel forces as they entered Misrata and went on a
killing spree, some of which has been documented by Human Rights Watch
and Amnesty International among other groups. There is no question that
the children are no longer in their sheltered facility. But from there
what became of them remains a mystery.
The Libyan government claims the youngsters were
kidnapped by rebels who went on a rampage in late February. Several
reports from eyewitnesses claim that the children were last seen being
put onto either a Turkish, Italian, or French boat. More than one
witness claimed to have witnessed some of the children being sold in
Tunisia. On his tweeter page, the local Russian Telesur reporter said
that "several sources have affirmed that the 105 children were taken out
of the country in a ship that could be Turkish, French or Italian."
Libyan Social Affairs Minister Ibrahim Sharif told
reporters in Tripoli this week that, "We want the truth and we hold
those countries responsible for the well-being of these children who are
neither soldiers nor combatants." Sharif added that a rebel doctor
captured by government troops testified that some of the orphans had
been taken to France and Italy.
Given Misrata's history as a main North
African slave trading port, a fact that today partially explains
tensions among the one third of Libya's population that is black and who
are descendants of slaves and many of whom live in western Libya in
villages now fighting the Misrata and Benghazi based rebels, concern is
acute.
While Libya has had perhaps the most strictly enforced
child protection laws in the Middle East and Africa, people here
remember clearly that France was at the center of a scandal in 2007 when
aid workers from the Zoe's Ark charity attempted to fly 103 children
out of Chad, to the south of Libya, who they said were orphans from
neighboring Sudan. International aid staff later found that the
children were in fact Chadian and had at least one living parent. People
here fear a similar fate for the Libyan youngsters.
Also on people's minds in Libya is what happened two
years ago in Haiti when "orphans," according to local authorities, were
kidnapped. Given the epidemic of human trafficking in this region,
especially of children, fears are well founded.
NATO has not replied to inquiries demanding
information about the disappeared children nor has UNICEF, Save the
Children or Secretary of State Clinton's office. Ohio Congressman
Dennis Kucinich has agreed to demand that the White House order an
immediate investigation and of course any human rights advocate could
raise this issue in the West and demand an urgent inquiry from her/his
government.
The Libyan government as well as both the Roman
Catholic Papal representative Bishop Giovanni Martinelli, and Father
Daoud of the Anglican Church of Christ the King, in Tripoli have
demanded that the UN investigate and find the children.
As for the National Transition Council, its spokesman
denied charges that they have sold the children and claim that the
Libyan government in Tripoli have all the children and that they are
using them as human shields at the now five times bombed Bab al Azizya
complex in central Tripoli. No known human rights organization or
journalist who has investigated this claim has reported seeing any sign
of the children at Bab al Azizya. The General Union, noted above, has
photos and names and ages of all the missing children and have widely
publicized them.
More than a dozen social welfare organizations,
women's groups and Libya's Lawyer syndicates have launched an intensive
media and public involvement campaign to find the children who have now
been missing for nearly six months.
Franklin Lamb is in Libya and can be reached at fplamb@gmail.com