Desolation, dismay stare in the face of displaced Libyans

A Libyan boy walks in a burned and destroyed building in the town of Al-Gawalesh, 120 km west of the capital Tripoli. (AFP)
  • Human Rights Watch (HRW) this week raised the alarm over the fate of Tawergha, a town in northeast Libya that also sided with Qaddafi during the revolt

AL-GAWALESH, Libya: 鈥淥ur town has been looted, homes wrecked and olive trees torched,鈥� Moftah Mohammed said in dismay on returning home to Al-Gawalesh in western Libya after years wandering from place to place.
Al-Gawalesh, perched on the slopes of Jebel Nefussa, 120 km west of Tripoli, paid the price for its support of former Prime Minister Muammar Qaddafi during a 2011 NATO-backed revolt in which he was captured and killed.
Once home to close to 10,000 people, the town is a scene of desolation: Wind- and dirt-swept, burnt-out homes, destroyed schools and other public buildings, devoid of any public services.
鈥淚t was July 6, 2011鈥� when he and his family like all other residents had to flee Al-Gawalesh, Mohammed said. 鈥淭o stay would have meant death,鈥� in the face of NATO airstrikes on Qaddafi鈥檚 forces.
Fear of reprisals by neighboring communities which had sided with the victorious rebels kept it a ghost town for the past seven-and-a-half years. In the face of often entrenched bitterness and a hunger for revenge, the UN mission in Libya has been working for reconciliation through the return of displaced communities to their pre-war homes.
The way was cleared for a return to Al-Gawalesh with a reconciliation deal signed back in 2015 between representatives of the towns of Jebel Nefussa that came along with promises of financial aid.
The town鈥檚 mayor, Said Amer, said residents were still waiting for compensation payments to repair their homes.
鈥淪ome families have no choice but to live in these burned-out homes, not realizing the risks posed to their health and that of their children,鈥� the mayor said.
The municipality says families have filed 1,600 compensation claims, none of which have been settled. Libya鈥檚 financial woes have blocked reconstruction in towns such as Al-Gawalesh, according to the internationally recognized Government of National Accord (GNA).
鈥淲e need a development plan and financing for reconstruction that we don鈥檛 have,鈥� Yussef Jalala, minister for the displaced in the Tripoli-based GNA, told AFP. He pinned the blame on the international community.
鈥淥n several occasions the international community has promised aid to help rebuild devastated towns but nothing has materialized,鈥� he said.
According to the latest figures published by the International Organization for Migration, Libya鈥檚 displaced number around 187,000.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) this week raised the alarm over the fate of Tawergha, a town in northeast Libya that also sided with Qaddafi during the revolt.
Most of its 48,000 inhabitants have still been unable to return, more than seven years on, it says.
鈥淭he Government of National Accord should urgently devise a strategy for Tawerghans鈥� safe return, ensuring reconstruction and security,鈥� it said.
鈥淲hile nothing can reverse seven years of forced displacement and dispersal, a measure of accountability for causing and preventing their return will not only bring justice to victims of serious violations and restore dignity, but it could serve as a deterrent for future crimes,鈥� HRW said.