Mobile Version
Free Internet Press
  Uncensored News For Real People


FIP Year In Review

FIP Month in Review

FIP Archive Search




2012-05-16
G8 Summit: President Obama To Press Chancellor Merkel On Euro-Zone Growth Package

Water Policy Needs 'Radical' Change To Protect People And Environment

U.S. Nuclear Weapons Upgrades - Experts Report Massive Costs Increase

Discussion: Greek Politicians Debate Election Disaster - 'If We Leave The Euro, Everything Will Be Worse'

Practiced Civility - Politesse Trumps Policy As Hollande Meets Merkel

Aftermath Of An Election Debacle - Merkel Fires Environment Minister Rottgen

In U.S.: Georgia Police Escort School Buses After Rifle Threat

Disses And Death Threats - Rapper In Germany Fears For Life After Fatwa

Ratko Mladic Goes On Trial For Bosnia War Crimes

2012-05-15
U.S. Justice Dept. Opens Investigation Into JP Morgan's $2 Billion Trading Losses

Conflict With Far-Right Party - Young German Muslims Defend Right To Protest

Rebekah Brooks Defiant Over Charges Relating To Phone-Hacking 'Cover-Up'

Delayed Indefinitely - Unraveling Berlin's New Airport Debacle

New Elections In June - Markets Fall As Greek Talks Collapse

News Analysis: Standing Firm - Germany's Merkel Won't Budge On Austerity Despite Setback

Better Than Expected - German GDP Surges As Euro-Zone Split Widens

Former Mexican Official Pleads Guilty To Aiding Cartel

Panel Calls For Steep Cuts In U.S. Nuclear Weapons

Checking The Vaults - Germans Fret About Their Foreign Gold Reserves

French President Inaugurated - Hollande Under Pressure To Score Quick Victories

Report: Resources Being Stripped Faster Than Planet Can Renew Them

2012-05-14
North Dakota Oil Boom: Thousands Pin Their Dreams On Striking It Rich

Time To Admit Defeat - Greece Can No Longer Delay Euro Zone Exit

E.U.: Israel Putting Any Two-State Peace Deal At Risk

JP Morgan Investment Boss Ina Drew Quits Over Bank's $2 Billion Investment Losses

Commentary: 'It's Going To Get Harder For Merkel'

Couples Therapy - Germany's Merkel And France's Hollande Are Damned To Get Along

Gulf Unity On Hold Amid Iranian Warning

News Analysis: Merkel's Defeat - Germany's Social Democrats Return To Relevancy

Champagne Before Crash - Pilot Bravado May Be To Blame For Russian Superjet Disaster


North African Road Trip - Hope Meets Hate In The New Libya
2012-01-03 20:05:17 (19 weeks ago)
Posted By: Intellpuke

One year after the Arab Spring, SPIEGEL correspondent Alexander Smolzczyk set out on a journey through the Maghreb to assess the region's transformation. On the second leg of his journey, he travels through post-revolution Libya and finds a country marked by a mixture of hope, desperation and the will to build a new democracy.

On Dec. 17, 2010, Mohamed Bouazizi, a young man in rural Tunisia, poured gasoline on himself -- and ignited an entire region. One by one, the people of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya toppled their rulers. One year after Bouazizi's self-immolation, much has changed in the Maghreb. But a lot has remained the same. In places where secular rulers prevailed for decades, Islamists are now trying to seize the reins of power. And many people there are just as poor and hopeless as they were before the revolutions.

This is the second article in a series by SPIEGEL correspondent Alexander Smoltczyk as he travels along the Transmaghrébine highway from Morocco to Egypt together with a photographer. On the second leg of his journey, he travels through Libya and finds people who have freed themselves from dictator Moammar Gadhafi, but not from the demons he left behind. Be sure to also read the first part of the series.

Ben Gardane, the last town before Tunisia's border with Libya, is a hive of smuggling and contraband -- a transit zone consisting of a jumble of unpainted concrete shops, storage sheds, barbecue stands and dirty hotels. Every few hundred meters, illegally imported gasoline is sold in bright red, blue and green bottles. Everyone in Ben Gardane is involved in smuggling, from young children to old men.

After it passes Djerba, the Transmaghrébine, the highway of the revolutions, extends along the flat Mediterranean coast. Youngsters hold up dried fish and crabs. Plastic toys and gutted sheep swing in the gusts of wind from the trucks roaring down the highway.

There they are, behind a bulwark of sand, the camps of those who fled Libya, shortly before the last checkpoint in Tunisia, under the flags of organizations like UNHCR and Islamic Relief. The men here come from countries like Somalia, Niger and Sudan. There are reportedly some 1,400 of them still here.

Abraham came here from Eritrea. "Eighteen days without seeing a tree," he says, describing his journey. The 36-year-old is a teacher and a computer specialist. He purchased his passage through the desert for $1,600 (€1,230) and worked for the Japanese Embassy in the Libyan capital Tripoli. Then the revolution began, in the guise of a civil war.

The refugees say that they are afraid of being beaten to death in the new, liberated Libya because they are black. They can't return to their countries or go back to Tripoli, and they don't want to stay in Tunisia either. "They don't like us," says Abraham. "No matter how well you speak Arabic." The camps are slated to be cleared in early January. Only 600 of them have received official refugee status. What can they do but hope for asylum in Canada, Australia or the E.U.? Their only way out is north across the sea.

The beach is just 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) away.

(story continues below)




This Story Has Been Archived.
To read the full story in the archives,
please make a donation.
Log In Now
Email To A Friend
Email this story to a friend:
Your Name:
Their Email:
 
Readers Comments
Add your own comment.
(Anonymous commenting now enabled.)

Creative Commons License
Free Internet Press is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License. You may reuse or distribute original works on this site, with attribution per the above license.

Any mirrored or quoted materials may be copyright their respective authors, publications, or outlets, as shown on their publication, indicated by the link in the news story. Such works are used under the fair use doctrine of United States copyright law. Should any materials be found overused or objectionable to the copyright holder, notification should be sent to editor@freeinternetpress.com, and the work will be removed and replaced with such notification.

Please email editor@freeinternetpress.com with any questions.

Our Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://freeinternetpress.com/privacy_policy.php

XML/RSS/RDF Newsfeed Syndication XML/RSS/RDF Newsfeed Syndication: http://freeinternetpress.com/rss.php

XML/RSS/RDF Newsfeed Syndication XML News Sitemap