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Calls for justice one year after Iran's 'Bloody Friday'

By - Oct 01,2023 - Last updated at Oct 01,2023

Campaign groups on Saturday demanded the perpetrators of the killing of dozens of protesters in southeast Iran one year ago be brought to justice, accusing authorities of using force to quell the latest demonstration in the region (AFP photo)

PARIS — Campaign groups on Saturday demanded the perpetrators of the killing of dozens of protesters in southeast Iran one year ago be brought to justice, accusing authorities of using force to quell the latest demonstration in the region.

According to activists, Iranian security forces used live fire to suppress a protest on September 30, 2022 in Zahedan, the main city of south-eastern Sistan-Baluchistan province.

At least 104 people were killed, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights NGO, in what is known as Zahedan's "Bloody Friday".

The violence marked the single deadliest day of months-long protests that erupted in Iran last year.

The Zahedan protests were triggered by reports a teenage girl was raped in custody by a police commander in the region and took place in parallel to nationwide demonstrations sparked by the September 16 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, after her arrest in Tehran for an alleged breach of the country's dress code for women.

Activists have long complained that the minority Baluch population in Sistan-Baluchistan, who adhere to Sunni Islam rather than the Shiism dominant in Iran, suffer from economic and political discrimination and are also disproportionately targeted by capital punishment.

"No official has been held accountable for the unlawful killings of scores of men, women and children from Iran's oppressed Baluchi minority on Sept 30, 2022," Amnesty International said in a statement.

"On the solemn anniversary of 'Bloody Friday', we remember the victims and stand together in the pursuit of justice."

Even as the protest movement dwindled elsewhere in Iran, residents of Zahedan have held regular Friday protests throughout the last 12 months, and despite heavy security held a new protest this Friday, campaigners said.

Security forces used live fire and tear gas against protesters, wounding at least 25 people, including children, according to the Baloch Activists Campaign group.

Iran's top Sunni cleric Molavi Abdolhamid, the Zahedan Friday prayer leader who has been outspoken in his support of the protesters during the past year, had in his sermon issued a new call for justice over "Bloody Friday", telling the faithful to "know your rights".

Footage posted on social media showed chaotic scenes as hospitals filled with patients including children, while people on the streets sought to flee to safety amid a sound of heavy gunfire on the streets.

"This is a horrifying display of indiscriminate violence by the Islamic republic as the state attempts to suppress peaceful demonstrations," said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the New York-based Centre for Human Rights in Iran.

"It is imperative for the international community to shine a spotlight on this violence and to hold Iranian officials accountable in international courts, invoking the principle of international jurisdiction," he said.

Suicide bomber kills five in central Somalia

By - Sep 30,2023 - Last updated at Sep 30,2023

MOGADISHU — Five people died and six others were wounded on Friday when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a restaurant near the presidential palace in central Somalia, police and witnesses said.

The attacker detonated a device inside a tea shop in Bar Bulsho in the capital Mogadishu, Somali police spokesman Sadik Dudishe said.

“All the casualties were people spending time to drink tea,” Dudishe said.

The cafe is frequented by members of the Somali security forces as well as civilians.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Witnesses said the police had cordoned off the area after the blast.

Adan Qorey, a resident of the Bar Bulsho area, said the tea shop was often crowded in the afternoon and evening with patrons drinking tea and chewing khat, a mildly narcotic native shrub also known as miraa.

Friday’s attack came barely a day after five civilians were killed and 13 others wounded in a car bombing near a market in central Somalia.

A truck bombing on Saturday in the central town of Beledweyne killed 21 people, razing buildings and injuring dozens.

The spate of attacks comes as Somalia’s beleaguered government has admitted that it has suffered “several significant setbacks” in its fight against the Al Qaeda-linked Al Shabaab militants.

Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud took office in May last year vowing “all-out war” against the militants.

His government launched a major offensive against the Islamists in August last year, joining forces with local clan militias in an operation backed by AU troops and US air strikes.

On Thursday, Somali security forces foiled two car bomb attacks targeting Dhusamareeb town in central Somalia where Mohamud has been based in recent weeks.

UN resolutions call for the African Union (AU) Transition in Somalia (ATMIS) force to be reduced to zero by the end of next year, handing over security to the Somali army and police.

But this has proved challenging, with the government now seeking to delay a planned reduction of ATMIS troops.

Al Shabaab, which is fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, regularly attacks government and civilian targets in Mogadishu.

The group controlled the capital until 2011 when it was pushed out by the African Union troops, but still holds territory in the countryside.

 

Bahrain says fourth soldier dies after Yemeni rebel attack

By - Sep 30,2023 - Last updated at Sep 30,2023

MANAMA — A fourth Bahraini soldier has died after an attack this week on his country’s contingent in the Saudi-led coalition battling Yemen’s Houthi rebels, the  army said.

Bahrain had previously announced the deaths of three of its soldiers in Monday’s attack near the Saudi border with Yemen. It accused the Houthis of carrying out the drone strike that killed them

First Lt. Hamad Khalifa Al Kubaisi had on Friday “succumbed to serious injuries as a result of the treacherous Houthi attack”, the Bahraini army said.

He had been wounded while “performing his national duty”, it said in a statement posted on social media.

This is the most significant Bahraini troop loss in the Yemen conflict since five soldiers were killed in 2015.

Saudi Arabia, the United States, France and the United Nations have condemned the attack.

Bahrain and the United States were among the countries that blamed the attack on the Houthi rebels, who have yet to make any comment on the matter.

Bahrain has taken part in the military intervention spearheaded by Saudi Arabia since 2015 in support of the Yemeni government against the Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

A Houthi delegation held five days of talks in Saudi Arabia this month aimed at consolidating a UN-brokered ceasefire, which has largely held despite officially expiring in October.

More than 16,000 children are displaced following Libya floods — UNICEF

By - Sep 29,2023 - Last updated at Sep 29,2023

Catastrophic floods hit the eastern part of Libya in September (Photo courtesy of UNICEF)

NEW YORK/AMMAN/TRIPOLI — More than 16,000 children are displaced in eastern Libya following Africa’s deadliest storm in recorded history, UNICEF warned on Thursday. 

"Their psychosocial wellbeing is at stake. Many more children are affected due to lack of essential services, such as health, schooling and safe water supply," UNICEF said in a statement to The Jordan Times. 

Storm Daniel struck eastern Libya on 10 September and left widespread flooding and destruction in its wake across Derna, Albayda, Soussa, Al Marj, Shahat, Taknis, Battah, Tolmeita, Bersis, Tokra and Al Abyar.

Some of the displaced families are hosted in schools, UNICEF said, adding it is working with authorities and partners since the beginning of the tragedy to respond to the urgent needs of children and families in the affected areas. 

“When disasters hit, children are always among the most vulnerable,” Adele Khodr, UNICEF Regional Director in the Middle East and North Africa, said.

 “I saw the devastating toll the floods have already taken on children and families. I met families grappling with a high psychological burden and I spoke to children in extreme distress, many not sleeping and unable to interact and play. The memory of what happened still haunts their dreams and their thoughts."

While the number of children among the casualties is not yet confirmed, UNICEF said that it is feared that hundreds of children died in the disaster, given that children account for about 40 per cent of the population.

"Significant damage to health and education infrastructure means children once again risk further disruption to their learning and the outbreak of deadly diseases. In the hit region, out of 117 impacted schools, 4 were destroyed and 80 partially damaged," the statement said.

Waterborne illnesses are a growing concern due to water supply issues, significant damage to water sources and sewer networks, and the risk of contamination of the ground water. In Derna alone, 50 per cent of water systems are estimated to have been damaged.

UNICEF said it revising its humanitarian response appeal of $6.5 million to integrate initial recovery efforts with a focus on education, health and water. 

To date, UNICEF said that it has received about 25 per cent of these much-needed funds.

Israel reopens Gaza crossing to Palestinian workers

By - Sep 28,2023 - Last updated at Sep 28,2023

Palestinian workers gather at the Erez crossing between Israel and the northern Gaza Strip on Thursday after the crossing was reopened by Israeli authorities (AFP photo)

EREZ, Palestine — Israel on Thursday allowed thousands of Palestinian workers to cross from Gaza for the first time in two weeks through the Erez crossing, following violent protests that rocked the blockaded enclave.

The Israeli occupation authorities had initially closed off the transit route, the only gateway for pedestrians from the Gaza Strip, for the Jewish new year holiday on September 15.

After extending the closure citing security reasons amid deadly protests, they announced on Wednesday evening that the crossing would be reopened for workers on Thursday, with thousands seen lining up in the morning.

An AFP correspondent saw crowds of Palestinians waiting at the terminal from the early hours, including many who had spent the night at the complex.

"We learnt at midnight that the Erez crossing would open today, and I have been waiting here since 1:00 in the morning," said Awni Abu Oda, who works in Tel Aviv, the main commercial city of Israel.

Palestinian trade unions said the reopening was a "positive step" for the workers who have far higher earning power in Israel than in the Gaza Strip, where salaries are low and unemployment is rife.

Nearly 6,000 workers crossed through the gateway by 10:00 am (0700 GMT), a Palestinian border officer at the crossing told AFP on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to journalists.

Israel has issued work permits to some 18,500 Gazans, COGAT, the Israeli defence body responsible for Palestinian civilian affairs, said last week.

COGAT had extended the closure of the crossing after daily demonstrations along the border with Israel left several protesters dead and injured in clashes with Israeli soldiers.

During the clashes the Israeli army often launched drone strikes targeting military posts of the Islamist group Hamas that controls the Gaza Strip.

 

'Collective punishment' 

 

Palestinian workers expressed relief at the reopening of the crossing.

"I'm very happy that the crossing is open. We have nothing to do with this problem," said Ayman Al Rifi, who works at a restaurant in the Israeli coastal city of Jaffa.

"I hope workers stay out of these problems because we suffer if Erez is closed."

Palestinian Trade Unions chief Sami Amis hailed the decision to reopen Erez.

But, he added, "preventing workers from crossing... was a collective punishment as 60 per cent of families of workers in the Gaza Strip live below the poverty line."

The Erez crossing is usually closed for workers over the weekend on Friday and Saturday.

While patients seeking medical treatment and foreigners had been allowed to use the Erez crossing, thousands of Palestinian workers from Gaza had been banned from entering Israel.

 

Years-long blockade 

 

The Gaza Strip, home to some 2.3 million Palestinians, had been rocked by violent protests in the past two weeks.

Protesters had resorted to burning tyres, throwing rocks and petrol bombs at Israeli troops, who have responded with tear gas and live bullets.

Since September 13, seven Palestinians have been killed and more than 100 wounded in the violence in Gaza, according to figures from the Hamas-controlled health ministry.

Israel has imposed an air, land and sea blockade on Gaza since Hamas seized the Palestinian territory in 2007.

Armed conflict sporadically erupts between Israel and militants in the Gaza Strip.

In May, Israeli air strikes and killed 34 Palestinians.

Overall violence linked to the Israel-Palestinian conflict has surged since early last year.

At least 242 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict so far this year itself.

Grief, anger at Iraq mass for victims of wedding fire

By - Sep 28,2023 - Last updated at Sep 28,2023

A firefighter checks the damage in an event hall in Qaraqosh, also known as Hamdaniyah, after a fire broke out during a wedding, killing at least 100 people and injuring more than 150, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

QARAQOSH — Survivors of a fire that tore through an Iraqi wedding and those mourning the at least 100 lives lost filled the pews for a Christian mass Thursday, two days after the disaster.

Mourners wept or quietly embraced one another under the arches of the Syriac Catholic church of Al-Tahera, where portraits of the dead lined the stairs, showing men, women and children of all ages.

"I don't know what to say; there is pain in our hearts, a tragedy that will never be forgotten," said Najiba Yuhana, 55, who lost multiple relatives. "There is anger and sadness that is indescribable and without compare."

Authorities have blamed indoor fireworks that set alight ceiling decorations for the fire that quickly engulfed the reception hall constructed from highly combustible building materials.

At least 150 people suffered burns, smoke inhalation or crush injuries sustained in the stampede when the nearly 900 panicked guests tried to escape through the hall’s few exits.

Some of those killed were buried on Wednesday, but more funerals are planned for coming days.

Both bride and groom survived the fire, their “minor burns” far outweighed by the crushing blow of losing so many family members, a friend of the couple, Jamil al-Jamil, told AFP.

“The bride lost her whole family — three brothers, all of her uncles and her young cousins. The groom lost his mother,” Jamil said.

 

Fourteen arrests 

 

The disaster hit the town of Qaraqosh, a centre of Iraq’s small Christian community in the Nineveh Plains near Mosul, which is still recovering from the terrors of the Daesh group’s rule from 2014 to 2017.

The town, also known as Hamdaniyah, is now home to 26,000 Christians — half of its original population.

At the church, which Pope Francis visited in March 2021, many of the bereaved sobbed quietly, joined by a few survivors with bandaged wounds.

Prime Minister Mohamed Shia Al Sudani, who has declared three days of national mourning, travelled to the province on Thursday to visit “the injured and the families of the victims”, his office said.

Sudani demanded “the toughest punishments permitted by law for those responsible for negligence or failings that led to this tragic fire”.

Anger has flared over the high death toll, which authorities have blamed in part on poorly observed safety regulations, an insufficient number of fire exits and the use of highly flammable building materials.

Authorities have arrested 14 people — the venue’s owner and 10 employees as well as three people suspected of having set off the fireworks, the interior minister said.

 

‘Joy to sadness’ 

 

Safety standards are often poorly observed in Iraq, a country still recovering from decades of dictatorship, war and unrest that remains plagued by corruption, mismanagement and often dilapidated infrastructure.

In 2021, dozens of people were killed in two separate fires that raged through hospital wards.

A previous major tragedy struck Mosul in 2019, when at least 100 people, mostly women and children, died when an overcrowded ferry sank in the Tigris River.

Among the mourners at the Al Tahera church was Riad Bahnam, 53, who came to pray for his sister-in-law and his six-year-old great-niece, both of whom died in the flames.

He likened the fire to “the tragedy of the boat in Mosul” and said the wedding had been a moment of “joy which turned into sadness and anger”.

Bahnam voiced anger at the “human error” he blamed for the deadly tragedy that heaped suffering on the small community.

Any official “who has committed negligence in giving the required authorisations to the owner is also responsible”, he charged.

“They are supposed to demand compliance with safety standards.”

Morocco aims to become key player in green hydrogen

By - Sep 27,2023 - Last updated at Sep 27,2023

RABAT — Morocco has voiced ambitious plans to become North Africa's top player in the emerging "green hydrogen" sector, with plans to export the clean-burning fuel to Europe.

Hydrogen is seen as a clean energy source that can help the world phase out fossil fuels and reduce atmospheric carbon emissions in the battle to slow global warming. 

Morocco, which already runs large solar power plants, also hopes to harness green hydrogen — the kind made without burning fossil fuels —for its sizeable fertiliser sector.

Around 6,000 square kilometres of public land — nearly the size of Kuwait — have been set aside for green hydrogen and ammonia plants, the economy ministry says.

King Mohammed VI has hailed a national green hydrogen plan dubbed l'Offre Maroc (the Moroccan Offer) and called for its "rapid and qualitative implementation".

Speaking in July, before the country's earthquake disaster, he said Morocco must take advantage of "the projects supported by international investors in this promising sector".

Local media have reported about investment plans by Australian, British, French, German and Indian companies. 

 

Fertiliser sales 

 

Hydrogen can be extracted from water by passing a strong electrical current through it. 

This separates the hydrogen from the oxygen, a process called electrolysis.

If the power used is clean — such as solar or wind — the fuel is called "green hydrogen", which is itself emission-free when burnt.

But there are problems: hydrogen is highly explosive and hard to store and transport. This has set back hydrogen fuel cell cars in the race against electric vehicles using lithium-ion batteries. 

However, experts say green hydrogen also has a big role to play in de-carbonising energy-intensive industries that cannot easily be electrified such as steel, cement and chemicals.

Powering blast furnaces with hydrogen, for example, offers the promise of making "green steel".

Hydrogen can also be converted into ammonia, to store the energy or as a major input in synthetic fertilisers.

Morocco is already a major player in the global fertiliser market, thanks mainly to its immense phosphate reserves. 

It profited after fertiliser shortages sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine sent prices up to 1,000 euros ($1,060) per tonne.

Morocco's state Phosphate Office has announced plans to quickly produce a million tonnes of "green ammonia" from green hydrogen and triple the amount by 2032.

 

Solar power 

 

Analysts caution that Morocco still has some way to go with its ambitious green fertiliser plans.

The sector is "embryonic and the large global projects will not see the light of day until three to five years from now", said Samir Rachidi, director of the Moroccan research institute IRESEN.

Morocco's advantage is that it has already bet heavily on clean energy over the past 15 years.

Solar, wind and other clean energy make up 38 per cent of production, and the goal is to reach 52 per cent by 2030.

For now green hydrogen is more expensive than the highly polluting "brown hydrogen" made using coal or "grey hydrogen" produced from natural gas.

The goal is to keep green hydrogen production below $1-$2 per kilogramme, Ahmed Reda Chami, president of the Economic, Social and Environmental Counsel, told the weekly La Vie Eco.

Rachidi of IRESEN said water-scarce Morocco must also step up the desalination of seawater for the process.

It must build "an industrial value chain which begins with seawater desalinisation plants for electrolysis, electricity storage, to transportation and hydrogen marketing", he said.

Already hit by droughts that threaten its farm sector, Morocco has announced plans to add seven de-salinisation plants to its 12 existing facilities. 

 

Regional contest 

 

Morocco is competing on green hydrogen with other regional countries from Egypt to Mauritania.

Business consultants Deloitte have predicted that North Africa will be the world's largest green hydrogen-exporting region by 2050, reshuffling the global energy cards.

Algeria, a major fossil fuel exporter, can capitalise on "one of the most important potentials in the world" in terms of solar and wind energy and gas pipeline infrastructure, said Rabah Sellami, director of its Renewable Energies Commission.

Currently, Algeria produces only 3 per cent of its electricity through renewables, but is investing heavily to boost capacity. 

Algeria has numerous de-salinisation plants whose capacity is set to more than double to 2 billion cubic metres in 2030.

Its roadmap for green hydrogen targets "production of 1 million tonnes for export to the European market" and 250,000 tonnes for domestic consumption, said Sellami.

Tunisia also wants to enter the fray, provided it can build up its renewables production, said its energy ministry's general director Belhassen Chiboub.

It hopes to grow clean power output from three per cent now to 35 per cent by 2030.

If it meets that target, Chiboub predicted, "it will be able to export between 5.5 and 6 million tonnes of green hydrogen to Europe by 2050".

Iran says it 'successfully' launched new military satellite

By - Sep 27,2023 - Last updated at Sep 27,2023

A man rides his moped past an Iranian Sevom Khordad road-mobile medium range air defence missile system displayed on a main road in Tehran on Tuesday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran's Revolutionary Guards "successfully" launched a new military imaging satellite on Wednesday, state media reported, in the latest display of its aerospace technology which has sparked Western concern.

"The Nour-3 imaging satellite... was successfully placed in orbit 450 kilometres above earth," the IRNA news agency said, quoting Telecommunications Minister Issa Zarepour.

He said it was carried by the three-stage Qassed satellite carrier, which also launched predecessors Nour-2 in 2022 and Nour-1 in 2020.

Wednesday's launch was carried out by the aerospace wing of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the ideological arm of the country's armed forces.

IRGC commander Hossein Salami told state television that the new satellite would provide higher resolution images than its predecessors enabling the Guards to "meet their intelligence needs".

The United States has repeatedly warned Iran against such launches, saying the same technology can be used for ballistic missiles, including ones designed to deliver a nuclear warhead.

Other Western governments have voiced similar concerns.

Iran counters that it is not seeking nuclear weapons and that its satellite and rocket launches are for civil or defence purposes only.

It has struggled with several satellite launch failures in the past and the successful launch of its first military satellite into orbit, Nour-1, in April 2020 drew a sharp rebuke from the US.

Tehran has been under crippling US sanctions since Washington's 2018 withdrawal from a landmark nuclear deal which granted Iran sanctions relief in return for curbs on its nuclear activities designed to prevent it from developing an atomic warhead.

Iran has always denied any ambition to develop a nuclear weapons capability, insisting that its activities are entirely peaceful.

In a recent interview with a Japanese news agency, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian spoke of a Japanese proposal to relaunch Iran's nuclear talks with the United States.

Tehran and Washington have had no diplomatic ties since the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic revolution.

 

At least 100 killed as fire engulfs Iraq wedding hall

More than 150 people were injured by flames

By - Sep 27,2023 - Last updated at Sep 27,2023

Mourners attend the funeral of victims who were killed when a fire ripped through a crowded wedding hall in the mainly Christian northern city of Qaraqosh, also known as Hamdaniyah, on Wednesday (AFFp photo)

QARAQOSH, Iraq — At least 100 people were killed when a fire ripped through a crowded Iraqi wedding hall, officials said on Wednesday, pointing to indoor fireworks as the likely cause for the blaze that sparked a panicked stampede for the exits.

More than 150 people were injured by the flames, the choking smoke or in the crush to flee the reception hall, which was reduced to charred debris and piles of twisted furniture under a partially collapsed ceiling.

"I thought there had been an explosion," said Martin Idriss, 19, who was working in the kitchen when the fire broke out Tuesday evening in the venue in the mainly Christian northern city of Qaraqosh.

"The flames were devouring the whole hall," he said.

"When I went back in, I saw the charred bodies of three children," he said, adding the venue's emergency exits had proved "inadequate" for the hundreds of guests trying to escape.

Early reports and unverified video footage online suggested flares shot up sparkling flames that ignited ceiling decorations before the fire engulfed highly flammable construction materials.

Health authorities "counted 100 dead and more than 150 injured in the fire at a marriage hall in Hamdaniyah", as the city is also known, Iraq's official INA news agency reported in what it called a "preliminary tally".

The casualty toll was confirmed to AFP by health ministry spokesman Saif Al Badr, who said most of the injured were being treated for burns, oxygen deprivation and crush injuries.

But the director of health services in Nineveh, Mansour Marouf, on Wednesday afternoon said 94 people had died, with their bodies transported to different hospitals.

Only 30 of those had been immediately identified by their families, he told a news conference.

The Iraqi Red Crescent meanwhile reported more than 450 casualties, without providing a breakdown of deaths and injuries.

Wedding guest Rania Waad, 17, who suffered burns to her hand, said that as the bride and groom “were slow dancing, the fireworks [flames] started to climb to the ceiling [and] the whole hall went up in flames”.

“We couldn’t see anything,” she said, choking back sobs. “We were suffocating. We didn’t know how to get out.”

At the city’s main hospital, an AFP photographer saw ambulances with sirens blaring and dozens of people gathering to donate blood, while bodies in black bags were being loaded onto a refrigerated truck.

On Wednesday, police and firefighters sifted through the charred remains of the reception hall where mangled metal chairs lay strewn amid the debris.

Civil defence authorities said the hall had been fitted with prefabricated panels that were “highly flammable and contravened safety standards”.

The danger was compounded by the “release of toxic gases linked to the combustion of the panels”, which contained plastic, they said in a statement.

“Preliminary information” suggested indoor fireworks had ignited the blaze, they said.

Nine of the venue’s staff were arrested and arrest warrants issued for its four owners, interior ministry spokesman General Saad Maan told AFP.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohamed Shia Al Sudani declared three days of national mourning.

He also ordered “intensified periodic inspections” of entertainment venues nationwide to “ensure that safety measures are followed” and to “identify any non-compliant buildings”.

Safety standards in Iraq’s construction sector are often disregarded, and the country, whose infrastructure is in disrepair after decades of conflict, is often the scene of fatal fires and accidents.

In July 2021, a fire in hospital COVID unit killed more than 60 people in southern Iraq.

And in April of the same year, oxygen tanks exploded and triggered a fire at a Baghdad hospital also threating COVID patients, killing more than 80 people.

Qaraqosh, like many Christian cities in the Nineveh Plains northeast of Mosul, was ransacked by extremists of the Daesh group after they entered the city in 2014.

The city and its churches were slowly rebuilt after the group’s ouster in 2017, and Pope Francis visited it in March 2021.

East Libya government announces fund for flood-hit Derna

By - Sep 27,2023 - Last updated at Sep 27,2023

People look at the damage caused by freak floods in Derna, eastern Libya, on September 11 (AFP photo)

BENGHAZI, Libya — Libya’s eastern-based government announced Wednesday the creation of a fund for the reconstruction of Derna, weeks after it was hit by a devastating flood that swept thousands out to sea.

Although not recognised internationally, the eastern government also confirmed in a statement that it would host an “international conference” on October 10 to aid the port city’s reconstruction.

It had initially called on the entire “international community” to participate, but on Wednesday it said the conference would “open the door for international companies to present the best suited projects for the city’s nature and terrain”.

In its statement, the eastern administration said it had “approved the creation of a reconstruction fund for the city of Derna” and other areas affected by the September 10 flooding.

It did not indicate how the new fund would be financed, but Libya’s House of Representatives, also based in the east, has already allocated 10 million dinars ($2 million) for reconstruction.

According to the latest toll announced by the eastern authorities on Tuesday, at least 3,893 people died in the disaster. International aid groups have said 10,000 or more people may be missing.

Libya has been wracked by division since a NATO-backed uprising toppled then killed veteran leader Muammar Qadhafi in 2011.

The North African country is now divided between an internationally recognised Tripoli-based administration in the west, and the one in the flood-stricken east backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar.

Despite a wave of nationwide solidarity since the flood, there has been no show of support for the proposed conference from the Tripoli-based government of interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah.

Jalel Harchaoui, a Libya specialist at the Royal United Services Institute, said that “institutionally” the eastern government “does not exist because it is not internationally recognised”.

It is therefore “unlikely that countries will give money to the east”, he said, adding that “in all likelihood, the money must go through Tripoli”.

He suggested that Dbeibah may seek to take advantage of the tragedy to unblock Libya’s foreign assets and investments that have been frozen by the United Nations for over a decade to prevent their theft following the uprising.

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