The Phnom Penh Post

Libyan drift drivers burn rubber for ‘unity and peace’

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BURNING rubber in eastern Libya’s Benghazi, drivers from across the country took part in a drifting championsh­ip this month, a rare unifying event as the country seeks to end years of conflict.

“We have excellent drivers,” said Marwan al-Manfi, a spectator from Tobruk. “It’s time the world knew about it.”

In souped-up BMWs, competitor­s lined up on the asphalt for their turn to tear up the track near the Benghazi seafront, tyres screeching as they swerved around barrels and markers.

The enthusiast­ic crowd of mostly young men watched on and took photos as the cars, some with lights flashing or splashed with advertisin­g, sent up clouds of smoke as they skidded and spun.

Popularise­d in Japan in the 1970s, the motor sport, which involves deliberate­ly oversteeri­ng the car to slip, skid and spin, and is popular among Libyan youth.

Libya, sitting atop Africa’s largest proven crude reserves, has been mired in chaos since the 2011 ouster and killing of dictator Moamer Kadhafi in a NATO-backed uprising that began in Benghazi.

For years it has been divided between rival forces, with a Tripoli-based UN-recognised Government of National Accord in the west and a parallel administra­tion headquarte­red in the east, backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar.

But it has been taking steps towards normalcy since a ceasefire between warring parties came into effect in October.

Libya’s new interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah was sworn in this week, pledging to re-unite the country and steer it towards December elections.

At the drifting championsh­ip, organised under the theme “unity and peace for Libya”, judges rated the competitor­s on their style, technique and vehicle speed.

Mohamad al-Marghani, a driver from Tripoli who won last year’s inaugural competitio­n, called this year’s edition “a success”.

An associatio­n of around 200 BMW enthusiast­s organised the tournament, which was sponsored by a Russian oil and gas company.

Drivers from the host city swept the top three places.

Ahmad Bishun, a spectator from Benghazi, said he was happy to see young participan­ts from across Libya.

Salah Houedi from a youth club in the city, said the event was an “example of unity”.

 ?? AFP ?? Libyans watch a driver put his drifting skills to the test during a competitio­n in the coastal city of Benghazi on March 12.
AFP Libyans watch a driver put his drifting skills to the test during a competitio­n in the coastal city of Benghazi on March 12.

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