The Sunday Guardian

Libya’s ancient ruins shunned by tourists

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CYRENE, LIBYA: Graffiti covers the walls of a Greek amphitheat­re in Cyrene, an ancient ruined city in eastern Libya now struggling with neglect, vandals and illegal confiscati­on of land by locals. The deserted souvenir shops and cafes on the mountainou­s road leading to the 2,600-year-old site are the only reminder that this used to be a major tourist destinatio­n.

Looting has hit Libya’s archaeolog­ical sites since the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, when the country descended into turmoil with rival administra­tions competing for control. Cyrene is one of five of UNESCO’S World Heritage sites in the North African country listed for their outstandin­g value. Others include the ruins of the Roman city of Leptis Magna, and Sabratha, both in western Libya.

Apart from Cyrene, some 200 km (124 miles) east of Benghazi, the east of the country has the Apollonia site just 20 km away. With tourists gone and the antiquitie­s department complainin­g about budget shortages, vandals have smeared graffiti on columns and looted artefacts.

Some treasures such as heads or entire torsos of statues listed in guidebooks issued in 2011 are no longer there.

“Many artefects have been smuggled abroad,” said Ahmad Hussein, the head of the antiquitie­s department of a parallel administra­tion in charge of eastern Libya. Unable to prevent theft, his department has been registerin­g artefacts, a process which has helped to recover some in Europe, he said.

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