Oman Daily Observer

Displaced by fighting, Libyans fear ending up ‘on the street’

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TRIPOLI: Libyans who fled fighting outside Tripoli dream of returning to their homes as they prepare for the Eid al Adha festival with heavy hearts, worried they will end up living on the streets.

In early April, Mohamad Kreir and his family fled their home south of capital as fierce clashes flared between rival forces turning the area into a battlegrou­nd within hours.

Kreir and others like him were moved into hotels paid for by a crisis committee set up by the Tripolibas­ed Un-recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) to cope with the influx of displaced.

The committee is now asking them to leave the hotels but has given no reason for its decision.

“A few days ago, they tell us we have to leave the hotel. What should I do? Live in the street with my family? I have nowhere to go,” Kreir said.

Another man added: “My family and I are at a hotel and I don’t even have a quarter dinar in my pocket.”

They were speaking during a gathering of some 50 displaced people in a gymnasium organised by an NGO in the Libyan capital.

“I realised that the crisis they’re going through is more serious than Eid,” said Entisar Elgleib, head of a Libyan coalition of civil society organisati­ons, who attended the gathering.

Eid al Adha is usually a time of festivitie­s, but for many of the displaced families, this year’s holiday will be a frugal one, as the fighting drags on around Tripoli and many complain of dwindling savings.

Kreir recalled how he and his family fled their home near the Al Toghar mosque in the Swani district after Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar launched in early April an assault to seize Tripoli from the GNA.

 ?? — AFP ?? Libyans buy livestock at a market in Tripoli for the Eid al Adha celebratio­ns.
— AFP Libyans buy livestock at a market in Tripoli for the Eid al Adha celebratio­ns.

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