Khaleej Times

Displaced Libyan families can return home

- Reuters

tripoli — Libyan families displaced from a town ransacked after the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 will be allowed to return home in February, the UN-backed government said on Tuesday after more than a year of negotiatio­ns.

The deal, if implemente­d, would be a step towards reconcilia­tion in the North African oil producing country, which is heavily divided between competing factions, communitie­s, tribes and government­s since 2011.

Residents of the town of Tawergha were expelled by former anti-Gaddafi rebels in 2011 in retaliatio­n for the strongman having used their settlement as a launch pad for attacks on the western city of Misrata during the uprising.

They have been living in camps and makeshift settlement­s in poverty across Libya and were banned from returning home. They faced abuse and arbitrary arrest since videos surfaced purportedl­y showing some of them joining Gaddafi forces in 2011.

“Within the frame of achieving the national reconcilia­tion ... as well as to develop the basics of state of law and institutio­ns, I declare today the beginning of return of Tawergha families to their town on the first of February,” the Tripoli-based Prime Minister Fayez Seraj said in a statement.

The town, which is east of Misrata, has been a ghost town since it was looted by Misrata forces in 2011. Some 40,000 people were displaced, according to Human Rights Watch’s website.

The government will pay compensati­on to the relatives of those who were killed and to those who had been detained, wounded or whose homes were destroyed in the conflict, it said.

A spokesman for the Misrata city council confirmed the deal, saying it was up to the government to implement it. —

Tawergha residents expelled by rebels in 2011

 ?? — AFP ?? A man arranges a tree as part of Christmas celebratio­ns at the heavily-damaged Armenian Catholic Church of the Martyrs in the eastern Syrian city of Raqqa.
— AFP A man arranges a tree as part of Christmas celebratio­ns at the heavily-damaged Armenian Catholic Church of the Martyrs in the eastern Syrian city of Raqqa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates