Gulf Today

Libyan festival seeks to attract visitors to ‘pearl of the desert’

-

GHADAMES: Young girls in colourful dress and traditiona­l jewellery sing at a festival in Libya’s Ghadames, an oasis city that was relatively unscathed by the past decade’s chaos and is seeking to atract visitors.

Under tents strung up with red and ochre paterned material, baskets were on display as a woman sat weaving one together with a large wooden needle, silver rings tracing the movements of her hands as she worked.

Ghadames, known as the “pearl of the desert,” is located nearly 500 kilometres southwest of the capital Tripoli.

The Unesco-listed oasis city, a pre-roman Berber setlement and a key stop on Saharan trade routes, has unique multilevel architectu­re with whitewashe­d, covered alleyways.

In 2016, it was one of five Libyan sites added to the UN cultural body’s list of World Heritage in Danger ater Libya plunged into lawlessnes­s and armed conflict following the 2011 toppling of Muammar Qadhafi.

The crats festival, which also highlights Tuareg traditions, aims to bring visitors to the desert gem near the border with Tunisia and Algeria.

“It’s a great honour for Ghadames to host this shopping and heritage festival,” said mayor Qasem Mohammed Al Manea, 74, highlighti­ng the “traditiona­l industries and handicrats made by Libyan hands.”

He noted the presence of “people from various parts of Libya and even from abroad like Tunisia,” expressing hope to see tourists from Algeria if a nearby border crossing is re-opened.

A United Nations-guided peace process following the last major fighting in 2020 led to the appointmen­t the following year of a prime minister heading a Tripoli-based Government of National Unity, now contested by an administra­tion in the east.

Clashes between the two camps repeatedly shook Libya last year, notably Tripoli.

Since July 2021, the country has been trying to have Ghadames removed from the UNESCO danger list, arguing that it has been largely sheltered from fighting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain