Tuesday, 1 March 2011

In 'Free Libya': Hey, Who, Exactly, Is in Charge Here?

It's easy to find the headquarters of the Libyan opposition in Benghazi, the country's second city and the hotbed of the uprising against the regime of Muammar Gaddafi. Just head down to the Corniche, the city's Mediterranean waterfront, and follow the cheering crowds hanging Gaddafi in effigy to the city's district courthouse, where the revolution began on Feb. 17 as a protest by the city's lawyers and judges. But once inside the now battle-scarred and graffitied building, it's hard to figure out who, exactly, is in charge.
Scores of newly minted revolutionary officials — middle-aged volunteers from the city's professional and business classes — have many meetings but appear to make few decisions. They hold press conferences in what used to be a courtroom, while about a dozen opposition spokesmen roam the halls trying to be helpful but often offering conflicting information. Trucks full of eggs and baby formula arrive at the courthouse doors without an apparent system for delivering them to the needy and without clear reports of shortages. And though spirits are high, especially among the young volunteers sporting Che Guevara–style berets, the institutional vibe is more like that of a steering committee of a future liberal-arts college than of a guerrilla movement gearing up for a long fight. "The problem is that we don't have anyone with any political experience whatsoever," says Iman Bugahaighis, a professor of dentistry now acting as an unofficial spokesperson. "We didn't have any institutions other than regime. That was part of Gaddafi's plan: to make everyone loyal only to him."...
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Andrew Lee Butters & Abigail Hauslohner @'Time'

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