Libya _ The Struggle Country


 

Libya (Arabic: ‏ليبياLībiyā) is a country in the Maghreb region of North Africa. Bordered by the Mediterranean Sea to the north, Libya faces Egypt to the east, Sudan to the south east, Chad and Niger to the south, and Algeria and Tunisia to the west.


As a result of the 2011 Libyan civil war, there are currently two entities claiming to be the official government of Libya. The Tripoli-based government of Muammar Gaddafi refers to the Libyan state as the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. It controls most of the western half of the country. The Benghazi-based Transitional National Council refers to the Libyan state as the Libyan Republic. It is led by Mustafa Abdul Jalil and controls most of the eastern half of the country.


With an area of almost 1,800,000 square kilometres (700,000 sq mi), Libya is the fourth largest country in Africa by area, and the 17th largest in the world. The capital, Tripoli, is home to 1.7 million of Libya's 6.4 million people. The three traditional parts of the country are Tripolitania, Fezzan, and Cyrenaica. Libya has the highest HDI in Africa and the fourth highest GDP (PPP) per capita in Africa as of 2009, behind Seychelles, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon. These are largely due to its large petroleum reserves and low population. Libya has the 10th-largest proven oil reserves of any country in the world and the 17th-highest petroleum production.

 

Government


Libya has a unique political system which seeks to combine socialism, Islam, and the revolutionary philosophy of the country's ruler, Col, Moamer al-Kaddhafi. The 1977 constitution created an Islamic socialist state, and the government is designed to allow the greatest possible popular involvement, through a large congress and smaller secretariats and committees. There is a General People's Congress (GPC) of 1,112 members that elects a secretary general who is intended to be head of state. The GPC is serviced by a general secretariat, which is Libya's nearest equivalent to a legislature. The executive organ of the state is the General People's Committee, which replaces the structure of ministries that operated before the 1969 revolution. There are also Local People's Congresses in towns and rural regions. The Arab Socialist Union (ASU) is the only political party, and, despite Libya's elaborately democratic structure, ultimate power rests with the party, its leader, Kaddhafi, and the security forces.

 

History


The area now known as Libya was inhabited by North African nomads until it came successively under the domination of Phoenicia, Greece, Rome, the Vandals, Byzantium, and Islam, and from the 16th century was part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire. In 1911 it was conquered by Italy, becoming known as Libya from 1934.


After being the scene of much fighting during World War II, in 1942 it was divided into three provinces: Fezzan, which was placed under French control; Cyrenaica; and Tripolitania, which was placed under British control. In 1951 it achieved independence as the United Kingdom of Libya, Muhammad Idris-as-Sanusi becoming King Idris.

 

Revolution


The development of oil reserves during the 1960s transformed the Libyan economy. The country enjoyed internal and external stability until a bloodless revolution in 1969, led by young nationalist officers, deposed the king and proclaimed a Libyan Arab Republic. Power was vested in a Revolution Command Council (RCC), chaired by Col al-Khaddhafi, with the Arab Socialist Union (ASU) as the only political party. Khaddhafi soon began proposing schemes for Arab unity, none of which was permanently adopted. In 1972 he planned a federation of Libya, Syria, and Egypt and later that year a merger between Libya and Egypt. In 1980 he proposed a union with Syria and in 1981 with Chad.

 

Islamic socialism


Khaddhafi attempted to run the country on socialist Islamic lines, with people's committees pledged to socialism and the teachings of the Koran. The 1977 constitution made him secretary general of the general secretariat of the GPC, but in 1979 he resigned the post in order to devote more time to ‘preserving the revolution’.

 

Conflict with the West


Khaddhafi's attempted to establish himself as a leader of the Arab world. He brought him into conflict with Western powers, particularly the USA and UK. In 1984, the UK broke off diplomatic relations with Libya after British police officer Yvonne Fletcher was shot outside the Libyan embassy in London. The Reagan administration objected to Libya's presence in Chad and its attempts to unseat the French-US-sponsored government of President Habré. The USA linked Khaddhafi to worldwide terrorist activities, despite his denials of complicity, and the killing of a US soldier in a bomb attack in Berlin in 1986 by an unidentified guerrilla group prompted a raid by US aircraft, some of them British-based, on Tripoli and Benghazi. Libyan terrorists were also blamed for the bombing of Pan American World Airways Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, which killed 270 people; and for the 1989 bombing of UTA (Union de Transports Aérians) Flight 772 over Niger.

 

International sanctions


In 1988 Khaddhafi embarked on a dramatic programme of liberalization, freeing political prisoners and encouraging private businesses to operate, and in the same year offered to recognize Chad's independence and to give material help in the reconstruction of the country. In January 1989 he did not retaliate when two fighter jets were shot down over the Mediterranean off Libya by the US Navy, and he appeared to be moving towards improving external relations, effecting a reconciliation with Egypt in October 1989. However in April 1992 the UN Security Council imposed international sanctions against Libya after Khaddhafi repeatedly refused to extradite six suspects linked to the Lockerbie and UTA bombings. Foreign air links were severed and Libyan diplomatic staff in several countries was expelled. A US request for tougher sanctions was rejected by the UN in April 1995.

 

By Fatma Dawod

 

 

References:

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZM_hn3IyCZA

 

http://www.libya-watanona.com/libya1/

 

http://www.libya-watanona.com/libya/culture.htm

 

http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Lybia

 

http://www.myphotographs.net/libya/picture6.html

 



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