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After The War, A Bitter Feud Remains In Two Libyan Towns

A destroyed home in Tawargha, south of Misrata, on June 5, 2012. Residents have not returned home for fear of death.
John W. Poole
/
NPR
A destroyed home in Tawargha, south of Misrata, on June 5, 2012. Residents have not returned home for fear of death.

Little boys play soccer in the afternoon heat at a makeshift camp near Libya's capital Tripoli. Their homes, or what's left of them, are in Tawargha, a small town about 20 miles from the Mediterranean coast.

The town has been empty since August of 2011. Its residents fled in cars and on foot, under fire from rebel militiamen from the nearby town of Misrata.

They won't welcome us with flowers, but we must go back to our homes.

The siege of Misrata was one of the bloodiest battles of the Libyan war. Forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi shelled Misrata relentlessly, killing hundreds.

Residents of the Libyan town of Tawargha were driven from their homes in Libya's 2011 civil war. Girls from the town hold up a sign that says "we want our homeland, Tawargha" during a protest outside Libya's Parliament. Residents say they will return next month, which could lead to a showdown.
Leila Fadel / NPR
/
NPR
Residents of the Libyan town of Tawargha were driven from their homes in Libya's 2011 civil war. Girls from the town hold up a sign that says "we want our homeland, Tawargha" during a protest outside Libya's Parliament. Residents say they will return next month, which could lead to a showdown.

When it was over, the people of Misrata, especially its powerful militia, accused residents of Tawargha of colluding with Gadhafi's forces. The militia attacked the town, burned and looted its homes and vowed that the residents would never be allowed to return.

About 40,000 displaced Tawargha residents now live in camps in the south, west and east of the country. They've had enough, they say, and will return on June 25, despite the concern that they'll be met with violence.

The bitterness between the two towns illustrates the chronic difficulty of ending a civil war and forging reconciliation. For now the Tawarghans are the victims, but many of them say too that they will not forgive or forget.

'We Must Go Back To Our Homes'

One camp of displaced Tawargha residents is in a former marine academy, where people get by with barely any electricity or water, afraid to leave because men who go outside the camp often don't come back.

Ali Arroz, a resident of the camp and a leader of the community, was a radiologist in Tawargha. Now he's trying to help his community return home. He denies that the entire population of Tawargha colluded with Gadhafi's forces, and he says the town's residents are targeted in part because they are black.

"The Misratan militiamen are hunting us in every corner of Libya," Arroz says, "and they are saying on television that they will rid Libya of black people."

He says Tawargha residents decided to return with the support of some Libyan tribes and are hoping the government will support the decision.

"They won't welcome us with flowers," he says, referring to the Misratans, "but we must go back to our homes."

Ali Arroz, a radiologist, left Tawargha with only the clothes he was wearing, under fire from Misrata militiamen.
Leila Fadel / NPR
/
NPR
Ali Arroz, a radiologist, left Tawargha with only the clothes he was wearing, under fire from Misrata militiamen.

Arroz walks through the camp, pointing out a family of 12 that lives in one room. The walls of the room are made of cardboard.

Like so many at the camp, Arroz fled Tawargha with nothing but the clothes he was wearing. When he leaves the camp, his son cries, worried that he won't come back. Men disappear every day, he says.

In one building, Saad Omar, a woman in her 70s, sits on a blanket on the floor, with two others. Her son is missing, and she believes he was detained by one of the militiamen from Misrata.

According to Human Rights Watch, about 1,300 Tawarghan men are listed as missing, dead or detained. A Commission of Inquiry for the United Nations Human Rights Council concluded that crimes against humanity have been committed against the Tawarghans.

Saad pulls one child after another toward her and says, "This one has no father. This one, too, and this one.

"It was a war between tribes, and we are being punished," she says. "I will never forgive the Misratans."

But despite the continuing threat from the militia, Saad Omar and the others in this camp plan to return to Tawargha next month.

Concerns Of More Violence

The government is concerned that if the Tawarghans return, Misratans will respond with force.

"I think it's very reckless; I think it's irresponsible," says Mohammed Abdallah, a member of Libya's General National Congress from Misrata. "That does not mean that we accept the living conditions and the suffering of the people of Tawargha or any displaced people — this is something that is not acceptable regardless of what's happened."

Abdallah says the government has failed to reconcile the two towns with a process of transitional justice that would bring pro-Gadhafi criminals to account for their crimes.

"There is a crime, a very deep wound that still bleeds in Misrata and in many other cities that have been carried out by pro-Gadhafi people," he says. "And the city of Tawargha should not pay the price for the actions of some criminals."

But Abdallah says the deep wounds the people of Misrata suffered will make it difficult for them to forgive their neighbors and allow them to return.

"From a human standpoint, to go and convince a father whose daughter has been raped by these criminals to say, 'By the way, their relatives are coming back to live in their homes as if nothing had happened,' " Abdallah says.

Back in the camp, a woman washes the floors in one building where makeshift apartments are divided by pieces of cardboard. She calls the Libyan revolution a disaster for Tawarghans but vows that she, too, will return home.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Leila Fadel is a national correspondent for NPR based in Los Angeles, covering issues of culture, diversity, and race.