walaalkis Posted January 22, 2012 Let the chaos start. They could have learned from Somalis Enraged Benghazi residents feel ignored, forgotten Sun Jan 22, 2012 3:27pm EST * NTC head attacked as anger boils over * Some residents say life better under Gaddafi By Oliver Holmes BENGHAZI, Libya, Jan 22 (Reuters) - The university professor, dressed immaculately in a pinstripe suit and waistcoat, points in despair to the crumbling buildings and rubbish-strewn streets of Libya's second city Benghazi. "You can see around you that there is no change. There has been no money spent on infrastructure and salaries are not being paid," said Ali al-Rabia. His voice rises in anger as he talks of how residents in Benghazi, birthplace of last year's revolution that toppled Muammar Gaddafi, had yet to see any benefit and had lost respect for the interim government. Anger in Benghazi has been simmering since October when the ruling National Transitional Council (NTC) moved to the capital Tripoli after declaring Libya liberated from Gaddafi's 42-year rule. Months later, residents say they feel forgotten. "The government is working without a judiciary or police. We know they are getting money from the over one million barrels of oil they sell a day, but where is it being spent?" Rabia said in fluent English. "But the worst of it is that people who worked with Gaddafi are being appointed into the interim government," he added, echoing a complaint from many in Benghazi who say they fear the corruption and nepotism of Gaddafi's rule did not die along with the dictator. ANGER BOILS OVER Frustration boiled over on Saturday when a crowd demanding the government's resignation smashed windows and forced their way into the NTC's Benghazi headquarters. The council's chief, Mustafa Abdel Jalil, was trapped inside for several hours. The protesters, many of them armed with machineguns and bayonets, had broken through the main metal gates and into the courtyard of the compound, witnesses said. Abdel Jalil attempted to placate the crowd, but retreated into the building after water bottles were thrown at him. Home-made bomb explosions were reported 500 metres from the compound. Although not intended to harm, protesters say they were a warning to the NTC. On Sunday, Abdel Jalil said such action could drag Libya into a "bottomless pit. There is something behind these protests that is not for the good of the country." The NTC made a peace offering to the protesters, the resignation of the NTC-appointed city mayor, Saleh El-Ghazal, and the promise of a new, elected leader. That was quickly followed by the resignation of NTC vice-president Abdel Hafiz Ghoga. Many in Benghazi said Ghoga should be barred from working for the NTC as he was secretary of the solicitors' syndicate under Gaddafi. On Thursday, Ghoga was jostled by an angry crowd of students when he visited a university in Benghazi. BETTER UNDER GADDAFI? Since Gaddafi's overthrow, it has been Libya's disparate armed militias who have captured the attention of the NTC with their sporadic infighting and refusal to disarm and join a national security force. Now the protests in Benghazi, and the need to appease the city of about 700,000 people, are preoccupying Libya's leadership. For an interim government that is only two months old, the demands of Benghazi are high. "We need compensation for the families of martyrs who died in the revolution and for the injured," said Nabil Baraka, 42, an unemployed man who was at the wrecked NTC headquarters on Sunday to protest along with dozens of other disgruntled men. "There is no security, the streets are full of guns. There is no transparency when the NTC makes a decision without asking anyone and the government is full of pro-Gaddafi people," he said. In Shajarah Square in central Benghazi a group of protesters have been staging a sit-in for more than a month. "We are worried about the establishment of a democracy," said Suleiman Abdul, an unemployed engineer, who stood in front of an Arabic language banner reading: "Make actions, not just promises." "Our families have died for this revolution, but the way it is going it was actually better before, under Gaddafi. The banks worked, there was no rubbish and people did not have to fear all the guns around the country." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites