Libya: From Africa’s Wealthiest Democracy, To US-NATO Sponsored
Terrorist Haven
By Garikai ChenguOctober 19, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "GR"
- October
20, marks the four-year anniversary of the US-backed assassination
of Libya’s former leader, Muammar Gaddafi, and the decline into
chaos of one of Africa’s greatest nations.
In 1967 Colonel
Gaddafi inherited one of the poorest nations in Africa; by the time
he was assassinated, he had transformed Libya into Africa’s richest
nation. Prior to the US-led bombing campaign in 2011, Libya had the
highest Human Development Index, the lowest infant mortality and the
highest life expectancy in all of Africa.
Today, Libya is a failed state. Western military
intervention has caused all of the worst-scenarios: Western
embassies have all left, the South of the country has become a haven
for ISIS terrorists, and the Northern coast a center of migrant
trafficking. Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia have all closed their
borders with Libya. This all occurs amidst a backdrop of widespread
rape, assassinations and torture that complete the picture of a
state that is failed to the bone.
Libya currently has two competing governments, two
parliaments, two sets of rivaling claims to control over the central
bank and the national oil company, no functioning national police or
army, and the United States now believes that ISIS is running
training camps across large swathes of the country.
On one side, in the West of the nation,
Islamist-allied militias took over control of the capital Tripoli
and other key cities and set up their own government, chasing away a
parliament that was previously elected.
On the other side, in the East of the nation, the
“legitimate” government dominated by anti-Islamist politicians,
exiled 1,200 kilometers away in Tobruk, no longer governs anything.
The democracy which Libyans were promised by Western governments
after the fall of Colonel Gaddafi has all but vanished.
Contrary to popular belief, Libya, which western
media routinely described as “Gaddafi’s military dictatorship” was
in actual fact one of the world’s most democratic States.
Under Gaddafi’s unique system of direct democracy,
traditional institutions of government were disbanded and abolished,
and power belonged to the people directly through various committees
and congresses.
Far from control being in the hands of one man,
Libya was highly decentralized and divided into several small
communities that were essentially “mini-autonomous States” within a
State. These autonomous States had control over their districts and
could make a range of decisions including how to allocate oil
revenue and budgetary funds. Within these mini autonomous States,
the three main bodies of Libya’s democracy were Local Committees,
Basic People’s Congresses and Executive Revolutionary Councils.
The Basic People’s Congress (BPC), or Mu’tamar
shaʿbi asāsi was essentially Libya’s functional equivalent of
the House of Commons in the United Kingdom or the House of
Representatives in the United States. However, Libya’s People’s
Congress was not comprised merely of elected representatives who
discussed and proposed legislation on behalf of the people; rather,
the Congress allowed all Libyans to directly participate in this
process. Eight hundred People’s Congresses were set up across the
country and all Libyans were free to attend and shape national
policy and make decisions over all major issues including budgets,
education, industry, and the economy.
In 2009, Gaddafi invited the New York Times to
Libya to spend two weeks observing the nation’s direct democracy.
The New York Times, that has traditionally been highly critical of
Colonel Gaddafi’s democratic experiment, conceded that in Libya, the
intention was that
“everyone is involved in every decision…Tens
of thousands of people take part in local committee meetings to
discuss issues and vote on everything from foreign treaties to
building schools.”
The fundamental difference between western
democratic systems and the Libyan Jamahiriya’s direct democracy is
that in Libya all citizens were allowed to voice their views
directly – not in one parliament of only a few hundred wealthy
politicians – but in hundreds of committees attended by tens of
thousands of ordinary citizens. Far from being a military
dictatorship, Libya under Mr. Gaddafi was Africa’s most prosperous
democracy.
On numerous occasions Mr. Gaddafi’s proposals were
rejected by popular vote during Congresses and the opposite was
approved and enacted as legislation.
For instance, on many occasions Mr. Gaddafi
proposed the abolition of capital punishment and he pushed for home
schooling over traditional schools. However, the People’s Congresses
wanted to maintain the death penalty and classic schools, and the
will of the People’s Congresses prevailed. Similarly, in 2009,
Colonel Gaddafi put forward a proposal to essentially abolish the
central government altogether and give all the oil proceeds directly
to each family. The People’s Congresses rejected this idea too.
For over four decades, Gaddafi promoted economic
democracy and used the nationalized oil wealth to sustain
progressive social welfare programs for all Libyans. Under Gaddafi’s
rule, Libyans enjoyed not only free health-care and free education,
but also free electricity and interest-free loans. Now thanks to
NATO’s intervention the health-care sector is on the verge of
collapse as thousands of Filipino health workers flee the country,
institutions of higher education across the East of the country are
shut down, and black outs are a common occurrence in once thriving
Tripoli.
Unlike in the West, Libyans did not vote once
every four years for a President and an invariably wealthy local
parliamentarian who would then make all decisions for them. Ordinary
Libyans made decisions regarding foreign, domestic and economic
policy themselves.
America’s bombing campaign of 2011 has not only
destroyed the infrastructure of Libya’s democracy, America has also
actively promoted ISIS terror group leader Abdelhakim Belhadj whose
organization is making the establishment of Libyan democracy
impossible.
The fact that the United States has a long and
torrid history of backing terrorist groups in North Africa and the
Middle East will surprise only those who watch the news and ignore
history.
The CIA first aligned itself with extremist Islam
during the Cold War era. Back then, America saw the world in rather
simple terms: on one side the Soviet Union and Third World
nationalism, which America regarded as a Soviet tool; on the other
side Western nations and extremist political Islam, which America
considered an ally in the struggle against the Soviet Union.
Since then America has used the Muslim Brotherhood
in Egypt against Soviet expansion, the Sarekat Islam against Sukarno
in Indonesia and the Jamaat-e-Islami terror group against Zulfiqar
Ali Bhutto in Pakistan. Last but certainly not least there is
Al-Qaeda.
Al Qaeda: The CIA’s Computer Data Base
Lest we forget, the CIA gave birth to Osama Bin
Laden and breastfed his organization throughout the 1980′s. Former
British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook told the House of Commons that
Al Qaeda was unquestionably a product of western intelligence
agencies. Robin Cook explained that Al Qaeda, which literally means
“the base” in Arabic, was originally the computer database of the
thousands of Islamist extremists who were trained by the CIA and
funded by the Saudis to defeat the Russians in Afghanistan. The
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) used to have a different
name: Al Qaeda in Iraq.
ISIS is metastasizing at an alarming rate in
Libya, under the leadership of one Abdelhakim Belhadj. Fox News
recently admitted that Mr. Belhadj “was once courted by the Obama
administration and members of Congress” and he was a staunch ally of
the United States in the quest to topple Gaddafi. In 2011, the
United States and Senator McCain hailed Belhadj as a “heroic freedom
fighter” and Washington gave his organization arms and logistical
support. Now Senator McCain has called Belhadj’s organization ISIS,
“probably the biggest threat to America and everything we stand
for.”
Under Gaddafi, Islamic terrorism was virtually non
existent and in 2009 the US State Department called Libya “an
important ally in the war on terrorism”.
Today, after US intervention, Libya is home to the
world’s largest loose arms cache, and its porous borders are
routinely transited by a host of heavily armed non-state actors
including Tuareg separatists, jihadists who forced Mali’s national
military from Timbuktu and increasingly ISIS militiamen led by
former US ally Abdelhakim Belhadj.
Clearly, Gaddafi’s system of economic and direct
democracy was one of the 21st century’s most profound democratic
experiments and NATO’s bombardment of Libya may indeed go down in
history as one of the greatest military failures of the 21st
century.
Garikai
Chengu is a scholar at Harvard
University. Contact him on
garikai.chengu@gmail.com