Still, it’s unlikely that a post-Gaddafi government will support U.S. policies in the Middle East. Members of the national council said they were opposed to U.S. policies in Israel and the Palestinian territories, as well as in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Rebel council seeks to transform Libya
http://www.washingtonpost.com/BENGHAZI, LIBYA — They are a rebel leadership who meet in secret places in their own stronghold. Some change residences every few days. Others worry their cellphones are tapped or walk with bodyguards. Their chairman is seldom seen in public: Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi has placed a $400,000 bounty on his head.
“There is a price on the life of all of us,” said Salwa Bugaighis, a lawyer and a senior member of the rebel leadership. “We’re dealing with someone who has a lot of cash. It’s been a difficult time. It still is.”
As Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton meets with Libya’s rebel leadership to assess their intentions and capabilities, she will hear from a movement under siege and desperate for international recognition, assistance and a no-fly zone. Gaddafi’s forces are methodically edging toward Benghazi, where the rebels have created a government-in-waiting known as the National Transitional Council.
It is a leadership of lawyers and intellectuals who profess ambitions of creating a Libya governed by democratic ideals, possibly altering the face of the Arab world and inspiring more autocratic regimes to fall. But it is also a leadership that is realizing that revolutionary zeal alone will not end Gaddafi’s 41-year rule on a landscape that is increasingly feeling like civil war.
The group includes activists who have fought Gaddafi for decades and recent defectors. At times, the national council doesn’t speak with a unified voice; day-to-day operations seem disorganized, even precarious. They have encouraged legions of enthusiastic but militarily inexperienced young people to fight on the front lines, a decision that has brought tactical and psychological setbacks.
Many of its leaders have no political experience, raising questions about their ability to create and run a post-Gaddafi government. In Egypt, deposed president Hosni Mubarak allowed political parties, elections, trade unions, rights groups and a vibrant free press that ultimately provided vital political training to his opponents. Gaddafi has muzzled the press and banned independent trade unions, political parties and non-governmental organizations.
Yet the rebels have effectively run eastern Libya for the past three weeks, devoid of the chaos seen in Tunisia and other upheavals. They have established local councils that run hospitals, collect trash, and operate banks, while providing basic services such as drinking water and electricity. Police patrol streets, even direct traffic.
“In every city in eastern Libya, there is security,” said Salwa el-Daghili, a constitutional law professor who is a member of the rebel national council. “Unlike Egypt and Tunisia, there are no political institutions in Libya. So this is a great achievement by the citizens of the revolution.”
Local councils in regions and cities across Libya nominated representatives to the 31-member national council. The names of only 11 members have been made public, for the rest live in areas either controlled by Gaddafi or under attack by his forces.
Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, who quit as Libya’s justice minister last month to protest the regime’s violent suppression of protesters, heads the national council. Since March 9, when Libyan state television reported Gaddafi’s bounty on his head, Abdul-Jalil has kept a low profile.
His deputy, Abdel-Hafidh Ghoga, a prominent lawyer, has been the public face of the council. Ghoga, a former president of the Libyan Bar Association, declared himself the spokesman of a rival interim council, but then joined hands with Abdul-Jalil. Rebel officials insist there is no tension between the leaders.
Other national council members include a U.S.-educated political science professor, a well-known youth leader and a relative of Libya’s former monarch who spent 31 years in prison for allegedly participating in a coup attempt against Gaddafi. The council has also tapped experienced diplomats who defected to represent them in Western and Arab capitals.
Mahmoud Jibril, a U.S.-educated professor and former head of Libya’s National Economic Development Board, is the rebel leadership’s foreign affairs representative and is expected to meet with Clinton in Cairo. A 2009 U.S. diplomatic cable released by Wikileaks and written by the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Gene Cretz, described Jibril as “a serious interlocutor who ‘gets’ the U.S. perspective.”
In an interview, Ghoga said the council unanimously wants to put in place a democratic, civilian government with a constitution, separation of powers, freedom of the press and assembly, and multi-party elections. “We want a Libya where no one is above the law,” Ghoga said.
They envision a parliamentary rather than a presidential system, largely because there was a parliament under King Idriss, whom Gaddafi deposed in a bloodless coup in 1969. Sensitive to comments by Gaddafi that they were linked to al-Qaeda and wanted to create an Islamic emirate, rebel officials stressed that while Islam would be the official religion, a post-Gaddafi government would be secular.
“It will never be an Islamic regime,” Daghili said. “The revolution seeks advancement for both men and women. The women here are well educated. It is far from a Taliban-like state.”
If the rebel council is recognized by the world, the council could be allowed access to Libyan funds abroad and to the proceeds of oil sales, and it could make it easier to take legal and political action against Gaddafi. France last week became the first country to recognize the council as Libya’s legitimate government.
Still, it’s unlikely that a post-Gaddafi government will support U.S. policies in the Middle East. Members of the national council said they were opposed to U.S. policies in Israel and the Palestinian territories, as well as in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The council has had minor differences and has publicly sent mixed signals, such as over an alleged offer from Gaddafi to negotiate. But prominent Libyan exiles said they held a high level of confidence in the rebel leadership. “It is not a government, it’s not a political party,” said Noman Benotman, a former top Libyan resistance fighter who lives in London. “It is a leadership dealing with a severe crisis. They are doing that well.”
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