Building a revolution from scratch

Angus MacSwan looks at how Libya builds its rebel structure, involving both the youth and professionals across the sector, with exiles returning to help the cause.
March 24, 2011 5:00 by Reuters
Mustafa Gheriani was a construction contractor shuttling between the United States and Libya when the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi broke out.
Iman Bughaeis was teaching dentistry at Benghazi’s University.
Now they are part of the Libyan rebel movement’s administration, trying to bring some order to what at first sight seems a like a state of near anarchy in their headquarters in a dilapidated courthouse on Benghazi’s seafront.
The uprising erupted spontaneously and the opposition is having to build its structure from scratch — no easy task in a country where authority and organisation had been kept in the grip of Gaddafi loyalists for four decades.
“We are learning as we go. Our political experience is one month and one week,” said Bughaeis, who teaches orthodontics and earned her degree at Newcastle University in Britain.
She stepped forward to help as the Feb. 17 opposition began to coalesce.
“We didn’t have anything. To start work in this environment was very hard.”
She is now helping the opposition cope with the international media, an important role as foreign governments weigh up their relationship with the rebels.
Gheriani has emerged as one of the main spokesmen. He said he was in Benghazi when the first protests broke out and he joined them.
“We thought it would just last a day or two then Gaddafi would put it down. But in a few days the east was liberated. People just started to show up at the courthouse.”
More on Analysis
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
Real cost of sending your child to a Dubai school
-
BurgerFuel rockets its way across Dubai
-
Middle East deadly virus – what do we call it?
-
BurgerFuel’s aggressive expansion plans
-
Qatar’s Leverage Over Banks Is On The Wane
-
First report by Etisalat covering global footprint
-
Qatar Should Consider More Flexible Exchange Rate – Central Banker
-
Yahoo on Tumblr: ‘we promise not to screw it up’
-
Arabtec workers: strike will continue
-
Kuwait: expats sent packing
-
Dubai Labourers on ‘rare’ labour protest
-
Tumblr officially off the market
-
A major step for Turkey
-
Dusting off the Emirates ID card
-
Turkish Airlines Can Ride Out Turbulence
-
Air Berlin doesn’t need Etihad’s help
-
Turkey’s IMF emancipation deserves cautious cheer
-
Nokia charging back with full force
Lately on Kipp
-
Dubai ruler makes horse doping illegal
-
CEO-elect of UAE’s fraud-hit RAKBANK has quit
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
NEC Display Solutions launches Full HD 3D ready compact meeting room projector
-
Saudi Arabia confirms another death from SARS-like virus







































