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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

Libya’s floods are result of climate crisis meeting a failed state

A man walks through the debris left behind by the floodwaters in Derna
Years of neglect and mismanagement played a major role in how the disaster in Derna unfolded. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

When the climate crisis meets a failed state, the outcome is the kind of disaster that Libya is witnessing in Derna.

Any city would have struggled with the extraordinary level of precipitation that Storm Daniel visited upon Libya’s northern coast. In its earlier, milder form, the storm caused severe damage in Greece before it crossed the Mediterranean.

Nevertheless, the extent of the devastation – a quarter of a city was swept into the sea in what is being described as Libya’s 9/11 – is also a function of the country’s failed politics.

After the bloody western-backed ousting of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, the country has mainly been governed by two rival administrations, one in Tripoli and the other in Tobruk, each supported by an assembly of rival external actors including Turkey, the UAE, Qatar, Egypt and Russia’s Wagner group.

Under Gaddafi’s pseudo-socialism in the late 1970s and 80s, the dictator dismantled oil-rich Libya’s private sector through the administration of state-owned companies, shattering the independent powerbase of the upper classes. “State enterprises became patronage networks,” explains Wolfram Lacher, the co-editor of a recently published collection of essays, Violence and Social Transformation in Libya.

Post-Gaddafi, the two sides have been similarly centralised. Ministers in the government of national unity, based in the west of the country, were nominated by militia. In the east, a relentless centralisation drive by the authoritarian head of the Libyan National Army, Gen Khalifa Haftar, and his family similarly ended up with numerous executives nominated by Haftar or his associates.

The two sides were at all-out war as recently as 2020. Hafter’s forces besieged Tripoli in a year-long failed military campaign to try to capture the capital in which thousands of people were killed. Then in 2022, the former leader of the eastern administration Fathi Bashagha tried to move his government into Tripoli before clashes between rival militias forced him to withdraw. This rumbling, mostly low-intensity conflict, requiring leaders to assuage their base with handouts, is the worst environment in which to make infrastructure investments that reap rewards only in the long term.

Bringing this context to Derna, the city that has long suffered since Gaddafi’s demise, either by being in the hands of Islamic State or since its recapture by Haftar in 2016, and infrastructure investment has always been at a premium. Haftar, whose secondary education was in the city, has also tried to keep close control of the Derna’s politics.

Municipal city council elections were scheduled to be held this month, with lists and voter registration compiled. In recent weeks, however, members of the Awliya al-Dam brigades loyal to Haftar burned campaign posters and threatened candidates with kidnapping and murder, demanding the cancellation of the elections and the installation of a military governor in the city. The head of the electoral commission reported he was being threatened. Aguila Saleh, the speaker of the House of Representatives in eastern-based parliament, proposed forming a temporary management council, a way of deferring the poll.

The two large dams built in the narrow valley above Derna were an accident waiting to happen, especially because poorly constructed housing built close to the river had become increasingly dense and high-rise. Built in the 1970s by a Yugoslav company, the risk posed by the two dams and their state of decay was the subject of a lengthy academic article in 2022, calculating what weight of water would crush them and how it might run off given the topography.

Money was set aside for work on the dams, but an audit circulating online shows little of it seems to have been spent. Once the flood waters overwhelmed the first dam they quickly accumulated behind the second, causing it, too, to burst.

Nor were instructions given to mount an evacuation as the storm neared. Instead a curfew was imposed, the standard response of Libyan militias to any crisis.

It is yet to be seen if the politicians who had a role in leaving Derna so exposed to nature will be washed away along with the buildings that collapsed into the swollen river. The lesson of the past few years is that in both the east and west they have an astonishing ability to survive.

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