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Libya celebrates 60th anniversary of independence day for the 1st time
in decades
25-12-2011
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — For the first time in more than four decades,
Libyans on Saturday celebrated the 60th anniversary of the country's
independence from Italy and France.
Under Moammar Gadhafi's 42-year rule, the celebration was scrapped and
instead, only the 1969 date of his coup was marked.
"Today we begin the building of Libya as our forefathers have done,"
Prime Minister Abdurrahim el-Keib said during the celebration. "We call
on our sons to build Libya after its destruction."
His remarks were part of an official ceremony in the capital Tripoli.
Thousands of people flocked to the capital from around the country in
hopes of breaking bread on an 7-mile-long (11-kilometer-long) set of
tables planned along Tripoli's coast as part of the ceremony. However,
the dinner was canceled due to security reasons and infighting among
former rebel groups who were invited, officials said.
At the National Transitional Council's headquarters in Tripoli,
ministers shared a cake and mingled with journalists.
No family members of deposed King Idris, who were forced into exile in
1969, were in Libya for the ceremony. Idris died in Cairo in 1983.
Libya was occupied for decades by various nations, and it was not until
1947 that both Italy and France relinquished claims to parts of the
country. The United Libyan Kingdom was announced with U.N. backing in
late 1951 under King Idris.
"As the late King Idris said at the time, preserving independence is
harder than achieving it," NTC chairman Mustafa Abdul-Jalil said at the
ceremony.
On the sidelines of the ceremony, the prime minister told reporters that
the Economy Minister Taher Sharkas had resigned due to health reasons.
The resignation comes after protests demanding that officials of the
former regime be barred from serving in government.
Sharkas had been appointed to the same post by Gadhafi just two months
before the longtime leader's capture and killing in October, a few three
days before rebel fighters took over the capital, Tripoli.
His resignation also followed a Thursday announcement by Abdul-Jalil, in
which he laid out 18 new ethics and standards guidelines for ministers
in the new Cabinet formed after Gadhafi's ouster. One of the new
guidelines is that a minister cannot have served in a top post under
Gadhafi.
Protesters in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, where the
anti-Gadhafi uprising broke out in February, have been protesting for
nearly two weeks, demanding transparency and justice from the country's
new leaders. They also called for Sharkas' ouster after it was
discovered that Gadhafi appointed him as a minister on Aug. 18.
The new government has said it is open to some reconciliation with
former regime officials, but protesters are opposed.
According to an NTC official, who wished to remain anonymous because he
was not authorized to disclose internal policy, the prime minister is
the one who chose Sharkas for the post. The official said it was a
"sloppy" mistake and that el-Keib had not done enough research on
Sharkas' background.
In his remarks at the independence ceremony, Abdul-Jalil admitted that
the NTC made mistakes during the transition.
"We are not going to defend these mistakes, but it is on us as a
national duty and responsibility to be transparent and learn from them
so we do not repeat them," he said. |