Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
UN: Libyan refugee crisis worsening
UN: Libyan refugee crisis worsening
Dec 28, 2025 10:37 PM

  The UN has said that almost 40,000 people have fled fighting in Libya's Western Mountains region in the past month.

  Thousands of ethnic Berbers from Libya fled into Tunisia after a brief hiatus in their exodus last week because of fighting between Gaddafi troops and opposition forces for control of a border crossing point.

  "This past weekend, more than 8,000 people, most of them ethnic Berbers, arrived in Dehiba in southern Tunisia. Most are women and children," a UNHCR spokesperson said on Tuesday.

  UNHCR staff in Dehiba said the situation of the refugees was being made worse by a violent sandstorm that has battered the area, destroying hundreds of tents and two huge portable warehouses.

  UNHCR and its partners said they are struggling to maintain nearby camps.

  Antonio Guterres, the UN High Commissioner for refugees, told Al Jazeera that the situation is rapidly getting worse for Libyan refugees.

  "We have two hot spots - Misurata, where there is no humanitarian access and people are suffering enormously, and the border with Tunisia where there has been a lot of fighting for control of the border," he said.

  "The situation is becoming extremely dramatic from a humanitarian point of view. The Tunisians have been extremely generous, sharing everything with Libyan refugees but it is extremely difficult to support this population."

  Control of the Dehiba border crossing has changed hands over the past week as the fighting spilled onto Tunisian territory. Currently, the crossing is under opposition control.

  Further fighting feared

  Residents of Dehiba town told UNHCR staff they were worried about military activity across the border and feared further skirmishes.

  Meanwhile, people have resumed fleeing Libya by sea to Italy after a 10-day break due to bad weather.

  Some 3,200 people have arrived on the island of Lampedusa over the past five days, most of them originating from sub-Saharan Africa.

  This brings the total number of irregular arrivals on Italian territory from Libya since March 26 to more than 8,100. Another 1,132 people have arrived in Malta on boats from Libya since mid-April.

  The United Nations, Western powers and some Arab states accuse Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi of ordering his security forces to kill thousands of civilians who rose up in protest against his four-decade rule.

  Benghazi bomb blast

  Meanwhile, a car bomb in the opposition stronghold of Benghazi lightly injured two people, doctors in the city said on Tuesday.

  The explosion, the first of its kind in the city since the uprising against Gaddafi began in February, prompted anti-government demonstrators, some of them armed, to come out onto the streets, chanting anti-Gaddafi slogans and brandishing the weapons.

  The explosion apparently blew out windows in a high-rise building near the Benghazi courthouse, which has served as the opposition headquarters.

  Early on Wednesday, explosions were heard in eastern Tripoli after jets were heard flying over the city. NATO has been carrying out a series of air strikes against targets in the capital it says are part of Gaddafi's command and control structure.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Refugees from Libya walk in a camp near the southern Dehiba border crossing, about 200 kms (125 miles) south of Ras Jdir in Tunisia, on April 25.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
All roads lead to checkpoints
  There may have been a period when all roads led to Rome, but for the Palestinian people, all roads lead to checkpoints. The latest checkpoint Palestinians find themselves at is not manned by Israel but rather the ostensible mediator of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, the Quartet (which is comprised of...
Kyrgyzstan: Debate on legalized polygamy continues
  The debate on legalizing polygamy has returned to Kyrgyzstan. The issue has come before the parliaments of all the Central Asian states -- Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.   Polygamy is practiced in all parts of Central Asia. For centuries Islamic law guided how societies in this region behaved and...
Bosnians decry genocide ruling
  Bosnian Muslim and Croat leaders have voiced disappointment at the International Court of Justice's decision to clear Serbia of genocide in Bosnia, while Serbs have expressed relief at the verdict.   The highest UN court said Serbia had not planned or carried out in the 1995 Bosnian Serb massacre of 8,000...
Gaza's tunnel economy stumbles
  Fayez Shweikh, one of Gaza's up-and-coming businessmen, shakes his head as he considers his mixed fortunes.   In the past year, he had significantly increased his household income by investing in a black-market, "tunnel" economy, which relied on smuggled goods siphoned through underground passages between Egypt and Gaza.   Israel has always...
Iraq: oil and colonial powers -I
  The Mongol sacked Baghdad in 1258 and there was further pillage of this city by the Turkic conqueror Tamerlane in the following century. In less than a century, the Mongol conquerors themselves converted to Islam, and Islamic power resurged in Turkey and India after being dislodged from the Arabian heartland....
Uncovering Turkey's dark past
  Many ethnic Kurds and Turks hope that an ongoing investigation into an undercover organization may help explain hundreds of unsolved murders, disappearances and bombings which rocked Turkey in the early 1990s.   State prosecutors allege that a highly-secretive group - 'Ergenekon' - was responsible for many unsolved, high-profile killings in Turkey...
Kosovo talks end in deadlock
  After more than 13 months of talks, Serbian and ethnic Albanian leaders have failed to reach a compromise on the future of the disputed province of Kosovo.   The two sides were discussing a UN proposal that offers the trappings of statehood, including a constitution, flag and national anthem, under a...
Iraq oil and colonial powers –II
  World War II   In accordance with its treaty of alliance with Britain, Iraq broke off diplomatic relations with Germany early in September 1939 and during the first few months of World War II had a pro-British government under Premier General Nuri as-Said. In March 1940, however, Said was replaced by...
Albania under siege -I
  Geographical facts:   Albania (Albanian Shqipëria, “Country of the Eagle”), is a republic in southeastern Europe, and it is officially known as the Republic of Albania.   Albania lies along the northwestern edge of the Balkan Peninsula, with a total area of 28,748 sq km (11,100 sq mi). The greatest distance from...
Albania under siege -II
  Albania today:   Today Albania is surrounded by Italy, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia. Almost 4 million Albanians live in the Republic of Albania. Another 2 million live in Kosova and an additional 700,000 in Macedonia. Adding up the number of people scattered in the territories, there are an estimated 6.5...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved