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Court jails Libyan Officials over deadly floods

by admineconai July 30, 2024
written by admineconai July 30, 2024
634

Twelve Libyan officials have reportedly received sentences ranging between nine and 27 years in prison for their role in catastrophic dam collapses that killed more than 4,000 people last September.

Recall that entire neighbourhoods in the city of Derna were swept away, and evacuation efforts were botched.

The convicted officials were responsible for managing water resources and maintaining the dams.
They were charged with crimes including negligence, premeditated murder and wasting public money.

Three of the defendants were also ordered to repay money obtained through illicit means, the public prosecutor’s office said. Four others put on trial were acquitted.

An international report in January said that the dams gave way partly due to poor maintenance and governance during more than a decade of conflict in Libya.

Read also: Ed Miliband: Labour will honour pledge of £11.6bn in overseas climate aid

A week after the disaster hit Derna, furious residents burnt down the mayor’s home as they demanded answers. The whole city council was dismissed.

In the days after the floods, residents report in Arabic that evacuation orders focused on the wrong part of Derna, that no sufficient provision was made for where evacuated people should shelter and that some of the stay-at-home orders and curfews contradicted each other.

Locals also report that some people who were evacuated from the seafront because of fears of rising sea levels were moved to more dangerous areas that later flooded.

The water was brought by Storm Daniel, resulting in more than 400mm of rain to parts of Libya’s north-east coast within a 24-hour period, in what has been described as an extraordinary deluge of water for a region which usually sees about 1.5mm throughout the whole of September.

Libya’s National Meteorological Centre said that the rainfall set a new record.

Since the ousting of long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi, Libya has been divided by power struggles and currently has two governments – a UN-recognised one based in Tripoli, and another in the country’s east backed by warlord Gen Khalifa Haftar.

Story was adapted from Voice of Nigeria.

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