The compound from which former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi ruled his country for four decades is now filled with squatters unable to afford housing in Tripoli.
Before Muammar Gaddafi’s ouster, Libyans steered well clear of the Bab al-Aziziya compound from where the dictator ruled, but a housing shortage in Tripoli has forced squatters to move in.
Satellite dishes and water tanks now fill the grounds of the once feared fortified complex in a southern suburb of the capital, as young boys kick balls and cars drive in and out of the main gate.
Much of the sprawling compound was destroyed in NATO bombardments during the 2011 uprising against Gaddafi and then rebels went on the rampage, ransacking it.
Now dozens of families have moved into the small houses once allocated to soldiers and the villas that were home to high-ranking army officers.
Bashir, 68, has been squatting in a 400-square-metre (4,300-square-foot) villa since 2012, one year after Gaddafi was captured and killed by rebels in Sirte, the coastal Mediterranean city that was his hometown.
“Hundreds of Libyans have come to live here,” he said, puffing on a cigarette.
“The villa had been set ablaze and it took me a year to renovate it, at great expense,” said Bashir. “But I’m not complaining.”
The complex, complete with bunker and a warren of underground tunnels, was Gaddafi’s home and the site from where he ruled Libya for four decades.
Built in the 1980s, it was reinforced following a US air strike in 1986 in response to an attack on US servicemen at a Berlin nightclub, for which Washington held Tripoli responsible.
In its heyday, Bab al-Aziziya, which covers six square kilometres (two square miles), housed a zoo, an indoor pool, countless murals and a fairground in its gardens.
Gaddafi had expanded the grounds by knocking down adjacent neighbourhoods.
After the uprising, Libyan authorities considered turning Bab al-Aziziya into a “green zone”, an amusement park or a memorial for the “martyrs” who had fallen in the conflict to oust Gaddafi.
None of those projects has materialised.
But according to information obtained by AFP, authorities are planning to turn Bab al-Aziziya into a park as part of a wider campaign to beautify Tripoli.
If so, the new residents of the once feared Gaddafi headquarters could face eviction.
“I will not leave my house,” said a man who gave his name as Hassan, declining to reveal his true identity for security reasons.
His squat “was in an appalling state, there were no doors or windows”, said Hassan, who claims to have spent the equivalent of $32,100 on repairs.
Ten years since the uprising that toppled Gaddafi’s regime, many Libyans who used to receive government grants and subsidies are struggling to make ends meet.
The oil-rich country descended into chaos after the dictator’s fall and still faces a host of political and economic crises, including chronic power cuts, petrol shortages and derelict infrastructure.
Years of conflict in post-Gaddafi Libya have resulted in tens of thousands of people being displaced, with many seeking refuge in big cities like Tripoli, creating a housing shortage.
“Before the revolution, you could find houses and there were less people (in Tripoli). But now finding an affordable house is rare, prices have skyrocketed,” said Bashir.
“Today, a small apartment costs around 400,000 dinars ($83,000). Where can I find money like that?”
The minimum monthly salary ranges between 450 and 600 Libyan dinars ($90 and $120), civil servants often go months without pay, and bank loans are almost impossible to obtain.
Economist Kamal al-Mansouri said insecurity has forced “foreign construction firms to pack up and go, leaving behind 200,000 unfinished homes”.
“Population growth and the displacement of Libyans due to conflict, with many people moving to big cities, means that finding decent housing is hard,” he said.
“And rents have doubled in the past 10 years,” said Tripoli-based real estate agent Ali Kelfat.
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