19.01.12 Menas Associates
Bringing the militias to heel?

Maj Gen Mohamed Al-Mangoush certainly has his work cut out. His main task is to build the Libyan army into
a credible force that can bring the militias under its control. Doing so will
not be easy. As things currently stand, with its handful of small units, the
army
is a David to the militias' Goliath. Convincing powerful revolutionary leaders
to hand in their weapons or to come under the command of national military
officers is an uphill struggle and, unless the army gets some serious clout
behind it,
unlikely to succeed.
Meanwhile the violence continues. It is true that the militias have a reduced
presence on the ground and that the number of checkpoints has been cut back.
This
does not mean, however, that the militias have stopped throwing their weight
around. As the clashes that erupted this month demonstrate, in the absence of a
strong authority rival militias continue to take the law into their own hands.
Moreover, the presence of so many armed young men with little else to do does
not bode well for future security. Despite the schemes currently being devised
by
the new authorities to absorb militia members – such as the
Planning Ministry's recent proposal to pay those who join the official security
structures a salary of LYD600 a month – there is still no indication that the
national army is proving any more attractive than the militias.
As one young man from Benghazi who is still holed up in Tripoli explained, "It [the fighting] was really exciting and fun most of the time and I made some
great friends!" The fact that hundreds of uniformed soldiers took to the streets this month and
staged a demonstration outside the Central Bank branch in Benghazi to demand their salaries can have done little to help
matters. The demonstrators declared that the new government should focus its
attention
on building a new army and not on giving cash rewards to the revolutionaries.
The police are doing little better than the army in the effort to recruit
revolutionaries. According to one report, 24 hours after the police force
opened its
doors for militia members to sign up only 100 had done so.
For more news and expert analysis about Libya, please see Libya Focus and Libya Politics & Security.
© 2012 Menas Associates