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Libya jihadists share ideals, not ties with Qaeda: experts

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AFP Tripoli
Last Updated : Oct 08 2013 | 3:05 PM IST
Abu Anas al-Libi, captured in a daring US raid, was once in Osama bin Laden's inner circle, but appears to have had few ties to Libya's new generation of jihadists.
Islamists inspired by Al-Qaeda's war on the West have flourished in chaotic post-Kadhafi Libya, but evince little interest in the core group founded by bin Laden in the 1990s, which has been decimated by arrests and US drone strikes in the decade-long War on Terror.
But in a measure of the limited success of that campaign, young militants now wave the black banner of radical Islam in war zones from Mali to Syria, while Libi appears to have lived the quiet life of a retiree in Tripoli, with little if any involvement in his country's growing jihad.
His story traces the arc of Al-Qaeda's decades-long struggle and growth from a small group of embittered exiles to an ideology seized upon by militants locked in conflicts across the Muslim world.
Like many Libyan jihadists, Abu Anas al-Libi -- whose real name is Nazih Abdul Hamed al-Raghie -- was hounded out of his native country during Moamer Kadhafi's brutal crackdown on Islamists in the 1990s.
The computer expert was welcomed with open arms by bin Laden's fledgling group, then based in Sudan, and according to a US indictment helped plan Al-Qaeda's first major attack -- the bombing of embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed more than 200 people.
After more than a decade on the run, Libi and other former Al-Qaeda operatives returned to Libya after the outbreak of the 2011 uprising against Kadhafi.

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As veterans of conflicts in Afghanistan and elsewhere, they enjoyed a certain notoriety among the younger generation of Islamist rebels, and some established camps and recruited new fighters.
A few still operate training camps for Libyans and foreigners alike who hope to join the war in Syria, a diplomat posted in the eastern city of Benghazi said on condition of anonymity.
And yet many analysts believe Libya's Islamist militias have taken on a life of their own, refusing to formally ally themselves with Al-Qaeda because they see themselves more powerful than the group.
Ansar al-Sharia, for example, which is believed to have launched the September 11, 2012 attack on the US mission in Benghazi, killing a US ambassador and three other Americans, has no apparent links to Al-Qaeda's core in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
"There are several groups that share a broad ideological affinity with Al-Qaeda insofar as they advocate a state based on Islamic law and nurture hostility against the West," said Claudia Gazzini, a Libya analyst with the Brussels-based International Crisis Group.

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First Published: Oct 08 2013 | 3:05 PM IST

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