This Article is From Feb 26, 2011

Libya crisis: Some Indians cross over to Tunisia

Ras Ajdir (Tunisia-Libya border): A group of Indians employed in Libya have fled across the border into Tunisia saying basic needs cannot be met in the Libyan town of Zawiyah, where there has been heavy fighting between forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, and his opponents who want to end his 41-year rule.

There is an acute scarcity of food and water in Zawiyah as the situation in Libya worsens.

"The situation is very bad. Everything we need is not available. Water is not available and food is not available in Zawiyah," said one of the Indian workers.

Apart from Indians, hundreds of expatriate Egyptians, Turks and Tunisians too seemed in shock on Friday as they crossed the border into Tunisia, carrying their belongings and horrific memories of the violence tearing apart Moammar Gaddafi's Libya.

They were met with embraces and offers of food and shelter by Tunisian aid groups.

Many Egyptians who had crossed on Thursday night said they lived in the embattled towns of Zawiya and Zwara, which encountered some of the worst fighting in recent days.

Volunteer doctors and nurses tended to the new arrivals in medical tents, and volunteers from the Tunisian Red Cross, Boy Scouts, and the Tunisian Trade Union handed out soup and sandwiches.

Doctors said they hadn't seen any serious wounds but added that most were suffering from shock and trauma.

A few miles (kilometres) from the border, Egyptian men lined up to wash their faces from water gushing from a pipe at a camp set up by the Tunisian army. The makeshift camp, which housed about 5,000 people, was built after shelters at the border couldn't handle the large numbers coming across.

Ali Mohammed, an Egyptian construction worker from Cairo, said he locked himself in his home for five days in the embattled town of Zawiya, running out of food and supplies, while listening to gunfire and screams from outside.

"Our government didn't bother to ask after us and did nothing to help us get out," Mohammed said.

He and some other workers had to pay 200 Libyan dinars (about $160) - 10 times the usual cost - to rent a car to take them from Zawiya to the border. The driver dropped them off nearly two miles (three kilometers) from the frontier, forcing them to walk with their belongings the rest of the way to the Tunisian border.

Once there, the Egyptians said they were harassed by Libyan authorities.

"They kept telling us we needed papers that have never been required before to leave the country," said Syed Mohammed, who worked at the port in Zwara. "We eventually had to fork over a bribe to keep us moving."

All the Egyptians said the Libyan army and police they encountered on the way confiscated and destroyed the memory cards from their mobile phones to get rid of any stored photos or video.

Another man, Ahmed Ibrahim, said he had moved to Zawiya to work as a barber four months ago before being forced to leave because of the violence.

He said a group of Egyptians he fled with Thursday were sheltered by Libyan families, their journey protected by community watch groups from the opposition that had taken over control of the streets there.

"They would transfer us from one checkpoint to another to ensure our safety," he said. Others had more terrifying experiences.

Taher Nasri, 25, who worked as a sailor in Zwara, said his car was pulled over at a gas station by the Libyan army.

"They pulled us out of the car, dropped us to our knees and then shot rounds next to us on the ground to scare us," Nasri said.

Among the hundreds of Egyptians, a handful of Indians who worked as caterers at a BP oilfield in the Sahara desert pulled their luggage behind them as they crossed the border into Tunisia.

Shocked and exhausted, the Indians said they were forced to hide in the desert for three days before their company could secure a plane to rescue them.

"Everything was going smoothly one day and then, we don't know exactly who the attackers were, but we were told one day to just run," said Anthony Caruz, 57, who headed the catering staff in the desert compound.

He said that after hiding in the desert, they were told it was safe to go back to their compound, where they found their apartments ransacked and destroyed. Caruz said they had to walk to a nearby landing strip where their company had chartered a flight from Malta to bring them to Tripoli.

"It was traumatizing. ... We couldn't sleep, we were panicking and running wherever we could just in the desert, just running as far as possible. We simply escaped from the jaws of death," Caruz said, choking back tears.

While the aid efforts were largely based on volunteers from Tunisian civil society groups and donations, the Tunisian army was in charge of keeping order and organizing the traffic.

"I wanted to go into Libya and help in there because I know the poor state of the medical health inside," said one of the volunteers, Hussein Saleh, 32, showing his green Tunisian passport. He said he worked in Libya for four years as an X-ray technician.

Saleh said officials were getting so much donated food and medical supplies "we're running out of room to store it."

A group of teachers from the Tunisian province of Sidi Bouzid brought an ambulance and two carloads of donated food and medicine. The province is the site where an unemployed man set himself afire Dec. 17 in the uprising that eventually toppled longtime President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and then spread across the Arab world.

"We are the country of the first revolution," said Hassan Adi, who helped organize the aid caravan. "We have a duty to help our Libyan brethren... as they revolt."

An abandoned home owned by the government had been used to store water bottles, packs of dried pasta, cans of food, and long-life milk. Hundreds of Egyptians lined up with their luggage, waiting for buses to the airport to catch flights to Cairo. They smoked, talked about the kindness of the Tunisians, and held a short-lived rally chanting anti-Gaddafi and pro-Arab unity slogans.

In the late morning, dozens of young men calling themselves the "Caravan of Victory" accompanied truckloads of aid. Posters of Gaddafi's face and a noose were taped all over the trucks and buses carrying the men.

The organizer of the caravan, Mohammed ben Mohammad, said his group was able to collect 20,000 Tunisian dinars (about $14,200) via text-messaging and Facebook. He said the money was used to bring 18 trucks filled with perishable food, water, milk and medicine for the refugees at the border.

The caravan started from the capital, Tunis, and moved across the country, collecting young men and aid along the way, he said.

"As Tunisians, we are rediscovering ourselves after the fall of Ben Ali," said ben Mohammad. "Our leaders have always tried to divide Arabs, but this event has proven that we can stand with each other."

(With AP inputs)


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