Hosted by Dailymotion. For legal issues report at the Copyright Center, report us on DMC, or use the Instant Removal tool.
Sirte residents return home
Description
Not much remains for some families returning home to Sirte.
One resident, Mosbah walks through what is left of his house.
He hopes for compensation from the new governing authorities.
(SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) SIRTE RESIDENT WHOSE HOUSE WAS DESTROYED MOSBAH, SAYING:
"God wrote this for us, it's okay. It is good that we managed to get out, the new state will compensate us, God willing."
But the father of three is not staying, he packs up his car and leaves, again.
The battle-scarred city was the scene of the final fight between Libya's interim government forces and Muammar Gaddafi's supporters.
Another resident said people were staying away out of fear of further violence.
(SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) SIRTE RESIDENT FARAJ AL-HOUNI, SAYING:
"The people are still afraid. The people are afraid there might clashes between the supporters of Colonel Gaddafi and their opponents, so they are not coming back to their homes. They think if the clashes resume then they will be the victims, so they are staying and waiting to see how things turn out."
Food supplies are basic in a city that is still recovering from the violence.
The killing of Gaddafi in his hometown brought to a close eight months of war, but now the National Transitional Council must continue their path to rebuild the battered country.
Marie-Claire Fennessy, Reuters
One resident, Mosbah walks through what is left of his house.
He hopes for compensation from the new governing authorities.
(SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) SIRTE RESIDENT WHOSE HOUSE WAS DESTROYED MOSBAH, SAYING:
"God wrote this for us, it's okay. It is good that we managed to get out, the new state will compensate us, God willing."
But the father of three is not staying, he packs up his car and leaves, again.
The battle-scarred city was the scene of the final fight between Libya's interim government forces and Muammar Gaddafi's supporters.
Another resident said people were staying away out of fear of further violence.
(SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) SIRTE RESIDENT FARAJ AL-HOUNI, SAYING:
"The people are still afraid. The people are afraid there might clashes between the supporters of Colonel Gaddafi and their opponents, so they are not coming back to their homes. They think if the clashes resume then they will be the victims, so they are staying and waiting to see how things turn out."
Food supplies are basic in a city that is still recovering from the violence.
The killing of Gaddafi in his hometown brought to a close eight months of war, but now the National Transitional Council must continue their path to rebuild the battered country.
Marie-Claire Fennessy, Reuters
More from User
00:46
Voters cast ballots Sri Lanka's presidential election.
Reuters
01:05
Recovery teams make plans to raise AirAsia tail section.
Reuters
01:34
Asia-Pacific leaders condemn attack in France
Reuters
01:00
Police hunt three Frenchmen after 12 killed in Paris attack
Reuters
00:52
Anti-terror police hunt for Paris killers in eastern French city of Reims
Reuters
01:27
More women accuse Cosby of assault, Writers Guild announces nominees
Reuters
Related Videos
02:21
Libya: Sirte residents return home after ISIL is pushed out
Al Jazeera English
02:41
Top stories: Students return to school after teacher walkout, residents near Tinder Fire begin to return home, extreme heat this weekend
ABC15
00:26
Residents return home to mud-soaked homes after typhoon
AccuWeather
02:15
Residents Return Home to `Utter Devastation` After Carr Fire Destroys More Than 1,000 Homes
Tribune Broadcasting
02:14
Grantham residents seek return to flooded homes
Al Jazeera English
00:51
Aleppo residents return to their homes
AWANI