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Libya court jails 12 officials over deadly floods

July 29, 2024 at 10:34 am

An aerial view of devastation after the floods in Derna, Libya on September 18, 2023. [Halil Fidan – Anadolu Agency]

A Libyan court has jailed 12 officials in connection with the collapse of a series of dams during floods in Derna last year killing thousands of the city’s residents, the Attorney General said yesterday, according to Reuters.

The officials, who were responsible for managing the country’s dams, were sentenced to between nine and 27 years in prison by the Court of Appeal in Derna. Four officials were acquitted.

Derna, a coastal city with a population of 125,000, was devastated last September by massive floods caused by Storm Daniel.

Thousands were killed and thousands more were missing as a result of the floods that burst dams, swept away buildings and destroyed entire neighbourhoods.

 

The Attorney General in Tripoli said three of the defendants were ordered to “return money obtained from illicit gains”, according to a statement. The officials were not named.

“The convicted officials have been charged with negligence, premeditated murder and waste of public money,” a judicial source in Derna told Reuters, adding that they had the right to appeal against the verdicts.

A report in January by the World Bank, United Nations and European Union said deadly flash flooding in Derna constituted a climate and environmental catastrophe that required $1.8 billion to fund reconstruction and recovery.

The report said the dams’ collapse was partly due to their design, based on outdated hydrological information, and partly a result of poor maintenance and governance problems during more than a decade of conflict in Libya.

Libya has been split since 2014 between rival power centres ruling in east and west following the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.

Floods in Libya’s Derna: Worst disaster in 21st century