Libya Jew returns to UK after Benghazi imprisonment
Raphael Luzon, a former Libyan Jew, returned to the UK
safely on Sunday after security forces in Benghazi imprisoned and interrogated
him for several days.
Luzon said his ordeal began in Benghazi on July 22 when
“suddenly a friend sent me a text warning me to be careful that security forces
are looking for me,” he recalled. “I immediately called the Italian consul who
came to my hotel, but when I went to the lobby to meet him he was surrounded by
12 to 15 armed men.
They didn’t let the consul speak, they put me in the car
and took me outside Benghazi.”
Luzon, who said he was in the country for business, was
kept behind bars at a military camp outside the Mediterranean city without
being told why.
“I felt my life was in danger for the first 24 hours
because no one knew where I was or what had happened to me,” Luzon said. “In
the morning high officials came. One of them, a general shouted at my captors
saying they should have brought me food and water.”
The Libyan Jew said men he identified as belonging to the
muchabarat, or the preventive security, interrogated him daily.
Meanwhile, news that a “Jewish leader was abducted”
appeared in the Libyan press.
After four days in prison, Luzon was freed and kept under
house arrest at a friend’s residence in Benghazi.
Still, he was not allowed to leave the country. A citizen
of Britain and Italy, Luzon said both countries intervened on his behalf. He
credited British MP Robert Halfon, whose father was a Libyan Jew, and Italian
consul Guido Bessanti, for securing his release.
Asked why he had been arrested, Luzon said he was still
not sure.
“I don’t know why, but privately I’ve been told that
there is a big fight between the groups and everybody wanted to be the one that
arrested and released me,” he said.
Luzon and other members of the former Jewish community of
Libya, who were forced to leave the country in the 1960s and 1970s, have for
years been lobbying for the return of considerable private and communal Jewish
assets that were confiscated by the regime of slain dictator Muammar Gaddafi.
After Gaddafi’s fall in 2011, there was hope the country might open up and
address the grievances of its exiled Jews, but so far little progress has been
made.
Last year David Gerbi, another Libyan-born Jew, received
death threats after he tried to reconsecrate a synagogue in Tripoli, forcing
him to flee the country.
Luzon, who makes a point of distancing himself from
Gerbi, has been negotiating with Libyan officials over the rights of Jews to
little avail.
Elio Raccah, a member of the Jewish Libyan community in
exile based in Italy, the country’s former colonial ruler, said he had few
expectations that he would be welcome back to Libya in the near future.
“What really counts is popular sentiment, I am convinced
nothing has really changed over there as far as the Jews are concerned,” he
wrote in an email to the Post. “[The Libyans believe Jews are] undesired greedy
ogres to be ridden of in Palestine and, of course, in Libya.”
The question of Jewish rights remains mute in Libya, where
a multitude of rival groups and clans are fighting for power in the power
vacuum created by Gaddafi’s ousting. Last month, when elections were held for
the first time, the National Forces Alliance, a non-Islamist, liberal party,
emerged triumphant, bucking the Islamist trend in Arab Spring countries like
Tunisia and Egypt. It remains to be seen, however, whether Western-educated
Mahmoud Jibril who leads the party will be able to reestablish the rule of law
in the oil-rich nation.
Despite his recent experience, Luzon said he had not
given up fighting for the rights of Libyan Jews.
“It will take a long, long time if they will allow some
Jewish assets to be returned,” he said, “but I think the country would allow
Jews to return for holiday or business in a few years.”
“They were under a regime for decades and they do not
distinguish between a Jew and a Jewish Zionist, religious or secular,” Luzon
added.
Meanwhile, he added, “at the moment I do not advise any
Jew to go to Libya.”
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