International reports reveal Erdogan's plans to turn Libya into pandemic country
The interactive map issued by the company International SOS
revealed that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has turned Libya into one
of the most dangerous countries for security and health, and that Turkish
policies in Libya have upended the country's scales, warning against visiting
Libya next year.
The interactive map classified the safety and security of countries
into three categories: security risks, medical risks, and the threat of the corona
virus. Media reports stated that Erdogan took advantage of the corona crisis
and the preoccupation of the countries active in the Libyan file in confronting
the pandemic, sending mercenaries from places infected with the virus.
Lindsey Snell, an American journalist who specializes in
covering humanitarian crises and conflicts, explained that the collapse of the
health system was not the only reason for the rapid spread of the corona virus
in western Libya, but rather that the Syrian mercenaries whom Turkey flooded
Libya with in 2020 contributed greatly to the outbreak of the corona pandemic
in the country, amid the absence of testing and isolation tools for suspected infections,
according to the report.
Snell confirmed on her Twitter account that Misrata in
western Libya is the epicenter of the corona pandemic in Libya, due to the
influx of mercenaries from Turkey carrying the virus and working to spread and transmit
it among the Libyans.
In this context, a report issued by the United Nations
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Libya announced the
exacerbation of the effects of corona in Libya, due to the ongoing conflict,
lack of internal security, and the political and economic crisis. It expressed
regret that the guidelines of the World Health Organization and medical and
health institutions to stay at home in an attempt to combat the pandemic
unfortunately represents a luxury for the 392,000 Libyans who remain displaced.
The report explained that the lack of basic services and the
continuous power outages affect the water supply for more than a third of the
Libyan population in the northwestern parts of the country, and therefore it is
not easy for people to practice simple but necessary measures, such as washing
hands frequently to protect themselves from the corona virus. The United
Nations in Libya helped provide fast, cost-effective and life-saving services,
it added, noting that the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, since the beginning of the pandemic, developed immediate preparedness
and response plans with the Libyan government and partners with a total funding
of $46.7 million, while also strengthening coordination between UN agencies and
international and local NGOs.
The report pointed to some salient points in the efforts of
the United Nations to deal with the virus and its impact in Libya, pointing out
that WHO provided the national laboratory with equipment for personal
protection and diagnostic kits and supported the Ministry of Health with the
latest information about laboratory tests and dealing with suspected cases. It
also supports the National Center for Disease Control to develop a national
guidelines on preparedness and Ministry of Health guidelines on maintaining
quality of services.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights had revealed that
the total number of mercenaries sent by Turkey to Libya amounted to 18,000
Syrians, in addition to 2,500 Tunisians, confirming that the total number of
mercenaries who were killed in the battles in Libya amounted to 496 people, as
well as injuring and losing contact with hundreds of other elements who Turkish
intelligence turned into mercenaries by luring them in for a large fee.
According to the Supreme Committee for Crisis Management in
Misrata, the city recorded a dangerous upward curve for the spread of the
virus, topping Tripoli and the list of cities where the corona pandemic has
spread.
In June, WHO officials expressed their concern about the
rapid spread of the corona virus in Libya through the Syrian mercenaries who
were transported there by Turkey.
Although Ankara caused the outbreak of the corona virus in
Libya and its leaders drained tens of millions of dollars from the wealth of
the Libyan people, Turkish hospitals closed their doors to Libyan citizens.
Atef Barqiq, leader of the Tripoli Revolutionaries Militia
residing in Turkey and appointed by Government of National Accord (GNA) head Fayez
al-Sarraj as an administrative advisor at the Libyan Health Attaché in Ankara,
called on Libyans who want treatment abroad to avoid the Turkish arena until
the debt owed from hospitals in Turkey is settled.
A leaked document from the Health Office of the GNA embassy
in Ankara also revealed that Turkish hospitals refused to treat security
personnel and militias affiliated with the GNA in Tripoli.
Turkey threatened the GNA to stop treating and sheltering
the wounded in the military operations against the army, in case the accumulated
debts in favor of its hospitals are not paid.



