CAIRO: Libya’s coast guard has intercepted 180 migrants, including women and children, in the Mediterranean Sea, a day after stopping more than 150 migrants on two other boats.
It says the latest boat, whose passengers included 31 women and 12 children, was stopped Sunday off the coast of the western town of Khoms.
The migrants were taken to a naval base in Tripoli.
Libya was plunged into chaos following a 2011 uprising. The chaos has made it a popular route to Europe for migrants fleeing poverty and conflict in Africa and the Middle East.
Libya has worked to stem the flow of migrants, with European assistance.
Libyan coast guard intercepts 180 migrants in Mediterranean
Libyan coast guard intercepts 180 migrants in Mediterranean
Sahara celebrates desert cultures at Chad festival
- Amdjarass, which is home to several nomadic peoples, is located in far northeast of Chad, a vast, sparsely populated region renowned for its dramatic rock formations and desert landscapes
AMDJARASS, Chad: In the heart of the Sahara, where the routes to Sudan and Libya cross, the Chadian city of Amdjarass has been transformed this week into an open-air celebration of desert culture.
Until Friday, Amdjarass hosts dance troupes, musicians, traditional storytellers, craftspeople, cooks and nomadic camel drivers from across the vast region.
Niger, the guest of honor at the sixth Amdjarass International Festival of Saharan Cultures (FICSA), hailed the event as a way to foster peace in a region beset by conflict and climate change.
“In a world rife with tensions, crises and misunderstandings, culture remains a space for encounter and dialogue, enabling us to understand and respect each other and build together,” Niger’s crafts and tourism minister Aghaichata Guichene Atta told the opening ceremony on Saturday.
“Our countries have everything to gain by joining forces to make culture a tool for peace, development and employment,” she said, to cheers from the crowd.
Atta highlighted the role of Saharan women in keeping desert cultures alive down the centuries.
In a shapeshifting region where traditions are seldom archived on paper, the women “carry the living memory of Saharan societies through their songs, their stories, their hands that weave, shape, cook and educate.”
Amdjarass, which is home to several nomadic peoples, is located in far northeast of Chad, a vast, sparsely populated region renowned for its dramatic rock formations and desert landscapes.
The once dusty village, now a grid-shaped city, derives its name from “djarass,” the Arabic word for bell, in reference to a strange white rock that rings in the wind and was once used to warn locals of raids by rival tribes.
- Spark interest in the desert -
Local Issak Bassam, 27, said he was delighted the festival had returned to his hometown after a break of seven years due to the covid pandemic, the change of president in 2021 and organizational problems.
“I haven’t got the money to travel so this festival is a way for me to meet people from different horizons and celebrate Saharan culture in all its diversity,” he told AFP.
Amdjarass was the stronghold of late president Idriss Deby Itno, who hailed from the area and ruled Chad for 30 years until he was killed during clashes with rebels and his son was handed the reins of power.
For current Prime Minister Allah Maye Halina and festival founder Issouf Elli Moussami, FICSA is not just an excuse for a week-long outdoor party.
It is also a lever for encouraging tourism into an area far off the beaten track.
Guitarist Omar “Bombino” Moctar from Niger, who played his blend of Tuareg blues-rock to a crowd gathered under the desert stars, said he hoped the festival would spark the world’s interest in a region about which it knows little.
“Through my music, I want to share happiness with all the peoples of the desert, bring them together and explain to the whole world the dangers we face,” he said.










