TRIPOLI: Libya has reopened its main border post with Tunisia after closing it for more than six weeks amid tensions over smuggling, Tripoli’s interior ministry said on Saturday.
The border at Ras Jedir was re-opened to “facilitate... Libyan and Tunisian travelers,” the ministry said, without providing further details.
An AFP correspondent in Ben Guerdane, a Tunisian town about 30 kilometers (18 miles) from Ras Jedir, confirmed the crossing had been re-opened, but said Tunisians were protesting over a lack of consultation with residents.
More than 200 people set fire to tires and blocked Libyan travelers between Ben Guerdane and the border.
The correspondent said the protesters were angry that Libyan authorities did not negotiate with them over the crossing’s re-opening, rather than with Tunisia’s government.
It was not immediately clear what the protesters were demanding from the Libyan authorities.
But prior to the border’s closure, Tripoli had banned the passage of goods to Tunisia in order to rein in the smuggling of fuel and other items, a local Libyan official said.
The ban on goods and the closure provoked protests by traders in Ben Guerdane, whose residents depend on cross-border traffic — including smuggling — for their livelihoods.
The Ras Jedir crossing has been closed several times in recent years, leading to repeated tensions on the Tunisian side.
Tunisian authorities have cited difficulties in negotiating with Tripoli over customs arrangements amid the political chaos that has engulfed Libya since the fall of dictator Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
The re-opening of the border came several hours after the closure of Tripoli’s only working airport, due to fighting.
Libya re-opens main border post with Tunisia
Libya re-opens main border post with Tunisia
- The border at Ras Jedir was re-opened to “facilitate... Libyan and Tunisian travelers,” the ministry said
- Tunisians were protesting over a lack of consultation with residents
Gaza’s Rafah crossing with Egypt to reopen on Sunday, Israel’s COGAT says
- Israeli government agency that coordinates civilian policy in Gaza makes announcement
JERUSALEM: Israel will reopen the Rafah border crossing on Sunday for people to travel between Gaza and Egypt, the Israeli government agency that coordinates civilian policy in Gaza, COGAT, said on Friday.
“The return of residents from Egypt to the Gaza Strip will be permitted, in coordination with Egypt, for residents who left Gaza during the course of the war only, and only after prior security clearance by Israel,” COGAT said.
The Rafah crossing is effectively the sole route in or out of Gaza for nearly all of the more than 2 million people who live there.
Israel seized the border crossing in May 2024, about nine months into the Gaza war. Reopening it was an important requirement under the first phase of US President Donald Trump’s plan to stop fighting between Israel and Hamas militants, which followed a ceasefire agreed in October.
Israel had said it would reopen it only after recovering the body of the last Israeli hostage in Gaza, which took place this week.









