List of Libya’s Islamic Movements -

I man­aged to com­pile a list of the impor­tant Islamic move­ments in Libya, with a sum­mary about their par­tic­u­lar back­ground and ideas. Very impor­tant for inter­ested West­ern read­ers mainly because these group will play a major role in Libya’s future.

In a com­ing post I will try to dis­cus the future of these groups accord­ing to the recent polit­i­cal sit­u­a­tion, also notice that these are the recent active groups.

Libyan Islamic Movement

Emerged as a Move­ment in the early 80s (although the idea of its for­ma­tion is back to the 70s), and then divided into two groups:

- (The Libyan Islamic Group), which later became known as (the Mus­lim Brotherhood)

- The orig­i­nal Move­ment, which con­tin­ued to func­tion under the name of (the Libyan Islamic Movement).

Accord­ing to Sheikh Mohammed Bin Ghali — a mem­ber of the move­ment — that the rea­son behind the split is the dif­fer­ence in the ide­ol­ogy and not in the objectives.

Ide­ol­ogy:

Focused on the Libyan inter­nal Islamic issues. the Move­ment is open to the pub­lic opin­ion, dis­tance itself from the elit­ists, and tend to dis­cus modern-day Islamic issues.

The move­ment is more flex­i­ble than other move­ments, less extrem­ists, and open to cul­tural, polit­i­cal debates, no regional or inter­na­tional con­nec­tions with other Islamic Movements.

Libyan Islamic Group (Mus­lim Brotherhood)

Since 1993, known as (the Libyan Islamic Group), which is an exten­sion of the Egypt­ian Islamic Move­ment founded by Has­san al-Banna.

Started its activ­ity as a Mus­lim Broth­er­hood in Libya after the arrival of Mus­lim Broth­er­hood Egypt­ian teach­ers to work in Libya in the 50s of the last century.

Ide­ol­ogy:

The group believes that Islam is the State’s reli­gion, its demands of top­pling of Gadhafi’s regime to estab­lish an Islamic State is its legit­i­mate and oblig­a­tory duty.

Focuses on the mod­ern his­tory of Islam, The group sup­ports the posi­tions of other Islamic groups and move­ments in Libya.

Its speech focuses on the “glob­al­i­sa­tion” of Islam through the review of the Islamic activ­i­ties around the world. From late sev­en­ties until mid-eighties the Move­ment changed its speech from direct Islamic preach­ing to the polit­i­cal side.

Pub­li­ca­tions

A mag­a­zine called (The Mus­lim), first issue pub­lished in Sep­tem­ber of 1980, and it is the first Libyan Anti-military regime (Gaddafi).

The group also released a its peri­od­i­cal bul­letin on behalf of (Libya .. the voice of the Mus­lim youth), also released audio and video media files con­tain sev­eral inter­views with Libyan Islamic figures.

The group also pub­lished few Islamic books on Libyan mod­ern Islamic phi­los­o­phy, includ­ing some of the chap­ters of the book (the new pop­ulism .. chap­ters in his­tory and pol­i­tics) — Mohamed Mustafa Ramadan, pub­lished 1971.

The Libyan Islamic Fight­ing Group (LIFG)

Armed orga­ni­za­tion with Salafi Jihadi ide­ol­ogy, estab­lished by a group of young men who par­tic­i­pated in the Afghan war against the Soviet. The group car­ried out armed oper­a­tions against secu­rity and civil organ­i­sa­tion in Libya in the 90s in order to over­throw Gaddafi’s regime.

The begin­ning

In 1982, Ali Al-A’ashbi with 8 other Islamists formed the first cell, but the Libyan secu­rity ser­vice man­aged to elim­i­nate this small cell. Another attempt in 1989, made by Awad al-Zawawi, cre­ated a new cell, but the mem­bers are arrested and jailed by the Libyan secu­rity. Later in 1989, Muham­mad Al-Mhishhish a.ka. (Sayyaf Libya) cre­ated an under­ground group called the “Islamic Mar­tyrs Movement”.

Rela­tion­ship with al-Qaeda

The group coop­er­ated with Al-Qaeda in the fight­ing against the Sovi­ets, but there are var­i­ous ide­o­log­i­cal rea­sons pre­vented the merger of the two groups. The goal of (LIFG) is to over­throw the Libyan rul­ing regime and the cre­ation of an Islamic State, while the pri­or­i­ties of Osama bin Laden directed towards other goals, the respect between both groups existed, until Ayman al-Zawahiri the sec­ond man in Al-Qaeda announced the merge of both groups in Novem­ber 2007.

Ide­ol­ogy:

On Octo­ber 18, 1995 the “Libyan Islamic Fight­ing Group” issued its first state­ment on the announce­ment of the Fight­ing Islamic Group in Libya, which stated sev­eral points of its gen­eral policy:

- A Mus­lim group pre­pares for jihad against the ene­mies of God and any tyrant rul­ing regime other than what Allah has sent.

- Beliefs and under­stand­ing: the doc­trine of the Sun­nis accord­ing to the pre­de­ces­sor of [Mohammad’s] com­pan­ions and followers.

- The pur­pose and goal: to please God and to the estab­lish­ment his religion.

- Means: to fol­low the com­mand of Allah Almighty in jihad.

- Method of work: con­fi­den­tial­ity in the work accord­ing to the inter­est, and inspire the spirit of jihad and incite among the believ­ers to fight in the name of God.

Pub­li­ca­tions

A monthly mag­a­zine called (Al-Fajir) first issue in 1994, pub­lished by the Islamic Infor­ma­tion Cen­ter, dis­trib­uted in Lon­don in the 90s, (at that time, Lon­don was open to receive many mem­bers of Arab-Afghan Islamic move­ments, dur­ing the war against the Soviet pres­ence in Afghanistan).

A monthly arti­cle in the mag­a­zine uses tac­ti­cal reli­gious terms to recruit mem­bers in group to fight against the gov­ern­ment in Libya.

Impor­tant operations

August 1996 — the group announced an attempt to assas­si­nate Gaddafi in the Braak city south of the country.

Octo­ber 1996 announced its attempt to assas­si­nate Muam­mar Gaddafi in Sirt, his hometown.

1998 the group announced an attempt to assas­si­nate Gaddafi in the east­ern city Baidha.

Con­fronta­tion with the Libyan authorities:

Since 1995, the Libyan secu­rity orga­ni­za­tions started to raided, jailed and killed many mem­bers of the group, espe­cially in Beng­hazi. The group armed wing nearly ended in 1999.

recon­sid­er­a­tion:

In 2009, there were (Cor­rec­tive Stud­ies), where many respected fig­ures with other Islamic groups started a dia­logue with (LIFG) to review their posi­tion from Jihad. Mem­ber of the Mus­lim Broth­er­hood, Dr. Ali Salaabi, and also for­mer leader of the orga­ni­za­tion Numan Bin Uth­man, and after these reviews Libyan author­i­ties released many LIFG detainees.

Islamic Alliance Movement

Cre­ated 1974 and joined the Mus­lim Broth­er­hood) and later 1990 they split again because of some organ­i­sa­tion dif­fer­ences. the group released an inter­nal bul­letin called (Al-Sabeel), most of the group’s ide­olo­gies are Islamic education.

Later many mem­bers of the group who believed in Jihad split and joined (LIFG).

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