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Assessing Italy's Grande Gesto To Libya

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  • Assessing Italy's Grande Gesto To Libya

    ASSESSING ITALY'S GRANDE GESTO TO LIBYA
    Claudia Gazzini

    Middle East Report Online
    http://www.merip.org/mero/mero031609.html
    M arch 17 2009

    Under a tent in Benghazi on August 30, 2008, Silvio Berlusconi bowed
    symbolically before the son of 'Umar al-Mukhtar, hero of the Libyan
    resistance to Italian colonial rule. "It is my duty to express to you,
    in the name of the Italian people, our regret and apologies for the
    deep wounds that we have caused you," said the Italian premier.[1]
    Eastern Libya was the site of the bulk of the armed resistance to
    the Italian occupation, which lasted from 1911 to 1943. More than
    100,000 Libyans are believed to have died in the counterinsurgency
    campaign, many in desert prison camps and in southern Italian penal
    colonies. Inside the tent, Berlusconi and Libyan leader Mu'ammar
    al-Qaddafi signed a historic agreement according to which Italy will
    pay $5 billion over the next 20 years, nominally to compensate Libya
    for these "deep wounds." The treaty was ratified by Italy on February
    3 and by Libya on March 1.

    Politicians in both Libya and Italy have often presented the $5 billion
    as reparations for the harm done to Libya by colonial rule. Qaddafi
    hailed the treaty as an important historical precedent that proves
    that "compensation entails condemnation of colonialism regardless of
    the amount paid."[2] Yet neither the title nor the text of the treaty
    mentions the word "reparations." The text alludes to settlement of
    colonial-era disputes, but officially the accord is called a "treaty
    of friendship, partnership and cooperation."

    The treaty was certainly not signed because Italy has suddenly come to
    terms with its colonial past and desires to make amends. Although the
    premier has made public noises of atonement for Italy's colonial past,
    Italians suffer from a general colonial amnesia and know very little
    about their country's adventures in Africa -- far less, for instance,
    than the French know about Algeria. Even the 1981 Anthony Quinn vehicle
    Lion of the Desert, about Mukhtar's rebellion, was utterly banned
    in Italy for many years because, in the government's words, it was
    "damaging to the Italian army's honor." The original English-language
    version of the movie has recently been screened at film festivals
    and seminars, but it has never been dubbed into Italian, and Italian
    TV stations have yet to broadcast it. The Italian government, for
    its part, still seems more interested in "turning the page" on the
    past than in exploring the full extent of the violence perpetrated
    in North Africa three generations ago. The financial package that
    Italy and Libya agreed upon would therefore be better understood as
    the expression of a nexus of interlocking interests: on the Libyan
    side, Qaddafi's historical commitment to reparation politics and
    his quest for moral victory over the country's former colonizers,
    and on the Italian side, strategic and economic gain. Berlusconi,
    with characteristic tact, has openly and repeatedly described the
    purpose of the treaty as "less illegal immigrants and more oil."[3]

    Be that as it may, Algerian and Egyptian politicians and intellectuals,
    and a number of activists from sub-Saharan Africa, have proclaimed
    that their countries should get deals similar to Libya's for the
    injustices they suffered at the hands of European colonial powers.[4]
    These injustices include the killings of civilians during anti-colonial
    uprisings, the destruction of infrastructure during World Wars I
    and II, and the distortion of local economies. Members of Algeria's
    National Liberation Front hoped that, after the Italian precedent,
    the European Union would be able to put pressure on France and "get
    it to make amends for what it did in Algeria."[5] Ibrahim Salih,
    former chairman of Egypt's Court of Cassation, claims that Britain
    owes Egypt no less than 100 billion pounds ($140 billion). "They
    [the British] plundered Egypt during World War I to cover the costs
    of their battles against the Turkish, bought Egyptian high-quality
    cotton for 20 years at very cheap prices, killed many Egyptians who
    joined demonstrations against their occupation and manipulated the
    country's wealth in violation of democratic rules and human rights,"
    Salih opined. "Are these crimes not serious enough for England to
    pay compensation or even offer an apology?" Not surprisingly, the
    British do not see the parallel: A British diplomat based in Cairo
    ridiculed the Italian-Libyan agreement as "media propaganda" aimed
    at appeasing Qaddafi and opening the door for Italian companies to
    tap the lucrative oil market.[6]

    Setting aside the self-interest in this diplomat's cynical reaction,
    there are important reasons why the Italian-Libyan treaty is not a
    model to be emulated.

    The Italian-Libyan Treaty

    The two major ex-colonial powers in the Arab world, Britain and
    France, have refused the very idea of state-to-state reparations
    or individual financial payments to their former subjects in the
    Middle East or elsewhere in Africa. Although Britain has atoned for
    some of the massacres carried out during its reign in India and New
    Zealand, the issue of apology, let alone financial compensation,
    to Arab territories under British rule has never been a matter of
    debate. As for France, in 2001 President Jacques Chirac admitted
    for the first time France's responsibility for the 1962 massacre
    of hundreds of thousands of Algerians.[7] More recently, President
    Nicolas Sarkozy recognized that French colonialism in Algeria was
    "profoundly unjust" but brushed aside an apology for the 132 years of
    occupation as "unnecessary" and stated that the two countries should
    look toward the future rather than the past.[8]

    In light of the lack of precedent, Italy's decision to sign a treaty
    with Libya pledging a staggering $5 billion to its former colony came
    as a surprise. In the 1990s, Italy paid for the construction of a
    pediatric hospital in Benghazi and funded a research project on the
    deportation of thousands of Libyans to penal colonies in southern
    Italy. Such projects were carried out under the understanding that
    they were small but concrete gestures aimed at redressing past
    wrongdoing. Around 2005, Libya began demanding that Italy make a
    "grande gesto" and proposed that the former colonizer pay to transform
    Libya's two-lane coastal road, built in the colonial period, into a
    highway stretching from the Tunisian border to Egypt. Disagreements
    dragged on as to whether Italy would pay for the feasibility study or
    the actual highway construction, and doubts arose as to the project's
    social utility.

    Given the lack of legal compulsion, many wondered why Italy would even
    enter negotiations for the treaty: $250 million per year over 20 years
    is not an insignificant amount of money, especially in the midst of
    the current economic recession. No individual Libyan has filed suit
    in an Italian court seeking damages for colonial-era offenses; nor
    has the Libyan government raised the issue at the International Court
    of Justice. And there was certainly no pressure from Italian public
    opinion -- to the contrary. The Association of Italians Repatriated
    from Libya has long demanded that before paying reparations to Libya,
    Italy should first compensate them for the property that Qaddafi
    expropriated in the 1970s.

    The greatest pressure to conclude the treaty came from the Libyan
    government, keen to secure material concessions that would symbolize
    Italy's admission of guilt for the colonial past. For over 30 years,
    Libya has actively attempted to shed light on the depredations
    of that era, so as to embarrass Italy into offering some sort of
    compensation, something that has come to be known as "reparations
    politics." Stealthier support for the treaty, however, came from
    the Italian business and political establishment, eager to improve
    bilateral relations with the North African country that is Italy's
    main source of hydrocarbons and most important trading partner in
    the Mediterranean basin.

    The terms of the nine-page document signed by Berlusconi and Qaddafi,
    the Treaty of Friendship, Partnership and Cooperation Between
    the Italian Republic and the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab
    Jamahiriyya, were kept secret for nearly four months. Now that the text
    has been disclosed by Italy, the enthusiasm of Italian big businessmen
    and strategic thinkers is fairly easy to understand.[9] First is
    the treaty's strong implication that the file of Libyan grievances
    against Italy can now be sealed. In the preamble, the two parties
    commit themselves to reinforcing peace, security and stability in the
    Mediterranean and promoting cooperation and integration through Italy
    and Libya's respective roles in the European and African Unions. The
    preamble also states that the purpose of the treaty is to develop a
    "special and privileged" bilateral relationship that includes a strong
    and wide-ranging partnership in political, economic and other areas.

    The two countries propose to continue collaboration on research on
    the manfiyun, the Libyans forcibly "rendered" to Italy early in the
    colonial period, but nevertheless intend the agreement to close the
    painful "chapter of the past." During the March celebrations for the
    treaty's ratification, Berlusconi solemnly stated: "The past that with
    this treaty we want to put behind our shoulders is a past that we,
    children of the children, are guilty of and for which we beg your
    forgiveness." (Skeptics who question Berlusconi's sincerity forget
    that, no matter how hypocritical and orchestrated his remarks might
    be, the very fact that an Italian head of state agreed to issue an
    official and public apology bears a symbolic significance that one
    cannot easily brush aside.)

    After an anodyne first section, in which the two parties commit to
    respect international law and the other's sovereignty, the treaty
    gets down to business. In the second section, Italy vows to make
    available funding -- up to $5 billion over the next 20 years -- for key
    infrastructure projects, the nature of which is left undefined. Libya
    will have the right to propose what type of infrastructure projects it
    is interested in, whereas a joint committee of delegates from the two
    countries will be in charge of examining the technical details and the
    time frame for completion. The treaty states that these infrastructure
    projects will be carried out exclusively by Italian companies, with
    the funding managed by Italy. It does not specify, however, how this
    money will be transferred. Libya, on the other hand, commits itself
    to making available, at no cost, the land necessary for completion of
    the projects, as well as helping to acquire those building materials
    that can be obtained locally and waiving customs duties on whatever
    needs to be imported. On top of these major infrastructure projects,
    the treaty mentions special initiatives such as the construction of
    200 housing units, the assigning of undergraduate and post-graduate
    scholarships to 100 Libyan students a year, a health care program in
    Italy for the victims of land mines, the reintroduction of pensions
    for Libyans who have a right to them on the basis of Italian records
    and pensions for their heirs, and the return to Libya of manuscripts
    and artifacts removed from Libya in colonial times. The costs
    of these social projects amount to a small fraction of the total
    expenditure. The two countries also commit themselves to settling
    disputes over payments owed by Libya to Italian firms that operated
    in the country in the past.

    In the third section, the treaty states that a Partnership Committee
    will be set up to consolidate the new cooperation in multiple fields
    in order to promote "common objectives of solidarity between people
    and the progress of humanity." Article 18 refers to the "strategic
    importance" of bilateral collaboration in the energy sector. The
    next article deals with the "intensifying" of cooperation in
    fighting terrorism, organized crime, drug trafficking and illegal
    immigration. The two parties also agree to set up a border control
    system for Libyan land borders (50 percent funded by Italy and 50
    percent by the EU) to be run by Italian companies. The last articles
    of the treaty deal with cooperation between the two countries' armed
    forces. Industrial partnership in the defense sector is envisaged.

    The treaty does not specify the sources of the $5 billion and,
    at first, many wrongly assumed that the Italian treasury would be
    saddled with the tab. But an appendix to the bill presented to the
    Italian parliament reveals that the funds will not be taken directly
    from Italian taxpayers, but rather will be covered by a corporate
    income tax of up to 4 percent imposed on profits made by Italian
    oil companies operating in Libya. Although Italian oil giant ENI is
    not explicitly mentioned in the treaty, the general understanding
    is that the burden of payment promised in the treaty will fall on
    ENI's shoulders. ENI is already the largest foreign oil operator
    in Libya, extracting an average of 550,00 barrels per day. In 2008,
    the Italian company, a sprawling conglomerate with 76,000 employees,
    two divisions headquartered in Milan and a third based in Rome, inked
    new gas and oil contracts with Libya that will protect its preferred
    position there until 2047.[10]

    In fact, the treaty was strategic in paving the way for the
    investment of Libyan sovereign wealth funds in a number of Italian
    companies. Since October 2008, the Libyan Central Bank has purchased
    $64.6 million in ENI stock and expressed interest in buying up to 10
    percent of the company -- "a positive thing," CEO Paolo Scaroni told
    Italian parliamentarians. The value of ENI stock went up by almost 15
    percent when Libya announced its interest in further investment. Libya
    has also bought shares in two Italian banks, including the
    second-largest one, Unicredito, of which the North African country
    now owns 5 percent.[11] The treaty also advantages smaller Italian
    firms operating in Libya, as these companies were previously obliged
    to pay "success fee" of up to 2 percent on the total value of signed
    contracts. This tax went to a joint Libyan-Italian company that in
    turned transferred the revenues to a "social fund." Created in 1998,
    this fund had the alleged aim of contributing to Libya's social
    and economic development and, ultimately, overcoming the effects of
    colonialism. With the treaty, Libya agreed to stop demanding this
    "success fee" and to shut down the joint company. Finally, the treaty
    will benefit large Italian engineering and construction firms, such as
    Impregilo, which are the most likely to win contracts for the planned
    infrastructure projects. In this respect, it is not unfair to surmise
    that the envisaged payments to this and other construction firms
    are comparable to a state-sponsored capital injection into Italian
    private companies in order to boost Italy's ailing economy.

    The Libyan state is also reaping rewards; according to a Libyan
    official, investment in ENI will allow the Italian firm and Libya's
    national oil company to prospect together for fossil fuel deposits
    in third countries. Obviously, Libya will also benefit from the new
    infrastructure projects that Italy commits itself to, but the main
    economic impact of the treaty will be in fostering foreign investment
    and the joint ventures that the North African country needs to bolster
    its insufficient technical know-how. By agreeing to solve pending legal
    disputes with a number of Italian companies who have been waiting to
    see their bills settled since the 1980s, Libya is trying to show the
    business community that it will honor contracts and thereby increase
    the international private sector's confidence in the country.

    Ultimately, the Italians hope that the agreement will boost Libya's
    commitment to combating illegal migration across the Mediterranean --
    a hot-button issue in Italian politics. In 2008, some 40,000 African
    migrants arrived somewhere on Italian soil, many of them from Libyan
    jumping-off points like Zuwara, west of Tripoli. Italy maintains a
    "reception center" for such migrants on the Mediterranean island
    of Lampedusa and it is routinely beyond its small capacity.[12]
    Politicians in Italy and in the EU, which has recently committed
    to paying $20 million to Libya to cope with migration, consider
    combating human trafficking to be critical issue. But no matter how
    large the increase in illegal migration from North Africa (it was
    up 75 percent in 2008), it is important to note that the amount of
    attention to illegal immigration by sea is disproportionate to its
    actual extent. In fact, immigrants arriving in Italy by sea constituted
    only 10-11 percent of the total alighting in Italy in 2007 and less
    than 15 percent in 2008. Images of African corpses floating off the
    Italian coasts, footage of pregnant woman crammed into wooden vessels
    and news of uprisings at the "reception centers," however, attract
    overwhelming media attention and thus influence public perceptions. As
    a result of the symbolic importance of being seen to defend national
    borders, countering this human trafficking from Libya is pitched and
    perceived as a national priority.[13]

    This treaty is unique for a number of reasons, but primarily because
    never before has a European state voluntarily agreed to pay a financial
    package to a country it once colonized. The one thing that is not a
    novelty, however, is the concept of reparations for colonial rule,
    which has gained currency in recent years despite the formal judicial
    impediments.

    The Problem of Reparations for Colonial Rule

    The idea that nations and peoples should seek reparations for
    exceptional injustices is linked to the legal principle according to
    which punishment is required as a deterrent against similar actions
    being committed again; it is also tied to the idea that those who
    committed injustices have a moral debt toward those who have suffered
    and, conversely, that victims have the right to seek redress for their
    suffering. It is on these premises that Germany paid reparations to
    the victims of the Holocaust and in 1952 reached an agreement with
    Israel for the payment of $222 million for the cost of resettling
    the Jews who had fled from Nazi-controlled countries.[14] In 1990,
    Austria made payments totaling $25 million to survivors of the
    Holocaust. In 2001 the German government and a consortium of German
    and American companies reached a Holocaust slave labor settlement of
    $6 billion. In 1988 the US Congress signed into law a bill titled the
    Civil Liberties Act, which allowed the US government to compensate
    Japanese Americans who had been interned during World War II.

    Despite these important historical precedents, all related to
    redressing the injustices committed in World War II, the idea that
    European states ought to make amends for the suffering inflicted upon
    their colonial subjects prior to, during or after World War II remains
    a controversial one. Unlike the settlement for the interned Japanese,
    who were citizens or at least residents of the nation that perpetrated
    the injustice, colonial reparations are being demanded by citizens
    of territories that have long since become independent states. When
    the matter becomes an international dispute, unless reparations are
    agreed upon on a spontaneous basis without resorting to courts (as
    was the case for the payments to Holocaust victims), the main problem
    becomes finding the legal forum that is competent to adjudicate such
    claims. Another crucial question is whether it is even possible to
    quantify the damage of colonial rule to a population. Furthermore,
    even if one were to list and assign a monetary value to the damages,
    how are the alleged victims of colonial rule supposed to be
    identified? Not all suffered as a result of European imperialism;
    in the case of Libya, some benefited. Some availed themselves of
    new opportunities to acquire education, accumulate wealth or work in
    the colonial service. Moreover, as Rhoda Howard-Hassmann and Anthony
    Lombardo have pointed out, it is generally difficult to differentiate
    the costs and benefits of colonial rule and those of post-colonial
    successor states. "Individual victims of colonialism still alive have
    been living under independent, post-colonial rule for 25 to 50 years,
    depending on the country. Post-colonial rulers were violators in their
    own right of the principles of bodily integrity, non-discrimination
    and private property" that colonial rule is accused of violating.[15]

    Aside from Libya, few other formerly colonized states have tried hard
    to get reparations from their European ex-rulers and, when they have,
    it has been to no avail. In the early 1990s, the Organization of
    African Unity appointed a so-called Group of Eminent Persons with the
    mandate to explore the modalities and strategies of an African campaign
    of restitution similar to the compensation paid by Germany to Israel
    and the survivors of the Holocaust.[16] That campaign failed because
    its members could not decide whether slavery, European colonialism
    or neo-colonialism had caused the greatest harm to Africans. In 2004
    Namibia's Herero tribesmen filed several lawsuits in US courts against
    German companies and the German government demanding $4 billion in
    compensation for the massacre of 65,000 Herero during Germany's rule
    in Namibia some 100 years ago.[17] The German government issued an
    apology but ruled out financial compensation for victims' descendants,
    on the grounds that Germany was supporting its former colony with
    development aid that had already totaled more than $1 billion.[18]
    The most recent quest for compensation is that initiated by the
    Kenya Human Rights Commission, which represents the survivors of
    the so-called Mau Mau rebellion. In 2008 the commission filed a
    lawsuit in the British High Court demanding compensation for the
    death of thousands of Kikuyu who between 1952 and 1960 were killed
    in the detention camps of the British colonial government. Insiders,
    however, believe that the ongoing Kenyan lawsuit will bear no fruit.

    The laws concerning reparations that have developed since World
    War II refer for the most part to reparations between states
    for violations of treaty obligations or other agreements. As
    reparations are required under international law for genocide and
    crimes against humanity, a number of countries have been able to
    file reparation claims at the International Court of Justice for
    massive violations that have occurred since the promulgation of
    the 1948 Genocide Convention. Legally speaking, if the gross harm
    that Algeria suffered during its war for independence from France
    (1954-1962) was to be defined as abuse of human rights, then Algeria
    or individual Algerians might have grounds for pursuing legal action
    for reparation claims (unless the amnesty law signed at the end of
    the war or any subsequent bilateral agreements with France ruled out
    reparations a priori). Unfortunately for Middle Eastern nations that
    seek compensation from the European countries that ruled them in the
    first half of the century, international law does not make provisions
    for retroactive payments for suffering prior to the 1948 Convention. If
    a retroactive application were permitted, there would be no limit
    to the potential claims that could be made at the International
    Court of Justice to remedy any genocide in history. In that case,
    the Armenian group Collective 2015: Reparations, an organization
    that calls on Turkey to pay reparations alongside recognition
    of the Armenian genocide, could have overcome Turkey's continued
    denial of the Armenian genocide by filing suit in an international
    court with recognized jurisdiction. In juridical terms, however, the
    Armenians and other nations or social groups who suffered major human
    rights abuses prior to World War II cannot raise their claims in an
    international court, because those forums do not have jurisdiction over
    historical violations. Holocaust reparation claims, being the result
    of a voluntary political agreement between Israel and West Germany,
    were not part of a lawsuit and thus did not require international
    law to coerce Germany to pay.

    If no spontaneous reparation agreement is in place and international
    courts have no jurisdiction, the descendants of victims of genocide
    and massive human rights violations occurring prior to World War II
    could attempt to have their case heard in US district court. This is
    the legal channel that the Herero and other descendants of victims
    of historical abuses have embarked upon. While the United States
    is not involved in the case on either the plaintiff's side or the
    defendant's, US courts can still claim jurisdiction under the Alien
    Tort Claims Act. This 1789 law, which is increasingly used by human
    rights activists and lawyers, allows US courts to hear any case in
    which victims of human rights abuses perpetrated by the state seek
    civil action or reparations from the state. Even if the Herero case
    has not met with success in the US court system, one cannot a priori
    rule out the possibility that other claims for reparations could.[19]

    But regardless of the strength of the moral claims that formerly
    colonized countries present, the exigencies of practical politics
    may impede these countries from securing monetary compensation for
    the cruelties of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

    Are These Payments Reparations?

    Reparations, however, need not be only about money. In the body of
    international law, the term "reparations" is used in a wide sense
    to refer to all those measures that may be employed to redress the
    various types of harm that victims may have suffered as a consequence
    of certain crimes.[20] Elsewhere, the term is used to signify
    "reparation programs" aimed at distributing justice to society at
    large. In either sense, the term, connected etymologically to the word
    "repair," suggests a field of interrelated activity oriented around
    repairing frayed or torn relations handed down from the past. Monetary
    compensation can be an important component, but the modalities of
    repair are manifold and may also involve trials of perpetrators,
    truth commissions, social policies designed to rectify inequalities,
    restitution of artifacts, memorials, changes in history curricula
    and more.[21] According to transitional justice theory, which Libya
    refers to, reparation projects ought to be linked to such complementary
    initiatives.[22]

    Bearing in mind these considerations, further problems with the
    Italian-Libyan treaty become clear. First of all, its stated aim to
    close a painful "chapter of the past" stands contrary to the goals
    of reparation politics. Furthering historical inquiry should go hand
    in hand with the process of settling past disputes. Reparations
    without steps to ascertain the truth about past violations may be
    perceived as an attempt to buy the victims' silence and could be
    counterproductive. Aside from government-funded research on the
    manfiyun, relatively little serious scholarship has looked into
    Italian rule in Libya, considered one of the most violent colonial
    experiments in the Arab world. Whole chapters have yet to be written
    on the establishment of concentration camps in Cyrenaica and Syrtica,
    where more than 100,000 Bedouins are believed to have died. Similarly,
    little has been written on the so-called flying courts, mobile colonial
    tribunals that flew into combat areas and sentenced to death thousands
    of captured Libyans. More symbolically, Italy has yet to release the
    "missing" proceedings of the trial of 'Umar al-Mukhtar, who was hanged
    at the age of 70. These are just a few of the most glaring gaps in
    knowledge of the colonial history of Libya. How can this treaty propose
    to close a chapter of the past when that chapter has not been written?

    The second problem with the treaty lies in how the payments are being
    distributed. The $5 billion that Italy has promised will not take
    the form of cash payments or other direct compensation to Libyan
    individuals or families who were the victims of Italian rule (as is
    the case for German compensation of Holocaust victims). The so-called
    reparations take the form of Italian investments in infrastructure,
    defense and border control technology, and only to a much smaller
    extent of services and scholarships. The money will be pumped back
    into Italian construction and engineering firms who will be in charge
    of building the jointly agreed-upon infrastructure projects. In
    this respect, these payments resemble tied aid, against which some
    countries, like Britain, have already enacted legislation.

    In theory, the fact that payments go to infrastructure projects
    rather than being divided up among the victims of colonial rule is
    not reason to disqualify them entirely as "reparations." Scholars
    have shown that there are two types of reparations for colonial
    rule: One is restorative, aimed at compensating those who have been
    physically hurt in the past, and the other is what John Torpey has
    called "anti-systemic."[23] The latter is rooted in the idea that
    past systems of domination, such as colonial rule, were generally
    racist, violent and unjust, and are the cause of continuing economic
    disadvantage suffered by those who lived under the systems or their
    descendants. This type of claim "views reparations as a means of
    transforming the current conditions of deprivation suffered by the
    groups in question, and is more frequently connected to broader
    projects of social transformation."[24]

    Had Italy and Libya programmed projects specifically aimed at a social
    transformation, it would be possible to categorize these payments as
    "anti-systemic." But informal conversations with a number of Italian
    government officials who were directly involved with the drafting of
    the treaty and the negotiation process reveal that, on the Italian
    side, little thought was given to the social function of these
    payments and how they would benefit the past victims of colonial
    rule. Again, aside from housing, scholarships and radar, the signed
    treaty does not even specify the types of infrastructure projects to be
    funded. Italians therefore appear to have been more concerned with the
    treaty's economic payoff to Italy than its social function in Libya.

    No Blueprint

    A number of Italian scholars have criticized the treaty for failing
    to emphasize the historical dimension of Italy's relations with Libya
    and for omitting any mention of the past crimes that, allegedly, this
    agreement seeks to redress. "In short, Italy is paying $5 billion,
    essentially an indemnity for the crimes committed over 30 years in
    Libya and for the 100,000 deaths that we caused, but in the treaty
    there is no mention of that," stated historian Angelo Del Boca.[25]
    Baffled, Del Boca wondered if Berlusconi specifically requested
    the omission of history or if the two parties had so decided at
    the very beginning of the negotiations. Or could it be possible,
    he mused sardonically, that they simply "forgot" to mention the
    past? Sergio Romano, a former Italian ambassador who has published
    on the Italian colonial past in Libya, was similarly critical, but
    for other reasons. He called the Benghazi meeting between Berlusconi
    and Qaddafi a "small theater of hypocrisy" where "the Libyan leader
    pretended to believe that Italy was the cause of all of Libya's
    problems; and the Italian premier pretended to feel regret for his
    country's colonial past."[26] Surprisingly, Italy's ratification of
    the treaty in early February 2009 did not trigger much debate in the
    Italian media, which at the time was busy covering the first days
    of the Obama presidency and the aftermath of Israel's attacks in
    Gaza. The criticisms of the treaty voiced by members of Parliament
    were not echoed, by and large, in the newspapers. Given the amount
    of money involved and the absolute novelty of a treaty of this type,
    one would have expected Italian intellectuals to discuss the treaty's
    moral and philosophical dimensions, if not the historical ones. But
    that debate never took place.

    A few Libyans voice the opinion that the amount to be paid by Italy --
    $5 billion -- is insulting, but most seem to cherish the agreement as
    a just settlement and a moral victory. On the streets of Tripoli,
    ordinary Libyans claim that Italians and Libyans are now "sawa
    sawa," which in the local dialect means "the same" or "equals." In
    their eyes, thanks to this agreement Italy has once and for all set
    aside the discriminatory and racist attitude that characterized the
    colonial period. Clearly such opinions mirror the official rhetoric
    that the country's state-controlled media has been broadcasting. The
    Libyan media has referred to the financial aspects of the treaty as
    payments for infrastructure projects in Libya, but has so far failed
    to highlight the fact that the funds will benefit Italian companies
    first and foremost. A few Libyans, both inside the country and among
    exiles, have criticized the treaty as opportunistic and compared
    Berlusconi to a marionette whose words are in reality those of the
    puppeteer. One such critic was the 80-year old son of 'Umar al-Mukhtar,
    the man on the receiving end of Berlusconi's apology in the tent in
    August. Apparently, he had originally refused to meet the Italian
    premier, who he accuses of representing a country that still "hates
    the Libyan people and hates 'Umar al-Mukhtar," but was eventually
    compelled by the Libyan authorities to attend.[27]

    Clearly, those who thought that Italy's announced scheme for Libya
    would trigger a similar course of action across the rest of the Arab
    world will be disappointed. First of all, it is highly unlikely that
    the two other former colonial powers in the region would consider
    reparation payments, in whatever form, as a priority. Secondly,
    no other Arab state has yet led a government-sponsored campaign to
    demand reparations for colonial rule in the same way that Libya or
    other African states have done over the past 30 years, or even shown
    interest in the idea. The few calls for colonial reparations coming
    from Egypt and Algeria originated in individuals or political parties
    that have not convinced their governments to follow Libya's example.

    Now that the details of the Italian-Libyan accord are known, the Libyan
    example is more troubling as a potential precedent. The treaty is an
    important step forward in the reconciliation process between Libya and
    its former colonial master, but it should not necessarily be upheld
    as a blueprint for other countries' quests for compensation. It is
    not with money alone that Italian crimes in Libya -- or those of
    other nations elsewhere -- will be redressed.

    Endnotes
    ----------------------------- -------------------------------------------------- -

    [1] Corriere della Sera, August 30, 2008.

    [2] Tripoli Post, September 7, 2008.

    [3] Corriere della Sera, August 30, 2008.

    [4] See, for instance, Karim Kebir, "La France a l'exemple italienne:
    'El Cavaliere,' Sarkozy et nous," Liberté, September 1, 2008;
    and Francois Soudan, "Commedia dell'arte," Jeune Afrique, September
    7, 2008.

    [5] ADNKronos, September 2, 2008.

    [6] Gamal Essam El-Din, "Climbing on the Bandwagon," al-Ahram Weekly,
    October 9-15, 2008.

    [7] Deutsche Presse Agentur, September 26, 2001.

    [8] Agence France Presse, December 4, 2008.

    [9] For the full text of the treaty in Italian, see "Ratifica ed
    esecuzione del Trattato di amicizia, partenariato e cooperazione tra
    la Repubblica italiana e la Grande Giamahiria araba libica popolare
    socialista, fatto a Bengasi il 30 agosto 2008," in Atti Parlamentari,
    Camera dei Deputati, 2041/XVI, presented to the Parliament on December
    23, 2008.

    [10] Associated Press, December 11, 2008.

    [11] Platts Oilgram News, December 9, 2008.

    [12] Independent, December 29, 2008.

    [13] Salvatore Coluccello and Simon Massey, "Out of Africa: The Human
    Trade Between Libya and Lampedusa," Trends in Organized Crime 10
    (2007).

    [14] Elazar Barkan, The Guilt of Nations: Restitution and Negotiating
    Historical Injustices (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press,
    2000), pp. 3-29.

    [15] Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Reparations to Africa (Philadelphia:
    University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), p. 54.

    [16] Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, "Reparations to Africa and the Group
    of Eminent Persons," Cahiers d'Ã~Itudes Africaines 45 (2004).

    [17] Allan D. Cooper, "Reparations for the Herero Genocide: Defining
    the Limits of International Litigation," African Affairs 106 (January
    2007).

    [18] BBC News, August 14, 2004.

    [19] Jeremy Sarkin and Carly Fowler, "Reparations for Historical
    Human Rights Violations: The International and Historical Dimensions
    of the Alien Torts Claim Act Genocide Case of the Herero of Namibia,"
    Human Rights Review 9 (2008).

    [20] Pablo De Greiff, "Justice and Reparations," The Handbook of
    Reparations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), p. 452.

    [21] John Torpey, Making Whole What Has Been Smashed: On Reparation
    Politics (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), p. 49.

    [22] On transitional justice, see the website of the International
    Center for Transitional Justice: http://www.ictj.org.

    [23] John Torpey, "Making Whole What Has Been Smashed: Reflections
    on Reparations," Journal of Modern History 73/2 (June 2001).

    [24] Ibid., p. 337.

    [25] Angelo Del Boca, "Solo soldi: La memoria non c'entra sui massacri
    nemmeno una parola," La Repubblica, March 3, 2009.

    [26] Sergio Romano, "Scuse italiane alla Libia e teatrino delle
    ipocrisie," Corriere della Sera, October 4, 2008.

    [27] Tripoli Post, August 30, 2008.
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