Jewel of Roman Empire Lies Neglected in Libya Chaos

One of the few visitors to the ancient Roman city of Leptis Magna in Libya looks at the Arch of Septimius Severus. Mahmud TURKIA AFP
One of the few visitors to the ancient Roman city of Leptis Magna in Libya looks at the Arch of Septimius Severus. Mahmud TURKIA AFP
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Jewel of Roman Empire Lies Neglected in Libya Chaos

One of the few visitors to the ancient Roman city of Leptis Magna in Libya looks at the Arch of Septimius Severus. Mahmud TURKIA AFP
One of the few visitors to the ancient Roman city of Leptis Magna in Libya looks at the Arch of Septimius Severus. Mahmud TURKIA AFP

Once among the Roman Empire's most beautiful cities, Leptis Magna lies neglected and shunned by tourists after a decade of war, but some see its potential for rebirth.

There is no queue at the gate and only a handful of visitors, almost all Libyans, wander among the imposing ruins at the UNESCO World Heritage site.

Visiting the area, a former Roman outpost on the south coast of the Mediterranean, is "a voyage in time, a dive into history", enthuses Abdessalam Oueba, a Libyan visitor in his 60s.

Founded by the Phoenicians then conquered by Rome, the city was the birthplace of Septimius Severus, who rose to become emperor from 193 until 211.

The ruler waged military campaigns across Europe and into modern-day Iraq before dying in York, England, far from the hometown on which he had lavished resources.

Perched on a hillside with a striking view of the Mediterranean, the well-preserved ruins include a large basilica, a racecourse and a theatre seating up to 15,000 spectators on arched terraces overlooking the sea.

Among the few visiting tourists are Ihab, from Tripoli, who made the 120-kilometre (75-mile) trip to show his children a site he had visited during his own childhood.

"Leptis Magna is beautiful, the most beautiful Roman site outside Italy," the 34-year-old doctor said under a clear blue sky.

"Yet it's barely been discovered."

- 'Neglect' -
The violence that wracked Libya after the 2011 revolt that toppled Moamer Kadhafi stirred fears for the ancient ruins, prompting United Nations cultural agency UNESCO to place them and four other Libyan sites on a list of global heritage in danger.

But so far, the areas have been mostly spared from the fighting, which has largely paused since an October 2020 ceasefire.

"There haven't been any direct attacks or threats against Leptis Magna, despite the conflict," said Azeddine al-Fakih, head of the site's antiquities department.

Yet it faces other threats: a lack of resources and government support.

"In 2020, we were finally able to launch projects that should have been finished 50 years ago," he said, listing toilet facilities, offices and a perimeter fence.

"But archaeological digs have stopped, and maintenance operations are rushed and superficial."

Fakih admitted that after 10 years of conflict and state collapse, Libya's current unity government "has bigger problems to deal with".

There was almost no tourism in Libya under Kadhafi, whose rule from 1969-2011 depended heavily on the country's vast oil wealth.

Tense foreign relations and sanctions also discouraged foreign visitors.

Kadhafi began issuing tourist visas for the first time in 2003 and even created a ministry of tourism as the regime began mending ties with the West.

But all that stopped in 2011, when a NATO-backed revolt overthrew and killed Kadhafi, plunging the country into years of chaos.

- More valuable than oil -

Now, a year-long lull in violence has sparked hopes the country can move on.

Omar Hdidan, a civil engineer who volunteers to promote and maintain Leptis Magna, believes in its potential for tourism.

"It has always been neglected by the state," the 49-year-old said.

"There are no digs, no new discoveries, no campaign to encourage tourism. But Leptis Magna is more valuable than 10 oil wells."

Fakih agreed.

Leptis Magna "could be a source of income if it was managed properly", he said.

"It could create thousands of jobs, welcome millions of tourists and bring in billions of dollars. There will come a day when the oil runs out, but Leptis Magna will remain."



UK Population May Hit 72.5 Million by 2032 Led by Immigration, Says ONS 

Commuters cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge behind, early in the morning of January 24, 2025. (AFP)
Commuters cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge behind, early in the morning of January 24, 2025. (AFP)
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UK Population May Hit 72.5 Million by 2032 Led by Immigration, Says ONS 

Commuters cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge behind, early in the morning of January 24, 2025. (AFP)
Commuters cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge behind, early in the morning of January 24, 2025. (AFP)

The UK population is projected to rise to 72.5 million by mid-2032 from 67.6 million in mid-2022, driven almost entirely by net migration into the country, the Office for National Statistics said on Tuesday.

Britain has seen record levels of immigration in recent years, and the ONS projections may fuel a debate over the ability of strained public services to cope with population growth and the need for foreign workers to drive the economy.

Successive administrations including Labor Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government have vowed to reduce immigration - a hot political topic that helped lead to the Brexit vote in 2016 and has fueled the rise of the right-wing Reform UK party.

Net migration - the number of people arriving minus those leaving - of 4.9 million people is projected to drive the population increase over the 10-year period, the ONS said.

The number of births and deaths in the UK over 2022-2032 was projected to be similar, the ONS added, largely cancelling out the impact of any natural change to population.

Although births were projected to increase slightly, deaths are also expected to go up as the large cohort of those born in the two decades after 1945 get older.

The projections also assume a long-term net migration level of 340,000 per year from the year ending mid-2028 onwards, the ONS said.

Net migration reached a record of more than 900,000 in the year to June 2023.

ONS data showed last year that the UK's population had grown by 1% in annual terms to 68.3 million as of mid-2023, mainly due to immigration.

While post-Brexit changes to visas fueled a sharp drop in the number of European Union migrants to Britain, new visa rules led to a surge in immigration from India, Nigeria and Pakistan, often to fill health and social care vacancies.