Oubari, Libya, Feb 22, 2019 (AFP) – In the southern Libyan city of Oubari, shops are shuttered and tension is palpable, as residents fear an imminent incursion by forces loyal to strongman Khalifa Haftar. We “dread the repercussions of military operations that are unfolding on the edge of town”, said 22-year-old hospital administrator Ali Senoussi, speaking on behalf of his Tubu community. Many residents in Oubari — some 900 kilometres (560 miles) south of Tripoli — are Tubu. The ethnic group fears vengeance by Arab communities that have joined an offensive by Haftar’s self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA), which is on the outskirts of the city.
Long marginalised, Tubus live in the Tibesti region, which straddles Libya, Chad and Niger, an area long at the mercy of roaming rebel groups, traffickers and jihadists. “We are residents of this region. Our support and love for it is immense”, said 22-year-old Senoussi, clothed in a traditional head robe to screen desert sun and wind. “We cannot accept being involved in wars with Arab tribes that fight alongside Haftar”, he insisted, sipping tea in the courtyard of a hospital where he works as an administrator.
The LNA says it is seeking to purge “terrorist and criminal groups”, and some accuse the Tubus of supporting Chadian rebels. But Senoussi dismisses the offensive as “a threat to the social peace of the whole region”. Tubu lawmakers even allege that ethnic cleansing is under way.
– Ethnic quarrels –
The community was among the first to join the 2011 uprising that ousted and killed Moamer Kadhafi. But the former dictator’s downfall by no means improved Tubus’ standing in Libya. Despite being home to some of the country’s biggest oilfields, the region is regularly hit by shortages of all kinds — petrol, electricity, gas cylinders and even bread. Prices have rocketed on the black market. Senoussi said the lack of fuel had forced him to leave his car at home and walk to work. “Most public sector workers prefer to walk” to avoid long queues that have become a fixture of daily life at gas stations, he said. The intensified chaos of recent years means that the southern border areas are more than ever a haven for jihadists, traffickers and rebels.
These groups exploit a security vacuum that is exacerbated by an ongoing power struggle between a UN-backed Government of National Accord in Tripoli and a rival administration loyal to Haftar in northeastern Libya. Tribal and ethnic quarrels between the Tubus, Tuaregs and Arab groups over trafficking have added fuel to the fire. “We are Muslims, but we have a culture and language that we share with our cousins from Chad, Niger and Sudan,” explained Ali Yahyia, a Tubu expert on his community. But this does not undermine “our support for the Libyan homeland”, he insisted.
– ‘Doctors fear for lives’ –
The LNA launched its ongoing military campaign in mid-January and on Wednesday night entered Murzuk, another southern Libyan city home to many Tubus. Renowned for a fortress that dates back more than seven centuries, much of the historic settlement now resembles a ghost town. Murzuk’s windswept streets are littered with garbage. Like Oubari, shops are closed and people are scared to circulate. Even bakers — hit by a lack of flour — cannot raise their blinds. “The city faces numerous problems at the service level, particularly at the hospital where we have only one doctor”, deplored municipal councillor Ibrahim Omar. “With the military operations that are ongoing, the doctors refuse to come, fearing for their lives”, he said. If the situation persists, “food stocks will in the end be exhausted”.
By AFP
ABOUT THE TUBUS
The Toubou or Tubu ("man who lives in Tibesti" in the , or alternatively from , meaning "rock people") are an native to the that inhabit the central in northern , southern , northeastern , and northwestern . They live either as or as farmers near . Their society is clan-based, with each clan having certain oases, pastures and wells.
The Toubou are generally divided into two closely related groups: the Teda and the Daza. They are believed to share a common origin and speak the , which are from the branch of the language family. The Tebu people are also referred to as the Tabu, Tebou, Tibu, 'Tibbu, Toda, Todga, Todaga, Tubu, Tuda, Tudaga, or Gorane people. The Daza are sometimes referred to as Gouran (or Gorane, Goran, Gourane), an Arabian exonym. Tebu is divided further into two closely related languages or dialects, called (Téda Toubou) and (Daza Toubou). Of the two groups, the Daza, found to the south of the Teda, are more numerous.
Many of Chad's leaders have been Toubou (Gouran), including presidents and .
Distribution
The Toubou people have historically lived in northern Chad, northeastern Niger, and southern Libya. They have sometimes been called the "black nomads of the Sahara". They are distributed across a large area in the central Sahara, as well as the north-central . They are particularly found north of the , which in means "rocky mountains". The first syllable tou refers to the Tibesti Mountains, as known by the natives (touda), and the second syllable bou refers to blood in the ; thus, people from the Tibesti region are referred to as Toubou and their name is derived from this.
The Teda are found primarily in the Sahara regions around the borders of southeast Libya, northeast Niger and northern Chad. They consider themselves a warrior people. The Daza live towards the Sahel region and are spread over much of north-central Chad. The Daza consist of numerous clans. Some major tribes, clans, or societies of the Daza, or , include the Alala, Altafa, , Ankorda, Ayya, Sharara, Sharfada, Shuna, Daza, Djagada, Dogorda, Donza, Gadwa, Gaeda, Howda, Kamaya, Kamsoulla, Kara, Ketcherda, Kokorda, Maghya, Medelea, Mourdiya, Nara, Salma, Tchiroua, Tchoraga, Wandala, Wandja, Warba, Warda, Yira and many more. The Daza cover the northern regions of Chad such as the , the , the northern Kanem, the in the south and also the Tibesti mountains and the neighbouring countries. There is a diaspora community of several thousand Daza living in , Sudan and a few thousand working in , .[]
History
The ancient history of the Toubou people is unclear. They may be related to the 'Ethiopians' mentioned by in 430 BCE, as a people being hunted by the , but Jean Chapelle argues that this connection is speculative. Scholars such as stress that the Garamantes and the Toubou seem to occupy the same lands, spanning from the Fezzan (Phazania) as far south as Nubia. stated in 1912 that the Bayuda desert was still known at the time as the "desert of Goran", a name connected with the modern Kura'án (Goran), affirming that the contemporary Kura'án people occupied much of the same territory as the Garamantes once did.
In , the earliest known mention of the Toubou people, along with that of the , is in an 8th-century text by Arabic scholar . The 9th century scholar also mentioned the Daza people (southern Teda).
During the expansive era of , the Toubou inhabited lands which were frequently used by merchant caravans, specifically along the oasis routes. It is unknown if the Toubou engaged with the caravans.
In the 18th century, the local Toubou peoples of were an until 1870, when the ruling tribe ( from ) of al hasan al balaazi ended their rule according to
Genetics
According to a study published in (Haber et al. 2016) that examined from samples obtained from 75 Toubou men, haplogroups associated with paternal Eurasian ancestry were present at rates of 34% for (R1b-V88), 31% for , and 1% for . The North African associated haplogroup were present at rates of 28%, while appeared at a rate of 5%. The study also found that 20–30% of Toubou was Eurasian in origin, and their African ancestral component was best represented by Laal-speaking populations. The most likely source of this Eurasian DNA, according to the analysis, was central European Neolithic farmers (). Other ethnic groups in the , such as the and the had considerably lower Eurasian admixture, at only 0.3–2% (Sara) and 1.25–4.5% (Laal).
In 2019, B Lorente-Galdos, using whole genome analysis, found that in the two Northeastern Sub-Saharan samples, Western Eurasian ancestry in their Toubou sample was 31.4%, and it was 14.9% for the East African Bantu. The Toubou also maintained similar genetic distance to other Sub-Saharan samples, but was also genetically close to North African and non-African samples. The Eurasian component in the North African individuals was present at high rates of 84.9% for the , and 76.0% for the Libyan. North African samples were closer to Eurasian populations than to Sub-Saharan populations, implying that the Sahara Desert might have represented a major barrier within Africa. In contrast, the three Khoisan groups presented significantly small proportions of a Eurasian component (3.83–4.11%).
Society
Livelihood
Toubou life centers on raising and herding their , or on farming the scattered where they cultivate , and . Their herds include , goats, cattle, donkeys and sheep. Livestock is a major part of their wealth, and trade. Livestock is also used as a part of dowry payment during marriage, either where the groom's family agrees to pay to the bride's family in exchange for the bride, or where the livestock is given by the bride's kin to supply the young couple with economic resources in order to start a family.
In a few places, the Toubou also mine salt and , a salt-like substance which is essential in nearly all components of Toubou life, including medicine, preservation, tanning, soap production, textiles and livestock. It is also an ingredient in chewing tobacco. Literacy rates among the Toubou are quite low.
Clan
Many Toubou people still follow a semi-nomadic pastoralist lifestyle. Those who prefer a settled life typically live in palm-thatched, rectangular or cylindrical mud houses. The Toubou are patrilineal, with an elder male heading the lineage. The second order of Toubou kinship is to the .
According to Jean Chapelle, a colonial officer of history specializing in Chadian ethnic groups (although his book in Borkou has caused a significant degree of wrongdoing), the clan system developed out of necessity. Nomadic life means being scattered throughout a region; therefore, belonging to a clan means that the individual is likely to find hospitable clan people in most settlements or camps of any size.
A second factor is the maintenance of ties with the maternal clan. Although the maternal clan does not occupy the central place of the parental clan, it provides ties. The third factor is protective relationships at the primary residence.
Despite a common linguistic heritage, the institution of the clan holds the highest sense of identity among Toubou peoples. Regional divisions do exist, however. In 1936, the Chadian government under French colonization conferred legality and legitimacy on Toubou regional groupings in Chad by dividing the Daza and Teda regions into territorial units called cantons. al-Haj Kelleï Chahami, from the Kamaya canton in Borkou region's Faya city, was appointed as the cantons' first chief. Even after Chad gained its independence in 1960, the cantons continued to exist.
Toubou legal customs are generally based on Islamic law, which allows restitution and revenge. Murder, for example, is settled directly between the families of the victim and the murderer. Toubou honour requires that someone from the victim's family try to kill the murderer or a relative; such efforts eventually end with negotiations to settle the matter.
Reconciliation follows the payment of the Goroga (Islamic tenet of ), or . Among the Tumagra clan of the Teda people in the region, there is a (spiritual head) who is recognized as the clan judge, and arbitrates conflict and levies sanctions.
Social stratification
The Toubou people, states Jean Chapelle, were historically socially stratified with an embedded caste system. The three strata of the caste system consisted of: freemen with a right to own property, artisanal castes, and slaves.
The endogamous caste of Azza (or Aza) among Toubou have occupations, such as metal work, leather work, salt mining, well digging, dates farming, pottery and tailoring, and they have traditionally been despised and segregated by other strata of the Toubou, much like the Hadahid caste in southeastern Chad among the . According to Paul Lovejoy – a professor of African History, 19th-century records show that these segregated Toubou castes followed the same customs and traditions as the rest of the Toubou, but they were independent in their politics and beliefs, much like the artisan castes found in many ethnic groups of western Chad such as the , , Arab, Kouri and Danawa.
Marriage between a member of the Azza and a member from a different strata of the Toubou people has been culturally unacceptable. The Azza are Dazaga-speaking people who sprang from the Dazagara. The majority of Teda speak and understand Dazaga; however, the Dazagada do not always clearly grasp Tedaga. Dazaga is the most commonly used language in BET by all its inhabitants.
The lowest social strata were the slaves (Agara). Slaves entered the Toubou Teda and Daza societies from raids and warfare on other ethnic groups in lands to their south. All slaves were the property of their masters, their caste was endogamous, and their status was inherited by birth.[]
In the year 1953, Al-Haj Kellei Chahami, a chieftain of the Kamaya canton, in an agreement with the French colonizers, decreed the emancipation of all slaves and suppressed the use of captives in the Borkou region, while slaves from the contiguous regions, such as Tibesti and Ennedi, uncovered the liberation center situated in Borkou. Several of these slaves escaped and sought refuge in Borkou under the protection of the Kamaya canton and they were subsequently emancipated by Chahami, who granted them land that enabled them to settle. This district was formerly referred to as "Ni-Agaranga" in Dazaga, which literally translates to "country of slaves" in the Faya-Largeau city. However, the Borkou municipality opted to rechristen it as "Quartier Huit" (Eighth Quarter) as an euphemistic expression. After the abolition of slavery in 1953, Chahami admitted the descendants of former captives to the canton, where they were recognized as full members and could move around freely; in this way, the last fraction of the Kamaya canton was established. Captives were not the only groups attached to the Kamaya canton; foreigners who resided in Faya, including Fezzanais (Libyan refugees who fled Italian brutality in 1929 before the Italian colonialists' progression into the Fezzan region of southern Libya), Ouadaens from the Chad's Waddai region, prostitutes, blacksmiths, and others were also attached to the Kamaya canton. All of these individuals' concerns were conveyed to the colonizers via the canton.[]
Europeans introduced and propagated inaccurate distortions to the Toubou languages; this can be seen where the sound of "y" is changed to "dj" or "j" in place names throughout the entirety of Chad. These mispronunciations may be attributed to difficulties faced by French colonists attempting to articulate the phoneme represented by the letter "y" in the alphabet. Moreover, the works of explorers who visited Borkou before French colonization contributed to the misinterpretation of various expressions, as evidenced by Gustav Nichtigal's works.[]
The term "Kamadja" is a prominent example of this distortion. The term has become somewhat entrenched, but is losing its relevance to the Kamaya ethnic group due to its lack of self-identification. Linguistic analysis shows that the word "Kamadja" does not exist in either the Dazaga or Tedaga languages. The tone terms, namely "Kamadja" for the male plural and as general, "Kamadji" for the male singular, the singular form of the female term "Kamadjedo" or "Kamadjero", and the female plural "Kamadjeda", all derive from this mispronounced ethnonym. []
On the other end of the spectrum, the nomenclature of Kamaya is rooted in the expression "Kama-dro-yédé". This expression pertains to an inhabitant of the Faya oasis in the accent of Kanem Dazaga, where "Kama" describes a valley, "dro" implies interior, and "yédé" denotes an occupant. In this context, "yé" indicates the act of dwelling, while "dé" stands as the indicator of a singular form. Thus, the expression "Kama-dro-yédé" may be interpreted as "the individual who dwells in the valley" of the palm grove situated in the Faya oasis. The ancient designation for the clans of Kamaya was "Kamayada", with "ya" denoting habitation and "da" indicating plurality. Conversely, "Kamayédé" is the noun used to refer to an occupant of the Faya palm grove oasis valley, since the suffix "dé" is appended to the solitary form of "yé". In Dazaga, the community is called "Kama-yanga" which means the Kamaya canton and together with the suffix "ga" implies the dialect spoken by the Dazagada. The citizens of the aforementioned canton are thus referred to as "Kamay" in the singular form for males, while the singular form for females may be either "Kamaydo" or "Kamayro", with the vocalization of the suffix varying across specific regions and individuals' accents, ranging from "do" to "ro". The plural form of the female noun may be expressed as either "Kamayda" or "Kamayra", whereas the plural form for males and as a general reference is "Kamaya".
Marriage
The Teda, in particular, forbids marriage between cousins, up to 9 generations unrelated, a tradition prevalent with many Muslim ethnic groups in Africa. However, the Daza of Kanem, Bahr el-Ghazal, and certain clans in Ennedi marry close cousins since it is not prohibited in the Quran. They[] also doubt the origins[] of individuals and . A man may marry and have multiple wives according to Islamic tenets, however, this practice is only somewhat prevalent in Toubou society.
The ownership of land, animals, and resources takes several forms. Within an oasis or settled zone belonging to a particular clan, land, trees (usually date palms), and nearby may have different owners. Each family's rights to the use of particular plots of land are recognized by other clan members. Families also may have privileged access to certain wells and the right to a part of the from the fields irrigated by their water. Within the clan and family contexts, individuals also may have personal claims to palm trees and animals.
Contemporary conditions
Chad
Much of the political class of Chad are drawn from Dazzaga. During the (1966–1979), the came to occupy a more important position. In 1965 the Chadian government assumed direct authority over the Mountains, sending a military garrison and administrators to , the capital of Tibesti Sub-prefecture. Within a year, had roused considerable opposition among the Toubou. The derde, , recognized but little respected up to that time, protested the excesses, went into exile in , and, with the support of Toubou students at the Islamic University of , became a symbol of opposition to the Chadian government. This role enhanced the position of the Derde from the Tumagra tribe of Toubou.
After 1967 the derde hoped to rally the Toubou to the (FROLINAT). became military authority shortly thereafter when his son, , became one of the leaders of the Second Liberation Army of FROLINAT. Goukouni was to become a national figure; he played an important role in the battles of N'Djamena in 1979 and 1980 and served as head of state for a time. Another northerner, of the Dazagra, replaced Goukouni of the Teda in 1982, and eventually lost power to the after 8 years.
Libya
The Toubou minority in Libya suffered what has been described as "massive discrimination" both under the leadership of as well as after the .
In a report released by the , the (STP) reported "massive discrimination" against the Toubou minority, which resides in the southeastern corner of the country around the oasis town of . In December 2007, the Gaddafi government stripped Toubou Libyans of their citizenship, claiming that they were not Libyans, but rather Chadians. In addition, local authorities denied Toubou people access to education and healthcare. In response, an armed group called the (TFSL) staged an uprising in November 2008 which lasted for five days and claimed 33 lives before being crushed by government security forces. Despite resistance and public condemnation, the Gaddafi regime continued its persecution of the Toubou minority in Libya. Beginning in November 2009, the government began a program of forced eviction and demolition of Toubou homes, rendering many Toubou homeless. Several dozens who protested the destruction were arrested, and families who refused to leave their homes were beaten.
In the , Toubou tribespeople in Libya sided with the rebel and participated in the against forces loyal to , briefly capturing the town of and claiming to capture for the rebel movement a month later.
In March 2012, broke out between Toubou and Arab tribesmen in the southern city of . In response, Issa Abdel Majid Mansour, the leader of the Toubou tribes in Libya threatened a separatist bid, decrying what he saw as "ethnic cleansing" against Toubou and declaring "We announce the reactivation of the Toubou Front for the Salvation of Libya to protect the Toubou people from ethnic cleansing." The TFSL was the opposition group active in the unrest of 2007–2008 that was "ruthlessly persecuted" by the Gaddafi government.

