Libyan civil war Yafran people, as in other cities of Libya, demonstrated against
Muammar Gaddafi. Subsequently, Yafran was exposed to bombardment and siege by Gaddafi forces. As of May 2011, Gaddafi's forces had shut down the water system and blocked food supplies and held the western part of the town with some 500 rebels in the eastern section of Yafran still resisting. Yafran fell to Gaddafi's forces sometime in late May or early June. The centre of the town was used as a position for "government tanks, artillery guns and snipers". On 2 June, rebel forces retook the city center and started to clear the area of Gaddafi's forces. On 6 June, an on-site
Reuters journalist reported that the pro-Gaddafi forces were nowhere to be seen in or around the town.
Jewish community Yafran had a deep-rooted
Jewish history dating back to antiquity. According to chronicler Mordehai HaCohen (1856–1929), a local tradition holds that the Jewish community there originated after the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE, when generals under
Titus allegedly sold 30,000 Jewish captives to
Bedouins in Yafran. The local Jewish population flourished under
Ottoman rule. During the Italian occupation of Libya in 1910–1922, they suffered persecution by the local Arab population; some of them fled to
Tripoli. During
World War II, Jews from
Cyrenaica were brought to
labor camps in Yafran; some Jews were later deported to the
Giado concentration camp. After the Tripolitania riots in 1945, most of the Jewish population moved to Tripoli and eventually emigrated to
Israel in the 1950s. ==Climate==