Showing posts with label Libya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libya. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Buried unceremoniously in a secret location, the man who was lord of Libya for forty two years makes his exit from this world:

Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, his son Muatassim and a top aide have been buried at a secret location with a few relatives and officials in attendance, a Misrata military council official said today.
The capture and killing of Gaddafi - let us be truthful and admit what really happened - was the closing chapter in the bloody civil war which toppled him. I think it was very unpleasant to watch and, though he did not deserve it, I also felt pity for the old man. I've read from some people that this bodes ill for the future of Libya, and that revenge and extra-judicial murder will set a worrying trend. Perhaps, and then again perhaps not. De Gaulle gave the resistance forty eight hours to settle old scores and eliminate French people who had collaborated with the Nazi occupation. Whilst we can pontificate about right and wrong, the fact is that Libya went through an extraordinary experience of dictatorship, brutality and a civil war. In such extraordinary times, things we don't find tasteful might be necessary for the people and the country to move on.
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Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Death of a Villain


He was the archetype of the Middle Eastern dictator. Festooned with medals, dashing in his fashions, and eccentric in his behaviour, who else in the world had an entourage of Amazons to protect him? And what other Arab "leader" enlivened the utterly boring Arab League meetings with the colourful denunciations and insults that Colonel Muammar al Gadaffi used? There is something of the endearing fool about Gaddafi that made us all (apart from the Libyan people) like him. But he was murderous as well as buffoonish, though not a stupid man. He also knew what human nature was and how best to manipulate and bring out the worst in it. Unfortunately for him that was also his downfall, because he thought he could crush his people like rats, that by using overwhelming force he could stamp his people back into submission using terror, torture and fear.  

Tonight, I think far more people will be happy that he is dead than not, and whilst I'm a bit old fashioned and don't like talking ill of the dead, I will say that seeing his body dragged like a dog's over the earth was poetic justice for forty two years of oppression, tyranny and untold cruelty.
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Friday, October 14, 2011

Gaddafi is almost, just about, nearly, and shortly and soon to be defeated. Saleh has, unsurprisingly, refused to step down even though he said he will do so. In Syria, three thousand people have been killed since the start of the uprising there. These dictators just don't want to take a hint.

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Monday, August 29, 2011

Some Comments on Libya

There are some who have an almost voyeuristic satisfaction whenever they hear of NATO bombing civilians by accident in Libya. Not once, have I ever seen them mention anything about, or express any sympathy for, the victims of Gaddafi's family and their sadism. Here, Gaddafi's daughter in law pours boiling water over her Ethiopian nanny. Here, Khamis al Gaddafi's brigade massacred dozens of people in the warehouse. But, of course, heaven forbid that NATO should get its hands on any Libyan oil.

But wait - what oil are these people talking about? Is it the same oil that was already available in Gaddafi's Libya after he came in from the cold? Didn't BP sign a major exploration and production deal with Libya? What was ENI, the Italian oil company, doing in Libya for all those past few years? So Libya's oil was already going to the West? Oh dear... where does that leave their argument then?

What is sad is that instead of placing the blame firmly on Gaddafi's idiocy, that has made NATO intervention in his country possible, these individuals continue to blame the Libyan people, his victims. In that sense, they are no different from those who support Zionism and blame the Palestinians for the misery they are in. Dogma, it seems, can be found in politics as well as religion.

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Friday, August 26, 2011

I am certain that the National Transitional Council (NTC), in its desperation, has agreed to sell its soul in order to save itself from Gaddafi. I won't judge, condemn or preach to them about their decision. As Libyan people who suffered the most horrific oppression under this mad colonel, it was always their own decision to make, and I respect that completely. I don't respect those pseudo-resistance types who, whilst accepting that Gaddafi has to go, drool at the mouth whenever they find evidence of the strong ties that the NTC will be having with the West. Where were these resistance types when Gaddafi's soldiers were shooting at unarmed protesters with anti-aircraft guns and mortars? For people who are self-described anti-imperialists, their behaviour towards the people they are supposed to be "anti-" for seems to lack an awful lot of compassion and empathy.


I don't mind somebody who tells me they support one camp against another, that they are after their own self-interest or that they benefit from the favours of one particular ruler: I can appreciate the motivations behind human nature. What I don't like is the self-deception these people try to convince me of as true. The devil doesn't need an advocate.
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Monday, August 22, 2011

Why Libya will not be Iraq

For many, including myself, Libya will be a bitter/sweet pill to swallow. That is because the rebel's victory over Colonel Gaddafi was only possible because of NATO involvement and an extensive bombing campaign that virtually nullified his armed forces. On the one hand a massacre of the Libyan people by this erratic and highly dangerous individual was avoided, but on the other there is the very real risk that Libya will now be a vassal state to the West. Of course the Libyan people have made their decision, and the jubilation they are showing in the streets of cities across the country is a clear sign that they prefer this alternative to having Gaddafi and his family ruling them with an iron fist. There is, however, the argument that points us to the 'Iraqi' scenario. As a Syrian, I'm quite used to hearing the argument that democracy 'didn't work' in Iraq and that we should remember how nearly one million Iraqis because of the invasion. But the analogy does not work for a number of reasons.

In Iraq, democracy was, allegedly, to be applied by an invading American-led force that would completely purge society of the Ba'ath party, remove Saddam Hussein and then sit back and let favourable oil and construction contracts do the rest of the work. In Libya there are no American tanks and no columns of invading American and British soldiers. The ground fighting was done entirely by Libyan rebels, and, contrary to exaggerated claims, you cannot occupy a country by air power alone. Nor do ships off the coast constitute an occupation. What we should acknowledge is that this was a Libyan rebellion which was assisted materially by NATO. To say otherwise puts the donkey behind the cart and verges on the dishonest.

Secondly, the instability and deaths that occurred in Iraq were not entirely because of American bombing, in spite of garish propaganda posters of the victims of such bombings. Iraq was a battlefield between Iran and the United States. By proxy, a cacophony of groups emerged in the chaos and began to fight for control, including al Qaeda. All these groups, whether aligned with the United States or with Iran, did very bad thing. The most memorable atrocities, apart from al Qaeda's macabre beheadings, were the Haditha and Falluja massacres perpetrated by US soldiers, the Iranian campaign of assassinating Iraqi intellectuals, pilots and senior Sunni figures, and the Mahdi army's torture of captives, including drilling their bodies with holes. Then there was the Syrian regimes encouragement of Islamists to go to Iraq.

For these reasons, I just don't accept the analogy with Iraq. Yes, the sectarianism and extreme violence we saw in Iraq was an awful warning against chaos and a lack of security, but they were symptoms of what I described above. When we look at Libya today, we do not see any of these factors. In fact, every indication is that Libya might actually prosper wonderfully now that Gaddafi is gone. Sandwiched between Tunisia and Egypt, countries which have already toppled their dictators, and with the firm support of the West, Libya is too far and too big for a distant country to start causing instability. It also has a coherent, popular, and legitimate alternative to Gaddafi's rule, something that was missing in Iraq. To say that Libya will go down the road of Iraq, or to say that NATO 'occupies' Libya, is bizarre and ignores -wilfully or out of ignorance - the reality underlying the Libyan solution.

Whether or not I would have accepted NATO involvement in Libya myself is another story, but I must respect the Libyans I have spoken with and heard from who have supported this involvement and wished Gaddafi removed at any cost. To lecture Libyans now about 'history', 'Arabism' and 'imperialism' is insulting and callous. Many of the people I know who decry NATO bombing and are cynical of its involvement there have ironically never mentioned or condemned the atrocities Gaddafi's forces have carried out. It is this silence that many Libyans will remember most in the future.

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Thursday, March 17, 2011

An excellent analysis by my good friend Raw Politic on what is happening in Libya today. I strongly recommend a read. The latest developments show an escalation of the cold war between the America and her Gulf allies against the resistance axis of Iran, Hezbullah, Hamas and Syria et al.

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Sunday, March 13, 2011

Libya - 'Not All Revolutions are Equal'


The Libyan revolution is now a civil war and it does not appear to be ending any time soon. More importantly, this civil war is now drawing in the key players in the region as they scramble to strengthen their positions. By this I mean Iran, through Syria, on the one hand, and the West on the other. They key point of contention is over the implementation of a no-fly zone over Libya, aimed at restricting Gaddafi's airforce from inflicting hurtful blows on the rebels. Apart from bringing up painful memories of the no-fly zone forced onto Iraq almost two decades ago, there is another very important issue that is being fought over at this very moment. That issue is whether NATO will have another toehold in the region or not.

Unlike with the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions, the Libyan revolution is now being ardently championed throughout Western capitals. France has already recognised the Benghazi based ruling council as the legitimate ruler of Libya, and it is likely that other Western states will not be far behind. The United Kingdom has been the key proponent of a no-fly zone but this has been severely contested by both China and Russia. al Jazeera Arabic also report that Syria is the only Arab country which opposes this no-fly zone.

The reason for this is very clear, and it was made very eloquently by someone I consider my political mentor. Syria is supporting Gaddafi in his attempt to maintain power, and may or may not be assisting him directly with pilots and planes. It is absolutely certain by now that Algeria is also providing pilots and planes for bombing rebel positions in Libya and they have been doing so for some weeks, in addition the Polisario fighters from the Western Sahara have also been given passage through Algeria to fight in Libya. From Syria (and Algeria's) point of view, the revolutionary wave sweeping the region must be contained. It is absolutely vital for Iran that Syria not be swept or affected by this tide of unrest. Syria is the lifeline for Hezbullah and a vital support for Hamas in Gaza, both politically and morally. In turn, Syria is quite prepared to burn down the house next door to prevent a fire from spreading to her own roof, as is Algeria.

This sentiment is shared by the Gulf states and other Arab countries, however, whilst Saudi Arabia and what remains of America's allies in the region support the crushing of the rebellion with the assistance of the West, Iran and Syria would prefer to maintain Gaddafi, as a matter of realpolitik, than allow the West a stronger position in the region. The opportunistic Amr Moussa is, in the meantime, ardently supporting a no-fly zone at any cost, hoping to ride the wave of revolutionary sentiment that sweeped aside Mubarak. Finally, the timing for an Iranian ship to arrive in the Mediterranean so soon after the fall of Mubarak was clearly an attempt at political one-upmanship.

Ultimately any moral considerations about the Libyan people and their rebellion is not what anybody is concerned about. At stake is the political future for the region, meaning not all revolutions are equal and not all dictators deserve to be toppled. At least not yet...

**UPDATE** Turkey has announced on Monday that it is opposed to a no-fly zone in Libya, especially one that is imposed by the West.
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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

جاى الدور عليكم كلكم



The strange ramblings of Qaddafi in 2008 at the Arab Summit in Damascus. Almost prophetic and very interesting to listen to now that he himself might be facing a similar fate albeit at the hands of his own people.

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Friday, November 12, 2010

A bizarre article, 'Gaddafi flies Italian women to Libya for "cultural tours" - and romance'. Some parts of it made me cringe. There also seems to be a warm friendship between the Colonel and Italy's Silvio Berlusconi, allegedly over their shared interest of nubile young women. This could be the start of something beautiful...


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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Note to myself

I remember writing a few posts a while back heavily criticising Libya for detaining the Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian trainee. I will think again before jumping to conclusions on why such things happen when they do.

The US is still holding five Iranians who were seized in January. American officials say the five include the operations chief and other members of Iran's elite Quds Force, which is accused of arming and training Iraqi militants.

For its part, Iran is holding several Iranian-Americans on spying charges, although it freed an American-Iranian academic last week.

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Monday, July 16, 2007

If the doctor and nurses held in the ridiculous and sham trial that is Libya's HIV scandal were British, American or even Saudi, they would be have been out a long time ago. This is the status of justice in the Potato of Islam Mu'ammar al Qadhafi's Libya.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The Libyan court case regading the Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor has been simmering for over 5 years and finally it appears that the accused may not be executed after all. In an act of magnanimity and generosity, Saif al-Islam (son of Colonel Qaddafi) has pushed the matter into a new direction. "The case went in the wrong direction from the very beginning. There were many manipulations in the original files, many errors ... This is why we should seek a compromise,". If anybody though there is no justice in Libya, this will surely leave them eating their words. All that is required is that the son of a revolutionary Islamic leader of the Arab world intercede on your behalf to ingratiate himself with the West and appear as a "moderate"; thus passing the required test for a future career as local despot and Imperialism-basher. He has already encouraged other developments such as e-democracy which must surely solidify his credentials as a forward looking leader for the Libyan people. Saif al-Islam is now geared to be the next ruler of the Jammahiriya, may his reign be blessed and long as his fathers before him. It is unclear at this stage whether he shares the King of Jordan's passion for the Sony Playstation 2.

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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

"A Libyan court today condemned to death five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor after finding them guilty of deliberately infecting 400 children with the HIV virus." The Libyan justice system is a complete sham and these accused are being used as political bargaining chips. This goes along with Qaddafi Jr's idea of an e-democracy, an e-justice system perhaps?

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Friday, October 13, 2006

From Libya

"Col Gadafy's son, Saif al-Islam, has talked of turning the country into the first "e-democracy", with citizens participating electronically in government decision-making."

How does it feel to be back in from the cold guys?

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