In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Update on siege of Bani Walid

Posted by seumasach on October 23, 2012

Leonor Massanet Arbona

 

23rd October, 2012

 

Beni WAlit está siendo bombardeada por el gobierno libio de doble nacionalidad. El bombardeo es indiscriminado sobre toda la población y desde varios flancos.

La violencia, la agresividad son terribles mientras el mundo está impasible y los medios siguen hablando del “dictador” para justificar lo NO JUSTIFICABLE.

Alguien puede imaginar un gobierno que bombardea a su prop

io pueblo, a una comunidad que representa la tercera parte del país. ..luego hablan de democracia o de libertad.

Por si fuera poco ya están amenazando que cuando terminen con Beni Walit van a seguir bombardeando el sur de Libia.

Mientras los medios y el mundo se mantiene impasible mirando hacia otro lado o justificando estas atrocidades.

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

SOS Bani Walid: How to prevent genocide?

Posted by seumasach on October 22, 2012

SOS BANI WALID (Libye) : Comment empêcher (enfin), le génocide ?

Allain Jules

22st October, 2012

Diantre. Ceux qui avaient simplement soupçonné le frère Guide Mouammar Kadhafi de vouloir faire le siège de Benghazi, la « ville rebelle «  disaient-ils, qu’ «  il voulait raser »-un mensonge abyssal-, s’étaient rués à l’ONU, ce machin, pour aller bombarder la Libye en violant la résolution 1973. Aujourd’hui, dans un silence assourdissant, les nouvelles autorités libyennes tuent des civils en silence à Bani Walid. Elles bombardent à l’arme lourde, utilisant tous les moyens de guerre contre une population sans défense. Est-ce acceptable ? On peut donc comprendre que la soi-disant révolution libyenne n’était qu’une leurre, une falsification. Cet attrape-nigaud occidental coûtera cher aux Libyens…

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »

Clashes between armed gangs and “Libyan government”

Posted by seumasach on October 21, 2012

LAS BANDAS ARMADAS SE ENFRENTAN AL GOBIERNO DE DOBLE NACIONALIDAD LIBIO

Leonor en Libia

20th October, 2012

 

Se están produciendo fuertes enfrentamientos en Trípoli entre bandas armadas del nuevo gobierno de doble nacionalidad libio. Las ordenes de este gobvierno de doble nacionalidad sobre estas bandas de mercenarios para que ataquen a los libios están siendo rechazadas por algunas bandas por su alto grado de peligrosidad ya que han llegado a un extremo que los libios dicen BASTA. Este gobierno de doble nacionalidad pretende entrar poco a poco a estas bandas de alqaeda para que controlen el país y para ello les van adiestrando y logrando nuevos miembros en los montes de Zintan en campos de adiestramiento. Una vez adiestrados son enviados contra los Libios y a Siria.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »

‘Bloodshed, torture, medieval darkness brought to Libya with Western involvement’

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2012

RT

20th October, 2012

A year on since the death of Colonel Gaddafi, RT speaks with political analyst Ibrahim Alloush who thinks that it is the involvement of NATO and its allies that handed the country over to ‘a group of fanatic criminals.’

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Besieged Gaddafi stronghold Bani Walid under attack

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2012

Stephen Lendman

Global Research

20th October, 2012

Washington’s war on Libya rages. Fighting didn’t stop after NATO said its seven-month 2011 “mission” ended. Ravaging a nonbelligerent country wasn’t good enough.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Report on siege of Bani Walid

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2012

Leonor en Libia

20th October, 2012

Viernes terrorífico en la ciudad LIBIA de Beni Walit habitada por familias libias, la mayoría de la tribu Warfala. Las bandas arnadas internacionales ayer agredieron más si cabe la ciudad lanzando bombas sobre la ciudad de forma indioscriminada provocando destrucciones masivas en áreas de la ciudad, decenas de heridos y algunos muertos. Entre ellos a un adolescente de trece años.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Ex-rebels attack Libya’s Bani Walid, 11 killed

Posted by seumasach on October 18, 2012

 

So  Libya Shield, a group which has been named in connection with the death of the US ambassador, operating “under the banner of the army” is engaged in an attempt to “truly liberate” Beni Walid from “regime loyalists and criminal gangs”. According to John Rosenthal:

“The Libya Shield Brigade is known to operate under the authority of the Libyan government. As it so happens, it is also known to fly the black flag of jihad.”

This time they won’t enjoy the advantage of NATO air cover which may. rather, be directed against them. Western policy towards the so-called Arab Spring is now in total disarray  and only continued deep cover from liberal-left groups and media, in particular, prevent the whole fiasco from blowing up in their faces

Daily Nation

17th October, 2012

At least eleven Libyans were killed and scores wounded in clashes on Wednesday when ex-rebels linked to the army attacked Bani Walid, a former bastion of dictator Moamer Kadhafi, local sources said. Read (Libya’s Misrata tense after death of man who caught Gaddafi)

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »

Benghazi: Marines “supported” by Jihadists

Posted by seumasach on October 17, 2012

Evidence shows militia backing up U.S. forces made up of radical Islamists

John Rosenthal

WND

17th October, 2012

BRUSSELS, Belgium – Video and documentary evidence shows that a Libyan-government-sponsored militia that reportedly provided support to American Marines on the night of the Sept. 11 Benghazi attacks is a radical Islamic militia that, like the presumed assailants, flies the black flag of jihad.

Read more

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »

Great escape of Libyan patriots

Posted by seumasach on October 16, 2012

Fuga masiva de patriotas de una cárcel libia

Resistencia Libia

15th October, 2012

Decenas de patriotas libios, miembros de las fuerzas armadas de la Yamahiriya árabe libia popular socialista, de los Comités Populares, de los servicios de seguridad, de la antigua administración revolucionaria y simples ciudadanos partidarios del Líder masacrado se han dado a la fuga de la cárcel de Al Jadaida de la ciudad de Trípoli, que en el pasado fue la capital de un país conocido como Libia y que hoy es una ciudad sometida a ocupación militar de la OTAN, de sus cuerpos de inteligencia y de las bandas de criminales armados puestos en el poder en 2011 por la mencionada alianza agresiva. Es evidente que los patriotas han contado con la complicidad de funcionarios de prisiones, como también es evidente que las masas populares darán refugio seguro a los evadidos para que prosigan la lucha de liberación nacional hasta la expulsion de los imperialistas y de sus agentes locales.

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Report Libya 13th October, 2012

Posted by seumasach on October 15, 2012

Leonor en Libia

Grupos armados de este “gobierno de doble nacionalidad” han sido acusados de usar gas tóxico en lunes 8/10/2012 en Bir Dufan, Beni Walit.

Hoy sábado se esperan ataques duros de estos grupos armados internacionales ya que han podido ver  columnas de tanques y armamento pesado que ha salido de Misratah hacia Beni Walit. Dios ayude a los LIBIOS y a LIBIA.

Read more

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »

The unanswered question: After the west’s bombs, what next in Libya?

Posted by seumasach on October 14, 2012

Lizzie Phelan

11th October, 2012

Whether or not you are or were “pro” or “anti”-Gaddafi should not have prevented anyone from asking the obvious questions. And there are some Libyans I know who would describe themselves as “anti-Gaddafi” before the crisis, but when they asked themselves this question and thought about it rigorously, it lead them to the conclusion that despite them not liking Gaddafi, he was the best thing for Libya.

And the question is: What would replace the government lead by Gaddafi?

The whole nature of the discourse on Libya has been clouded by decades of information manipulation, whereby Libya has overwhelmingly only been spoken about externally when Gaddafi is the subject (in a context whereby he is always criminalised).

As such the whole of Libyan society has come to be personified by this criminalised man, a society which is made up of people who are either with him or against him, as though there was no variance of analysis amongst the Libyan people about their country, its history and its direction. This has lead to the nuances in Libyan society being totally ignored let alone understood.

Two of those nuances are the tribal construction of the society and the regional (African, Arab and to a lesser extent Mediterranean/Ottoman) religious and political dynamics that influence that society.

The tribal construction of the society is largely ignored/dismissed because it has equally been criminalised as something that was a phenomenon exacerbated by Gaddafi, rather than a phenomenon that predated Gaddafi by centuries and that only faced serious tensions as a result of the arbitrary borders drawn up by European powers.

The western [dis]information system has claimed that the former Libyan government played tribes off of one another to consolidate its power. It is indeed a profound tragedy that it took the destruction of a country to get rid of Gaddafi that now we can see the reality. And the reality is that for those 42 years there was a government lead by PEOPLE from several tribes that had a deep understanding of the dynamics between the approx 150 tribes in Libya. It goes beyond logical reasoning to suggest that the peace was maintained purely through repression and playing tribes off one another when for example, the largest tribe in Libya (Werfalla), which numbers more than one million (in a population of approx 6 million) never attempted any serious revolt against the former government in 42 years. It is clear that if they would have they would have posed a serious threat and of course we know that the Werfalla was firmly allied with the former government during the NATO bombing campaign and continues to refuse to submit to either the “government’s” or any other militia’s control.

One of the clearest example of how the former Libyan government managed potential tribal tensions (as opposed to played them off against each other in a way that was in the interests of just Gaddafi’s tribe) was in Misrata, which according to some Libyan accounts historically some sections have had their own separatist agenda (perhaps because they did not identify with the Libyan nation whose borders were created by the colonialists, or because of other factions Ottoman descent…ie. its a complicated and overlooked history!) which of course would threaten the unity of Libya and likely play into the hands of former colonial powers who had shown an inclination to prefer a divided Libya.

As such, Misrata was invested in heavily by the former government, boasting one of the region’s most important steel factories, a port which was as important as the capital Tripoli’s, and a free-trade zone. The city was one of the country’s most prosperous and some of the richest Libyans came from there. But without the former Libyan government ensuring that they have a vested interest in maintaining Libya as a whole they are just one faction that has reverted to be out for itself(I am generalising because there are many in Misrata who are against what some militias are doing in their name).

So back to the original question: What would replace Gaddafi?

To answer it you would have to address how what replaces the former Libyan government would deal equally as well or better with the plethora of interests of different tribes, interests which have been shaped in the modern era by colonial borders, and equally what kind of relationship that replacement government would have with religious/political factions that have a vision beyond Libya. Clearly it is not in the remit of western style “democracy” to accommodate this context.

None of these questions were seriously asked by the people who said “the people will take over”,from the NATO elite to the eurocentric left/liberals.

But the answer can be seen in today’s Libya.

Posted in Libya | Leave a Comment »