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Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Libye : le nouveau pays sans foi ni loi que personne en Occident ne veut voir

Posted by seumasach on June 13, 2012

Allain Jules

13th June, 2012

Les nouvelles autorités libyennes ont été installées grâce à la puissance de feu de l’organisation terroriste et nazie nommée OTAN. Pour que son action n’ait pas de problème, elle s’était appuyé sur son bras judiciaire, la Cour pénale internationale (CPI). Ce tribunal dédiés aux Africains, pour ne pas permettre de porte de sortie au clan du frère Guide Mouammar Kadhafi (Saif, Senoussi et le frère Guide lui-même), en les inculpant d’entrée de crime contre l’humanité, sans la moindre preuve.

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An ongoing disaster- Libya, Africa and Africom

Posted by seumasach on June 1, 2012

Dan Glazebrook

Counterpunch

25th-27th May, 2012

The scale of the ongoing tragedy visited on Libya by NATO and its allies is becoming horribly clearer with each passing day. Estimates of those killed so far vary, but 50,000 seems like a low estimate; indeed the British Ministry of Defence was boasting that the onslaught had killed 35,000 as early as last May. But this number is constantly growing. The destruction of the state’s forces by British, French and American blitzkrieg has left the country in a state of total anarchy – in the worst possible sense of the word.

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Libye : naissance d’un mouvement pour la restauration de la Libye (MPNL).

Posted by seumasach on May 22, 2012

Allain Jules

22nd May, 2012

TRIPOLI – Un mouvement de résistance mais pacifique est né. Il s’agit du Mouvement populaire national libyen ( en arabe :  الحركة الوطنية الشعبية الليبية et en abrégé MPNL). C’est un  mouvement politique  créé par d’anciens  patriotes de la Grande Jamahiriya arabe libyenne et socialiste. Son secrétaire général  est  le major-général  Al-Hamidi Khuwaildi , un ancien membre du  Conseil de commandement révolutionnaire libyen .

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AFP rewrites the Lockerbie case

Posted by seumasach on May 22, 2012

Voltairenet

21st May, 2012

View video

Abdel Basset al-Megrahi died on 20 May 2012 of cancer at the age of 60. He was the only person convicted of the bombing of PanAm flight 103, which exploded over Lockerbie on 21 December 1988, killing 270 people.

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NATO in the dock on Libya bombing

Posted by seumasach on May 18, 2012

NATO’s claim that it cannot investigate civilian casualties because it has no mandate to be in Libya is feeble and disingenuous.”

Vijay Prasad

Counterpunch

15th May, 2012

On May 14, 2012, Human Rights Watch released an important report, Unacknowledged Deaths: Civilian Casualties in NATO’s Air Campaign in Libya. The 82-page report reveals conclusively that some of NATO’s ten thousand sorties flown over Libya resulted in the deaths of at least seventy-two civilians, including twenty-four children. These are not large numbers, largely because HRW’s analysis is based on the most obvious cases and because its work was not assisted by an investigation of NATO’s own paperwork. HRW did not conduct a comprehensive investigation. That was not possible. Its investigators went to eight sites of NATO air strikes and found here that NATO’s bombs had indeed killed civilians. The findings, then, are not comprehensive. They are illustrative.

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Thierry Meyssan sur les tentatives de déstabilisation de la Syrie et sur l’élection présidentielle française

Posted by seumasach on April 22, 2012

Interview with Thierry Meyssan

Voltairenet

20 th April, 2012

Dans une interview accordée à nos confrères suisses de Mecanopolis que nous reproduisons dans nos colonnes, Thierry Meyssan revient sur l’offensive internationale contre la Syrie, la situation dramatique de la Libye et la campagne électorale en France. Comme un symbole, le « succès » français en Libye est un désastre, alors que paradoxalement, l’échec d’Alain juppé en Syrie préserve les chances de peser dans le monde de demain. Alors que la crise syrienne annonce la fin du monde unipolaire et le bouleversement des anciennes alliances, la France n’a qu’une alternative : la reconquête de sa souveraineté ou l’errance mondialiste.

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La Libye, les bandits-révolutionnaires et l’ONU

Posted by seumasach on April 19, 2012

Alexander Mazyaev

Voltairenet

17th April, 2012

La Mission d’appui des Nations Unies en Libye a présenté les conclusions de son premier rapport. Pour Alexandre Mezyayev, celles-ci trahissent le fait que l’ONU, loin d’encourager la paix comme elle est supposée le faire en accord avec sa Charte, est désormais largement au service de la politique de remodelage du Grand Moyen-Orient et de l’Afrique du Nord. Alors que la mission d’observation des bérets bleus débute en Syrie, il convient d’être particulièrement attentif à ce que l’organisation et son secrétaire général Ban Ki-moon se remettent au service du droit international et non plus d’intérêts partisans.

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War crimes in Libya and the March shift

Posted by seumasach on April 8, 2012

Michael Collins

War is a Crime

7th April, 2012

Foreign Policy just published a roundup of weapons contributed to the Libyan rebels in the regime change effort.  The e-Journal is a publication of the Washington Post.  Colum Lynch’s April 4 article relies on the March 20 UN report to the UN Security Council by a panel of experts appointed to track the UN resolutions and responses from the start of the conflict.

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Libya: Brigands-Revolutionaries and the UN

Posted by seumasach on March 22, 2012

Alexander Mezyaev

Voltairenet

22nd March, 2012

As NATO and the GCC persevere with their project of remodeling the Greater Middle East and North Africa, a constant flow of fighters have been crossing from Libya into Syria and vice versa. According to Alexander Mezyaev, far from pursuing peace as stipulated in its Charter, the United Nations has become an instrument of this policy.

For the first time the UN Security Council viewed the results of the Mission in Libya operation after it was established in September last year. The report of UN Secretary General was submitted for the Council’s consideration to convince its members that the prolongation of the Mission’s activities was necessary. That’s what was done. The UN Security Council took decision to extend the operation of the Mission for a further period of up to 12 months and specified a new mandate. As it states the Mission is to aid the Libyan authorities to define national requirements and priorities throughout the whole country; to promote the rule of law, to monitor and protect human rights, to restore public security, to fight illegal proliferation of all types of arms and related material (shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles known as man portable air defense systems are of particular concern).

No matter the UN Secretary General’s report tried to portray the Libyan authorities in the most positive light, a scrutiny of events in Libya couldn’t be avoided.

The new Ban Ki-moon’s report contains information on combat actions of the forces loyal to the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, that continue resistance to NATO/UN occupants and local collaborators. The resistance takes place in the biggest cities: Tripoli, Bani-Walid, Corfu etc [1].

Trying to smooth the gravity of the situation the UN Secretary General calls the combat actions “skirmishes”, and it’s not the only absurdity in his report that doesn’t clarify the understanding of the situation but rather makes it more complicated. For instance, besides new Libyan authorities and “old regime supporters” all of a sudden a third actor appears – some “revolutionary brigades”. Who are they, what areas do they control, whose command are they under – the report doesn’t say a word about it. But the text makes it clear what the new actor is needed for: “the “revolutionary brigades” continue to carry out arrests of alleged former regime supporters, and interrogation, including at disclosed locations, as well as to control known detention centers”. There are “acts of severe torture and ill treatment perpetrated by the brigades including death in custody, particularly in Tripoli, Misrata, Zintan, Gheryan”. [2] Now everything becomes clear. The new Libyan authorities have nothing to do with it, it’s all the fault of some mythical “brigades”. Still another question crops up: if the brigades operate in Tripoli itself, what does the “government” control?

The UN special representative for Libya Ian Martin came from Libya to take part in the Security Council’s session and to shed light on what the situation is like on spot. His report was no less a sad sight. He also maintained there were some “armed brigades” but it is not clear who they were and under whose control they acted. [3]

Libya Permanent Representative to the UN Shalgam was more open. He told straight that there were areas where the government failed to establish control. No police presence and no courts make it impossible for the new authorities to be responsible for what was happening there. But somehow Shalgam didn’t make precise what parts of the country those areas out of “government” control were situated in. According to international law any authorities constitute a legal government if they control the territory. That’s de jure. It’s tacitly recognized de facto that a government should control at least the larger part of the country. It’s exactly what lacks in the case of the National Transitional Council. So, the representatives have to invent rather stupid reports.

The “new Libya” authorities know their heads could roll in the wink of an eye. That’s why the Libya UN representative raised alarm. He said it’s known that some former Gaddafi regime leaders were plotting a coup d’etat. “In the past few days a number of armed cells have been detained. They were plotting to sabotage and bomb Tripoli. Al-Qadhafi agents are sending funds to Libya for acts of sabotage”. [4] Shalgam said he had sent to the Security Council and the International Criminal Court copies of recorded phone conversation of former Libyan Prime Minister Al-Baghdadi al-Mahmoudi (now living in Tunisia) personally giving instructions to launch sabotage acts. In a week Libyan present “prime minister” Abdel Rahim al-Kib addressed the Council imploring it to cancel the arms embargo against Libya.

Let the earth burn under the feet of the “government”. To save the present regime the UN Security Council abrogated the arms supplies embargo against Libya made effective by clause 14 of the Resolution N 1973, but the clauses 9 and 10 of the resolution 1970 (with amendments inserted by the 2009 resolution) remained in force. Still the people’s resistance to newly authorities continues. But the Libya’s entreaty to return its funds captured by the “Western democracies” somehow was left without response. The resolution only “instructed” the Sanctions Committee to permanently oversee the other steps introduced by the resolutions 1970, 1973 and 2009 concerning only the Libyan Investment Authority and Libyan African Investment Portfolio. It also envisaged a plausible abrogation of the sanctions by the Committee but only when appropriate. [5]

There is a special operation to transfer the Syrian “opposition” brigands into Libya conducted under the cover of the UN Mission and its head I. Martin.

Once the fact has become known [6] I. Martin tried to make it look like it was not militants but rather “refugees” fleeing from the Bashar Assad bloody regime. But for anyone who has ever seen a map it’s clear that one can “escape” from Syria into Libya only through Jordan and Israel and then crossing Egypt. And to overcome it all to be granted asylum in the most “problem free” country! Looks like these people are not refugees but rather marathon runners. As one can see it’s another silly story. But nobody cares about the authenticity of the explanations offered.

Since a long time the UN Security Council’s sessions have become examples of cynicism and hypocrisy, a world wide stage for spreading fabrications to promote public opinion support for the most bloody and base crimes.

On March 9 in Geneva the International Commission of Inquiry on Libya presented a formal report at the UN Human Rights Council’ session. Its Chairman Kirsch (former head of the International Criminal Court) said crimes against humanity and war crimes were committed in Libya. He said it was necessary to conduct an additional investigation of NATO’s activities in the country as well of circumstances of Muammar Gaddafi and his son Mutassim’s deaths.

The Russia’s UN Human Rights Council’s representative called the report “not balanced enough”. It’s a surprisingly diplomatic interpretation. It’s a well known and documented fact that the multiple crimes were committed as a result of NATO combat operations in Libya. One can recall the August 9 2011 bombings of Zlitan, that led to the death toll of 80, including 30 children. Or the strikes against Tripoli TV center in July 2011. Inexplicably these and many other (the most significant) events of human casualties under the NATO bombs are not even mentioned in the Commission’s report. No matter the report contains a special section devoted to the death of Muammar Gaddafi and his son Mutassim, the lawyers appear to make strange conclusions. The Commission insists no matter it has made many requests, it has received no autopsy report but only pictures of the body, that don’t allow to determine the cause of death. It made possible a conclusion that “the Commission has been unable to confirm the death of Muammar Gaddafi as an unlawful killing.”. [7] The Commission members, prominent lawyers, pretend to be novices in legal matters that have never seen video footages of Gaddafi’s being humiliated, nor the testimony of his murderers. The critically crucial fact that a prisoner was destitute of life happened to be of no legal significance for experienced lawyers.

The UN Security Council’s deliberations on the situation in Libya in March this year and the results of investigation conducted by the UN Commission’s of inquiry on Libya testify that a plan to convert Libya into a “twilight zone” of world political scene is underway. The attempts are undertaken to make it kind of a symbiosis of Iraq and Somalia, a place of uncontrolled “sprawling” of weapons, pumping free oil and training militants for new revolutions. But till the resistance of the Libyan Jamahiriya’s forces is not broken this plan may be frustrated.

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Libye un an après : mémoire courte

Posted by seumasach on March 21, 2012

Manlio Dinucci

Voltairenet

20th March, 2012

Un an après la guerre de Libye, nul ne souhaite tirer un bilan. Les puissances coloniales parlaient de soutenir une révolution démocratique contre un tyran. En réalité, elles ont à nouveau divisé le pays et remis au pouvoir en Cyrénaïque la dynastie des Senussi. La Jamahiriya, mélange hybride d’anarchie proudhonienne et d’autocratie, a laissé la place à un chaos libéral où la torture et le meurtre sont devenus la norme tandis que les compagnies multinationales se goinfrent.

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NATO’S Craven Coverup of Its Libyan Bombing

Posted by seumasach on March 17, 2012

Vijay Prashad

Counterpunch

15th March, 2012

Ten days into the uprising in Benghazi, Libya, the United Nations’ Human Rights Council established the International Commission of Inquiry on Libya. The purpose of the Commission was to “investigate all alleged violations of international human rights law in Libya.” The broad agenda was to establish the facts of the violations and crimes and to take such actions as to hold the identified perpetrators accountable. On June 15, the Commission presented its first report to the Council. This report was provisional, since the conflict was still ongoing and access to the country was minimal. The June report was no more conclusive than the work of the human rights non-governmental organizations (such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch). In some instances, the work of investigators for these NGOs (such as Donatella Rovera of Amnesty) was of higher quality than that of the Commission.

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