Where is gaddafis spokesman
What has happened in Bani Walid in the last few days falls under this Militias, aligned with the Defence Ministry, have shelled the hilltop town of 70, for several days.
Many other militia members are from the rival town of Misrata, which was enraged by the death of rebel fighter Omran Shaban after two months in detention in Bani Walid. Shaban, from Misrata, was the man who found Gaddafi hiding in a drain pipe in Sirte on October 20, Alarmist media narratives have overplayed threats to civic peace, while most citizens simply get on with their lives. Published On 21 Oct But a government spokesman has since denied that Ibrahim is being held in custody.
From: Inside Story. It doesn't seem highly likely that those who dispatched Gaddafi to his grisly end will be very forgiving to someone who, as the dictator's minister of information, was seen as the public face of the regime and who spread Gaddafi's inflammatory messages. But why should I care about the fate of a Gaddafi loyalist and whether he is tortured or not? Because only last Christmas, Moussa was in my home with his German wife and new baby. I cooked them a traditional roast dinner and we played with the baby.
Moussa was very hands-on, changing nappies and rocking the baby to sleep. Perhaps more surprisingly, we toasted the Tunisian uprising over several glasses of good red wine, to which Moussa was always extremely partial. My partner John was Moussa's PhD supervisor at Royal Holloway, University of London and, over the six years that it took for Moussa to complete it, we got to know him quite well.
He was sociable and likable and his wife, a German woman from a Quaker background whom he had met first at an Exeter University Christian meeting, was intriguing. Moussa wrote his own PhD in contrast to the allegations surrounding Gaddafi's LSE-educated son Saif and never offered donations to the university or presents to John.
Indeed, I always formed the impression the couple didn't have much money. When we met up it was usually at our house over a meal, although once they took us to restaurant on London's Edgware Road.
We would talked about the Roman glories of Libya , and about their holidays they were cycling enthusiasts and, more latterly, when Julia and he married and the baby was born, how she could fit in with Libyan society. For several years it was clear Moussa was delaying his return to Libya, but about 18 months ago he was summoned back by his family, apparently to work in their communications industry. When we met up last Christmas — he was back on a visit to the UK — he was talking about trying to set up journalism courses and teach western journalistic concepts in Libya.
From his thesis he seemed to be an idealist, believing in the power of digital technology to free individuals. He certainly saw himself as a moderniser, following the pathway Tony Blair had opened up to end Libya's pariah status. Libyans have failed to overcome deep enmities between those who fought to overthrow Gadhafi and former loyalists of the late leader, whose eccentric and brutal rule focused on pitting tribes against one another.
Al-Mzirig said many remnants of the old regime are still working inside the government and only after they have been removed will the country fulfill the promises of the uprising, which began in February as part of the Arab Spring wave of revolts that swept the Middle East but quickly morphed into a civil war.
This attitude, common among many who fought in the uprising, bodes ill for future efforts to bring rival groups together. A hard-line Islamist militia in Benghazi, Ansar al-Shariah, is widely believed to have been behind the Sept. These groups, especially the armed militias, have often pursued their own agendas, some dating back to longstanding feuds inside a country Gadhafi controlled unchecked for more than four decades.
After Gadhafi was killed, the former rebels negotiated a takeover of the Bani Walid and then looted it, prompting the angry citizens to form their own militia and throw out their new rulers in January. The tensions boiled over when one of the rebels celebrated for being among those who captured Gadhafi, Omran Shaaban, was captured and allegedly tortured by the Bani Walid militia.
He later died in a French hospital and stencils of his name and face can be seen painted on buildings in Tripoli. As the militias gathered for revenge, the government authorized them to retrieve those responsible for the killing, setting the stage for the current siege.
0コメント