The rise and fall of Colonel Muamar Gadaffi

Russia wants Gaddafi out, but no "manhunt"

Russia wants to see Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi ousted, but only through a political transition and not a "manhunt", its ambassador to France said on Wednesday.

Speaking to Reuters before a summit of the Group of Eight powers in the French resort of Deauville, Alexander Orlov said Russia was ready to mediate in the conflict between government and rebels, but that this would require a ceasefire.

Russia abstained from a U.N. Security Council vote on the resolution that authorised military action to protect Libyan civilians, and has strongly criticised the NATO air strikes.

Orlov said the coalition had gone beyond its U.N. mandate.

Full story, Gonga hapa Russia wants Gaddafi out, but no manhunt | Top News | Reuters
 
I would always prefer those who speak out their opinions even if I disagree with them.....than those who just keep silent even if their countries, wealth, women etc, are raped!
The easiest thing to do, even for those who feel are small is to say, please, wanikanyaga! When one fails to do even that, and is a so-called leader....!

I have a big problem with those. So, kudos to Mugabe for standing up. Strange this world! Some of the silent ones were, even the day before yesterday, in Libya, with........ a begging bowl!
 
who told you this lie?find facts before saying anything-how strange gaddaf want a united africa-but a divided nigeria? seems he dont know what he is talking.
 
who told you this lie?find facts before saying anything-how strange gaddaf want a united africa-but a divided nigeria? seems he dont know what he is talking.

Didn't Nyerere want a united Africa?, why then did he support the Devided Nigeria?( have you forgotten about Biafra?).
Nigeria is in Africa, Africa is not in Nigeria, two different things, Ghadafi is talking about the Union Of countries, not provinces. once the provinces separate and become countries, then they are eligible to Join other countries to unite Africa!.
 
i do remember biafra tried to secede-but their movement were supported by different african states and westernes-for gaddaf-its quite different,none of the african leaders has come out to support this
 
i do remember biafra tried to secede-but their movement were supported by different african states and westernes-for gaddaf-its quite different,none of the african leaders has come out to support this
What is the significance of being supported by several african countries if the supporters are corrupt leaders and not acting at their own.By the way which other countries supported Biafra besides Tanzania under Nyerere?..
 
What is the significance of being supported by several african countries if the supporters are corrupt leaders and not acting at their own.By the way which other countries supported Biafra besides Tanzania under Nyerere?..
always majority rules-
other nations supported biafra secessio were gabon,zambia,south africa,ivory coast-just to mention few
 
G8 summit: Arab uprisings dominate Deauville agenda

World leaders are in the French resort of Deauville for a summit of the G8 bloc of wealthy nations. The leaders are discussing how to end the seemingly deadlocked Libya conflict, and their response to the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia. Correspondents say recent events such as uprisings in the Arab world and Japan's nuclear crisis have given the G8 a new sense of purpose. Also on the agenda is how little or how much the internet should be regulated.

Internet bosses - including Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and Google boss Eric Schmidt - are attending the two-day summit in Normandy. The global economy and climate change will also be discussed at the gathering for the leaders of the US, Russia, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada.

As the summit opened, the French and Russian leaders met to agree the sale of four French-built Mistral helicopter carriers to Russia at a cost of at least 400m euros each (£350m; $565m). The elements of the deal had been agreed and "the signature will take place within a fortnight", French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. The deal - Russia's biggest foreign arms purchase since the fall of the Soviet Union - has caused consternation among some of Russia's neighbours and some of France's Nato allies.

Nuclear debate

Thousands of police have been deployed as part of a huge security operation and checkpoints have been erected on all roads leading to Deauville. In drizzling rain, President Sarkozy welcomed his guests to the coastal casino resort as they were heralded by trumpets. His wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, is hosting the leaders' spouses and greeted them in a white dress that showed off her pregnancy.

US President Barack Obama, who headed to the meeting after a state visit to the UK, is holding a series of one-on-one meetings with leaders including President Sarkozy and Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan. He has already met Russian President Dmitry Medvedev for discussions over the two countries' long-running row over US plans to create a missile defence shield in central and eastern Europe.

President Obama told reporters that the two men were committed to finding an approach that met the security needs of both countries, while Mr Medvedev said the two could work together towards a resolution, but it was unlikely to come in the near future. Debate is expected at the summit on ways of improving global nuclear safety after the breakdown of Japan's Fukushima power plant following March's earthquake and tsunami.

G8 also offers the leaders their first real opportunity to debate the so-called Arab Spring uprisings. Interim prime ministers from Tunisia and Egypt - where longtime leaders were overthrown this year - and the head of the Arab League will also be at Deauville for talks on a massive aid plan to help their transition to democracy. Representatives from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund are due to spell out for G8 leaders what it would take to stabilise the Tunisian and Egyptian economies. But the ongoing global financial crisis will determine what concrete help can be offered and correspondents say large pledges are unlikely.

Points of friction

BBC diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall, in Deauville, says that despite President Obama's appeal in London on Wednesday for democratic unity and leadership, there may well be friction at the summit. She adds that Russia's president - one of the first to arrive - has opposed air strikes on Libya from the start, though he may offer to mediate in that conflict.

Africa will also be represented at the summit, as it has been since 2003. Newly elected leaders from Ivory Coast, Niger and Guinea are expected to participate in sessions about promoting democracy.

A shift in global influence to emerging powers such as India and China, who are not in the G8, has led to the bloc's relevance being questioned. But speaking in London on Wednesday, President Obama rejected arguments that the rise of superpowers like China and India spelled the demise of American and European influence in the world. After the summit ends on Friday afternoon, President Obama is scheduled to travel to Poland, the last stop on a four-country, six-day tour of Europe that began on Monday in Ireland.

BBC News - G8 summit: Arab uprisings dominate Deauville agenda
 
PSYOPS (pyschological operations).
Pictures of flyers that NATO has been dropping on Tripoli, asking soldiers to defect Libya




Top: Gaddafi's orders to attack civilians is illegal and as a result he has been charged with by the international criminal court for crimes against humanity.

Bottom: Professional soldiers do not attack civilians. Any orders deemed illegal or criminal is a direct violation of international law. Avoid bringing shame to yourselves and family.
 
always majority rules-
other nations supported biafra secessio were gabon,zambia,south africa,ivory coast-just to mention few

You talk about the majority, but you mention the minority, what a circus!, in all about 50 african countries you have have seen only 5, what about the others?. by the way South-Africa which you have mentioned, was an apartheid regime atthe time, discriminating against our brothers in there, so it is ironic how it would sympathize with the biafrans.

It doesn't matter how many countries supported the seccession, the precedent is that they wanted a devided Nigeria!, and they did that in good faith, but this doesn't mean they didn't support a united Africa!. the same applies to Gadafi at the moment!.

International relation is not an all or nothing phenomen, reality should be considered!
 
African leaders have geared up to demand an outright end to NATO air strikes on Libya, accusing the West of sidelining African nations in efforts to end a conflict on their home turf.

"Some international players seem to be denying Africa any significant role in the seach for a solution to the Libyan conflict," said African Union Commission chief Jean Ping at a summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

"Africa is not going to be reduced to the status of an observer of its own calamities."

He added that the AU would call for an end to NATO operations in Libya and demand that its roadmap be used as a basis for a resolution to the conflict.

Libya Live Blog | Al Jazeera Blogs
 
MI6: Gaddafi ameanza kuweweseka (anapata mchecheto)
Gaddafi is paranoid and on the run, MI6 tells David Cameron

Libyan leader said to be hiding in hospitals by night, and many senior commanders appear to have stopped using phones


Rebel fighters training near Giminis, 30km (19 miles) south of Benghazi. Photograph: Mohammed Salem/Reuters

David Cameron has been told by UK intelligence that Muammar Gaddafi is increasingly paranoid, on the run, and hiding in hospitals by night with senior commanders in the regime unable to communicate with one another.

The reports from MI6 relayed to the cabinet's national security council this week prompted Cameron to authorise a high-risk escalation of attacks by agreeing in principle to deploy four Apache helicopters into Libya with orders to gun down Libyan regime leaders and assets hiding in built-up areas.

The French had leaked that Britain was likely to deploy helicopters, but the Whitehall ministerial decision was only made today.

-The Guardian

My take: African leaders will reap what they are sowing. As they have let the West sideline them on Libya, they are in fact now in for a difficult time ahead. The precedent being set in Libya means in the future, African leaders have to increasingly be dancing to the tunes composed in the corridors of either London, Paris or Washington. The failure of which will mean being bombarded into coercion while the AU stands paralysed and unable to raise a voice.

The same happened during the era of "Gunboat diplomacy" in the turn of the 19th Century, where Great Britain used her naval power to negotiate conditions favorable to the British. Gunboat diplomacy played a crucial role in paving the way for the establishment of British colonial administration throughout the West African region. The victims of this "diplomacy" included, among others, King Jaja of Opobo.

History repeats itself!
 


AU urges diplomatic solution in Libya

Thu May 26, 2011 6:33AM




Head of the AU Commission Jean Ping

The African Union (AU) has called for a diplomatic solution to the crisis in Libya amid the increasing Western alliance pressure on the Libyan regime to relinquish power.


"I am convinced that only a political solution can lead to a lasting peace and satisfy the legitimate aspirations of the Libyan people," AFP quoted Jean Ping, the head of AU Commission, as saying on Wednesday.

Ping added that the "lack of coordination of international efforts" and the situation in Libya have made it difficult to find a solution.

The African body has voiced opposition to the military campaign in crisis-hit Libya
.

Last month, the AU proposed a ceasefire plan about the crisis in Libya, which included talks to organize elections during a transition period. The initiative was greeted positively by the Libyan regime.

However, the revolutionaries rejected the ceasefire, saying they would continue fighting to see Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi out of power.

The office of South African President Jacob Zuma announced on Wednesday that he will hold talks with beleaguered Gaddafi on May 30.

Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama said on the same day that the West would not ease pressure on the Gaddafi regime.

"I absolutely agree that given the progress that has been made over the last several weeks that Gaddafi and his regime need to understand that there will not be a let-up in the pressure that we are applying," Obama said.

The US president noted that the process in Libya will be slow but will finally force Gaddafi to quit power.

Source😛ressTV

"Hawa(AU) wananipa mashaka makubwa kuamini wanachokisema " MpigaKelele
 
Heavy fighting rages on in Misratah
Fri May 27, 2011 1:0AM






A fresh round of heavy fighting has broken out between revolutionary forces and troops loyal to Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi in the western port city of Misratah.


Gaddafi forces bombarded the outskirts of the besieged city with mortar rounds, marking the heaviest bombardment for days in Libya's third largest city, Reuters reported on Thursday.

The sound of exploding mortar shells could be heard every few minutes in Misratah, while a steady stream of ambulances were transporting the dead and injured throughout the city.

A spokesman for the revolutionary forces in Misratah said the mortar attack killed three opposition forces in the city, which has been the scene of some of the fiercest fighting in Libya's three-month-old unrest.

Anti-Gaddafi forces are now in control of Cyrenaica, Libya's fertile eastern coastal region as well as Misratah in the west.

The latest spate of violence comes as Western leaders, gathering for a Group of Eight summit in the French seaside resort of Deauville, reiterated their determination to force Gaddafi out.

Meanwhile, Russia said it had been contacted by Libyan Prime Minister Al Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi seeking to negotiate a deal to find a way out of the growing political impasse in the country
.

Earlier on Thursday, al-Mahmoudi said in a letter to foreign governments that the regime of longtime ruler Gaddafi was ready to enter into unconditional talks with opposition groups and was prepared for an immediate UN-monitored ceasefire.

"We must stop the fighting, start talking, agree on a new constitution and create a system of government that both reflects the reality of our society and conforms to the demands of contemporary governance," the Libyan prime minister said.

The Spanish government also says it has received a proposal from al-Mahmoudi seeking a ceasefire with NATO countries.



 
Russia urged to mediate in Libya crisis
Fri May 27, 2011 6:28AM





Russian President Dmitry Medvedev arrives for an evening dinner function at the G8 summit in Deauville, France on May 26, 2011.
Russia says the Western members of the Group of Eight (G8) have demanded that Moscow assume a mediation role to put an end to the war in Libya.


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's "partners in all bilateral meetings called on Russia to assume a mediation mission in Libya," Reuters quoted the Russian president's spokeswoman, Natalia Timakova, as saying on Thursday.

The spokesperson did not say how or whether Russia has reacted to the proposal.

Medvedev held bilateral meetings with French, US and British leaders during the G8's annual summit which will end on Friday.

Russia has been critical of NATO's operations in Libya, saying airstrikes go beyond the UN resolution which mandated a no-fly zone over the North African country.

Libyan Prime Minister Al Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi said on Thursday that Tripoli was ready for an immediate UN-monitored ceasefire. The Libyan regime had previously announced readiness for a ceasefire but has continued fighting against revolutionary forces.

In a telephone conversation on Friday, Mahmoudi asked Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to arrange an immediate ceasefire in Libya.

The mediation requests from Russia come as the British government has approved the deployment of Apache helicopters to Libya. On Monday, France said it would send attack helicopters to the North African country.

Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama has said there will not be "a let-up in the pressure" against the Libyan regime until Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi quits power.
 
US supplies bombs to allies for Libya war😛entagon

The US military is supplying bombs and spare parts to allies carrying out strikes in the NATO-led air campaign against Libya's regime, the Pentagon said Wednesday.

"We have provided material support, including munitions, to Allies and partners engaged in operations in Libya" since April 1, spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said in an email.

The statement marked the first time the Pentagon had publicly confirmed it was providing ammunition to NATO allies, amid reports some countries were running out of supplies of precision-guided bombs or parts.

Since NATO took the lead in the air campaign on April 1, the United States has provided allies and partners with about $24.3 million worth of "repair parts, ammunition, and technical support," Lapan said.

US supplies bombs to allies for Libya war😛entagon - Yahoo! News

Hivi hawa jamaa walisema wanakwenda Libya kufanya nini?
Hakuna anaezungumzia no-fly zone...sasa ni "Gaddafi must go" tu na "Gaddafi must relinquish power"

AU itakumbana na hali ipi baada ya Gaddafi kuondoshwa?
 
BRITISH AND FRENCH ATTACK HELICOPTERS TO BE DEPLOYED OVER LIBYA IN NEXT 24 HOURS
Source-skynews
 
THE African Union (AU) member states have called for a peaceful resolution to the crisis in Libya.

This was one of the resolutions adopted by over 35 heads of state and governments of member countries of the AU after day-long discussions yesterday in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

President Yoweri Museveni attended the conference.

Museveni had earlier attended the meeting of the AU high level ad-hoc committee on Libya that was formed by five African nations which include Congo Brazzaville, Mali, Mauritania, South Africa and Uganda.

Closing the Extraordinary Summit of the African Union on peace and security issues in Africa, the Chairman of the AU, President Obiang Nguema Mbagoso of Equatorial Guinea, noted that the concerns of the continent’s body was absolute, chiefly to defend the people involved in the crisis in Libya as well as to defend the integrity of the African continent.

He added that the declarations will further strengthen the Unity of Africa as the majority of delegations at the Summit reaffirmed their commitment to the road map prepared by the African Union with to the Libyan crisis.

Libya has been mired in a bloody conflict pitting Kadhafi's forces against opposition rebels since the eruption of massive anti-government protests since February this year
 
Zipo hizi comments
14.Rebecca Rosenthal
26th May 2011 - 7:00
Western media and justice choose their victims well. High profile but inconvenient figures are demonised out of proportion.
I'm not even suggesting that Gadaffi, DSK, and a host of others are clinically clean, merely that the' in' set who serve the 'hard right' and their media, have had far greater crimes conveniently buried.

19.matt-stone
26th May 2011 - 8:06
Another project Gaddafi had in place was to irrigate their desert areas and re-vegetate them with trees and plants. Apparently the desalination projects have now been suspended. Will Britain and American do all these after Gaddafi has gone?? We shall see.

wamezitoa kutoka ripoti hii..
Some of the biggest and best-known financial institutions in the world held billions of dollars of Libyan state funds, a leaked report has revealed.

Principal among them were HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Nomura and Societe General, Global Witness said.

Established in 2006, the LIA holds about $70bn of assets and is the 13th largest sovereign wealth fund in the world, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute.
BBC News - Libyan assets held by leading global banks
 
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