The rise and fall of Colonel Muamar Gadaffi

The rise and fall of Colonel Muamar Gadaffi

Some updates

23:00 Telegraph correspondent Rob Crilly writes that the commander is in contact with the coalition to coordinate air strikes in Libya.

22:50 @LibyanDictator tweets: Reports of a peaceful protest Tripoli met with live bullets, 3 martyred and clashes continue.

22:40 AFP Eyewitnesses quoted by Agence France Presse say that a naval base near Tripoli has been hit by coalition forces.

22:36 Reuters New explosions and anti-aircraft weapon fire were heard above Tripoli late on Monday night, according to eyewitnesses

22:07 BBC In Tobruk, the BBC’s Ben Brown says people on the streets want their fighters to push west, recapture lost territory and eventually gain control of Tripoli.

22:05 Sky News‘ Lisa Holland reports from Tripoli that rumours are doing the rounds that Muammar Gaddafi’s compound has been hit again after parts of it was reduced to rubble last night.
 
Video of Gaddafi tanks burnt, oil depot on fire after Libya military strike

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Gaddaffi kujitambulisha kama mwarabu na pia kuwa mwafrika ni sawa na wewe kujitambulisha kama mzungu na mwafrika wakati wewe ni mwafrika halisi. Angalia avatar yangu; ina sura ya kiafrika au kiarabu? Mmakonde ni mnakonde. Hawezi kuwa mmakonde na mpare hapo hapo. Libya ni member wa AU lakini haiondolei libya kuwa nchi ya kiarabu. All countries in north africa are Arab countries. And that is why they are members of Arab league. Kwa vile Libya ni member wa AU then unafikiri ni nchi ya kiafrika? Mbona Morroco sio member lakini iko Afrika?

Everyone know that Gaddafi has always presented himself as an Arab nationalist. However, his attempts to forge unity with other Arab states were met with little success. So, in the 1990s he turned to Africa and proposed a "United States of Africa". The concept later formed the basis of the African Union. Baada ya kupigwa bao na waarabu wenzake ndio kawa mwafrika?

Kama una-analyse kimabara, then it is simple to say that Libya belong to Africa. Lakini kama uta-analyse genealogically, people in north africa including Gaddafi himself are not Africans. Ever since Gaddafi was rejected his fellow Arabs to rule the Arab world, he started consider himself as black. But look at the photo below; is he a true African and or Arab descendant? We also know that the Arabs in north Africa do not consider themselves African because they know full well their ancestors were invaders of the continent, and not indigenous to it. And we know they did not invade Africa from their barren lands to start erecting pyramids. That was the work of the Africans they displaced.

Arabs in Africa have grown accustomed to the popular use of the term "African" meaning "Black". But they are not Black, and they identify more with Arabic culture and Islam as this was imposed on them. If not for Islam, they would probably identify with the West than Africa as they were once a part of the Roman Empire and were Christian for some time. That is why Morocco requested to be a member of the European Union, because they consider themselves associated with the West.

Look at the photo. Does Gaddafi looks African?

_44970009_libya466afp.jpg


So Gaddafi saying is an African ni geresha tuu. Anatuingiza mkenge tuu hapa kwa kuchukua mercenaries weusi kwenda kuwaua waarabu wenzake.

mkuu.
ninachokiona ninapotazama picha na makala yako naona ubaguzi tu!
Unataka kuniambia kwako uafrika ni rangi nyeusi ya ngozi ya mtu tu?
halafu unasema True african...kwa hiyo mkuu wale wasudani ya kusini ndio true,true african? na wengi wa sisi hapa Tanzania ambao sio weusi kama Marehemu yule makamo wa rais wakati wa Mkapa sio true africans?

waethiopia jee ni true africans, wao naona sio kama watu wa sudani ya kusini wala sio kama watanzania walio wengi....si waarabu wala si wazungu...je wao ni true africans?

Tunawiata wapemba waarabu...are you serious? Yaani Ismail jussa si true african?
lakini wewe ni true african?
 
An undated satellite image provided by GeoEye shows Moammar Gadhafi's compound in Tripoli, Libya.

pict102.jpg
 
Farrakhan achukizwa na Obama, amuonya!

Farrakhan Issues Stern Warning to Obama About Attacking Libya

farrakhan.jpg


By Boyce Watkins, PhD on Mar 21st 2011 2:42PM


In his usually powerful way, the Minister Louis Farrakhan has taken to the public airwaves to address the U.S. government's decision to attack Libya. The United States has joined with allied forces to (in their words) protect the Libyan people from the alleged tyranny of their leader, Muammar Gadhafi.

Since it has been alleged that Gadhafi used his military forces to attack his own people, the U.S. government has spoken against Libyan leadership and has also begun air strikes on Libyan soil. Gadhafi has warned the United States that a war against his country will be long and that he will emerge victorious.

Minister Louis Farrakhan, who has a long-standing friendship with Gadhafi, went to WVON in Chicago to speak on the situation. As expected, Farrakhan is not happy with the invasion and openly spoke about U.S. policies that involve deliberate destabilization of nations with whom they have a financial interest.

In the case of Libya, Farrakhan openly asks President Barack Obama why he and his administration are suddenly concerned with alleged atrocities in this country while the U.S. government looked the other way a few years ago, when the Israelis were engaged in relentless bombing of Palestinians, many of them women and children.

Farrakhan also noted that the U.S. government showed no interest in becoming involved when numerous human rights violations were occurring in Rwanda and the Congo. He argued that the U.S. government's goal has been to spend funds arming dissidents in Libya who do not want to see Gadhafi in power.

In an even more telling fashion, Farrakhan noted similarities between Gadhafi and President Obama: He mentioned that similar to Gadhafi, there are millions of Americans who don't want to see Obama in power, and that intervening with internal dissent in Libya would be no different from someone doing the same here in the United States.

Farrakhan asks the president, "Who in the hell do you think you are that you can talk to a man that built a country over 42 years and ask him to step down and get out? Can anybody ask you ... to step out of the White House 'cause they don't want no black face in the White House?"

Farrakhan notes that dissatisfaction with Obama and the U.S. government has reached a boiling point and that the president should be careful about intervening in another nation's internal discord. The Council for Afrika International, a UK-based think tank, also takes issue with the United States' decision to circumvent the African Union in its decision to create a no-fly zone around an African country.

As arguably the most persuasive speaker in the United States, Minister Louis Farrakhan lays out a very clear and poignant case for his objections with the U.S. military action in Libya. The United States government is already facing massive budget deficits and two expensive wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, so one can only wonder how we expect to afford yet another intervention in the Middle East.

Farrakhan's points about selective morality of the government are also quite interesting. The United States stands idly by during countless revolts in countries around the world and usually doesn't have much to say when a government responds with violence toward its citizens, but for some reason, the case is different in Libya, and it appears to be more than coincidental that the nation just happens to be sitting on a great deal of oil.

Rev. Al Sharpton and I have spoken extensively about the Libyan issue. It appears that this intervention is something of significant interest to the African-American community, particularly black Muslims. President Obama is not only the first black president in U.S. history, he also has the strongest ties to the Muslim community of any president our nation has ever had.

Obama is indirectly linked to Louis Farrakhan given their mutual relationship with Jeremiah Wright (Obama's former pastor) and his roots in the South Side of Chicago. So Farrakhan's message has a special degree of power and value, at least to black Obama observers.

Farrakhan also makes a strong point regarding the nature by which the United States government justifies its invasions of other countries. He mentions that in order to get American support for preconceived decisions, the government engages in a concerted effort to make the other nation's leader look like (in his words) "the boogeyman." To Farrakhan's point, public perception of Gadhafi seemed to change overnight, as celebrities who were fine with performing for the Libyan leader just three months ago were suddenly expected to give the money back.

Rev. Sharpton's position appears to be one that is based on fact-finding and determining whether there is merit to the populist uprisings occurring all through the Middle East. Given that there appears to be a newfound hunger for democracy in the region, Sharpton doesn't rule out the possibility that the rebellion taking place among the Libyan people has roots in genuine dissent that has not been impacted by outside forces.

While I see merit to Sharpton's point, I am personally concerned with the fact that the U.S. government has a history of sticking its nose where it doesn't belong. For example, the Iran-Contra affair in the 1980s led to rebel groups being allowed to sell drugs and weapons in black communities to raise money for a U.S.-sponsored rebellion that was being illegally funded by drug proceeds. This created the crack-cocaine epidemic, urban decay, out-of-control violence and mass incarceration within black communities for the next 30 years.

There's something fishy going on in Libya, and I suspect that if the country didn't have any oil, we wouldn't even be talking about it in the news. We must also wonder if it makes sense to give President Obama the Nobel Peace Prize, when we are making questionable declarations of war on smaller nations. Farrakhan has a point in his argument, and perhaps black America should listen. But I have a feeling that this situation goes much deeper than Barack Obama.

Source: Black Voices

Swali langu: Farrakhan hapa ana pointi au ndio yale yale "makelele" yake?
 
Duh kweli UN wameamua.

00:10 The Guardian The UN Security Council has rejected a Libyan request for an emergency meeting to halt what Muammar Gaddafi's regime called "military aggression", saying it would wait for a briefing on Thursday from the secretary-general.

The Associated Press news agency reports:

Council members held closed-door discussions in response to a letter dated Saturday from Libyan Foreign Minister Musa Kousa who claimed that "an external conspiracy was targeting … (Libya) and its unity and territorial integrity."
According to the letter, obtained by The Associated Press, Kousa accused France and the US of bombing "several civilian sites" in violation of the UN Charter and called for "an emergency meeting in order to halt this aggression."

The Security Council late Thursday adopted a resolution authorizing military action to protect civilians from attacks by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's forces and imposed a no-fly zone over the country. On Saturday, US, French and British forces launched airstrikes against Libyan air defenses, tanks, armored personnel carriers and other military hardware.

India's UN Ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri said the resolution requires Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to report to the Security "within seven days" on the implementation of its provisions, which also include a more robust arms embargo and additional Libyan individuals, companies, banks and other entities subject to travel bans and asset freezes.

"That seven days is on Thursday, so people didn't want to get into a discussion on who represents whom and what the letter is," Puri said. "They want to have a discussion on substance which will be on Thursday."
23:12 BBC A spokesman for the revolutionaries in Misrata told the BBC that in addition to the 40 casualties, over 200 people were wounded in today's attack by Gaddafi's forces. "The situation is a catastrophe," he said, "the people went out on to the street to demonstrate and the military started shooting at them with heavy weapons. They even shot three ambulances – two of the drivers were killed."
 
00:56 BBC An eyewitness from the city of Sirte said that the air strikes on the city airport tonight didn't hit any civilians

00:54 BBC The British parliament has voted overwhelmingly in favour of the military action in Libya – 557 MPs voted in favour and 13 against

00:43 AFP, which reported the news that the UN Security Council will meet on Thursday, has issued a correction stating that this is in fact a scheduled meeting, and not at the request of Libya as earlier reported. Apologies for any confusion.

00:30 BBC More from Zintan, where witnesses have reported heavy shelling earlier on Monday. One man told Reuters: "Several houses have been destroyed and a mosque minaret was also brought down. New forces were sent today to besiege the city. The man said there were at least 40 tanks in place in the foothills of the mountains near Zintan.
 
OHHH sijaona hiyo habari ... ninachoona hapa breaking news tripoli is under attack for the third time.....haswa haswa kwenye makazi ya Gadaffi .... seems like ceasefire hamna ... ohh US na Uk wamesema hawatambui na kuamini maneno ya Gadaffi
 
Hapana, hakupigwa ni zile Tomahawk (yaani vishoka - katika lugha nyingi za wahindi wekundu) zilizoangushwa na majeshi ya kimarekani. Huyu kauwawa na mmoja wa mapailot wake mwenyewe ambaye hakutaka kutekeleza amri ya kwenda kuangusha mabomu kule Benghazi; akaamua kwa makusudi kuangusha ndege yake ya kivita mbele ya huyu kijana na kumjeruhi vibaya sana. Baadaye amefariki.
 
Duuuu sasa kunaelekea kuwa vibaya sana...Gaddafi hawezi kukubali kabisa.......
 
Alafu Mugabe atakuwa anakula bangi huyu mzee bure kabisa aisee....sasa yeye anaingilia haya mambo anaona wazungu wameshindwa kuingia pale na kumtoa???hahaha asubirie tu zamu yake asione wazungu wapo kimya akajua ameshinda.....
 
01:59 BBC Panorama As the world unites against Colonel Gaddafi, Panorama reveals the real story behind the country's revolution. Using remarkable new footage, it tells how a group of young professionals bravely stood up to 42 years of dictatorship. Reporter Paul Kenyon travels across the front line to uncover how the Libyan military fired on unarmed protestors and tracks down the man accused of ordering the shooting – Colonel Gaddafi's son, Saadi


 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hawezi kukubali nini? Mtoto wale ameuliwa na mmoja wa mapilot walioko kwenye brigade yake.

Thanks mkuu hapo nimekuelewa vizuri sasa....duuu sio mchezo naona atainua tu mikono mwenyewe maana hawezi kuhimili haya mapigo....
 
Is Muammar Gaddafi a target? PM and military split over war aims

David Cameron says Libyan leader may be a legitimate target while Chief of the Defence Staff said he was 'absolutely not'
Muammar-Gaddafi-s-troops-007.jpg


Muammar Gaddafi's troops are beaten back from Ajdabiya by coalition air strikes. While rebels fight on the ground. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
A breach within Britain's political and military leadership has opened up as David Cameron argued the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, may be a legitimate target while the Chief of the Defence Staff, Sir David Richards, said he was "absolutely not".
The clash fed a growing concern on the third day of the air assault against Gaddafi that the hastily assembled international alliance is struggling to paper over disagreements about its ultimate war aims in Libya, the future role of Nato and the legitimacy of the rebel groups.
There was also cabinet anxiety that the scale of the initial heavy bombardment may strengthen popular support for Gaddafi in Tripoli and be seen in the Middle East as exceeding the UN security council goal of protecting civilians.
Gaddafi's compound was hit by British missiles on Sunday night in an attempt to weaken his command structure as fighting continued across the coastal towns of Libya.

Tripoli faced a third night of bombing with no sign yet that the allies would call an early halt to attacks on the basis that the no-fly zone had been established.
Senior cabinet ministers admitted that "the emotional optics" of cruise missiles raining down on Libya, backed by coalition military briefings, had unwelcome echoes of Iraq.

Downing Street is urgently trying to help organise the rebel forces so they become a more coherent and visible political and military force.
During a long Commons debate, Cameron eventually won cross-party support from sceptical MPs for his actions, but there was widespread disquiet in the Commons about mission creep, and whether the intervention would end in an unstable partition of Libya.
The rift between Cameron and his defence chief arose after the defence secretary, Liam Fox, said on Sunday that an attack on Gaddafi could be a possibility if it did not lead to civilian casualties. When asked whether Gaddafi was a legitimate target, Sir David replied: "Absolutely not. It is not allowed under the UN resolution and it is not something I want to discuss any further."

Cameron told MPs: "The UN resolution is limited in its scope and explicitly does not provide legal authority for action to bring about Gaddafi's removal by military means. We will help fulfil the security council aims, and leave it to the Libyan people to determine their government and their destiny, but our view is clear that there is no decent future for Libya with Colonel Gaddafi remaining in power."
Later Cameron's spokesman argued it was lawful to target Gaddafi if he was seen as organising the threat to Libyan civilians, pointing out the security council's objective is the protection of civilians.

A summary of the legal advice given to the cabinet by the attorney general, Dominic Grieve, was published. It implies attacks on Gaddafi are lawful if he poses a threat.
The head of the US Africa Command, Gen Carter F Ham, said attacking Gaddafi was not part of his mission.
A French spokesman said that even if the Libyan leader's exact location were known, he would not be targeted. However, the French foreign minister, Alain Juppe, said he hoped the allied attacks would topple Gaddafi. "It is very probable that faced with the increased fragility of the regime, it falls apart from within. In any case that is what we are hoping for."

Barack Obama, on tour in South America, echoed the dispute in London, saying there was no contradiction between the Pentagon saying removal of Gaddafi was not a goal and the White House saying it was. The aim of the military was restricted to fulfilling the mandate of the UN, which was to protect the civilian population, but the White House and the state department was working for his removal.
"I have also stated that it is US policy that Gaddafi has to go and we have a wide range of tools to support that policy," Obama said, making it clear he had in mind diplomatic pressure.

Obama said the core principle was when a leader loses legitimacy and turns his army on civilians, the international community cannot respond with "empty words".
Republicans, while backing intervention to prevent a massacre in Benghazi, objected to Obama going to war without proper consultation with Congress and without a clear mission. Although Obama said he had expected to transfer command from the US to Europe within days, that is being held up by a Nato dispute involving Turkey, which objects to the scale of the attack on Libya.
Ham insisted he was not worried about mission creep. Most of the action to destroy Gaddafi's air defence systems and push back his forces from Benghazi had taken place in the first 24 hours and he did not anticipate further action on that scale.

Ham said he also saw coalition partners taking a bigger share in the days ahead. There had been 60 sorties on Sunday in which coalition planes took part in about half, 70 on Monday, and again about half were non-American. New members were joining the coalition, with Canadians and Belgian forces being added and an expectation of more to follow.
A total of 12 Tomahawk missiles had been fired in the last 24 hours, he said, aimed at a Scud missile base, a regional command centre and a repeat attack on an air defence system. US, British, French, Italian and Spanish planes were over Benghazi and he expected the no-fly zone soon to extend along the length of the coastline.

Ham insisted the mission was not to provide air cover for the rebels, only to protect civilians.
But Mark Toner, the state department spokesman, suggested that regime change was an aim after Gaddafi's failure to honour the ceasefire he declared at the end of last week. "What we are trying to do is convince Gaddafi and his regime to step down from power … that remains our ultimate goal."
 
Thanks mkuu hapo nimekuelewa vizuri sasa....duuu sio mchezo naona atainua tu mikono mwenyewe maana hawezi kuhimili haya mapigo....
Hii habari niliipost juzi kutoka kwenye feed ya Al Manara, waliweka hadi picha ya pilot wa ndege aliyejitoa muhanga.....ngoja niitafute tena.
Mwisho wa madikteta wengi inakuwaga kifo kwao na watoto wao, inasikitisha lakini ndio hivyo wanasema ukiishi kwa upanga utakufa kwa upanga.
 
Back
Top Bottom