The rise and fall of Colonel Muamar Gadaffi

The rise and fall of Colonel Muamar Gadaffi

Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's forces broke through rebel defenses at the city of Zawiya Saturday, witnesses said after a battle in which dozens of people were killed.
The attack on the city, about 30 miles west of Tripoli, saw an improvised force of rebels armed with hunting rifles and swords take on troops from the elite Khamis Brigade — named after the son of Gadhafi who commands it.
The witnesses said that forces loyal to the regime had overcome rebel positions with tanks, heavy mortar shelling, machinegun fire.
The rattle of gunfire and explosions could be heard as they spoke to The Associated Press by phone. They did so on condition of anonymity because of fears for their safety.
They added that several fires were raging in Zawiya Saturday.

"Now with all the artillery, tanks and armored vehicles, we're seeing battles and killings we haven't seen in Iraq. I consider it total genocide," said one witness who spoke to Al-Arabiya television.
"The battles have now entered the city. More than 15 armored vehicles entered two hours ago along with a tank. There is heavy firing in all the areas and mosques have announced 'jihad' against these brigades," the man told Al-Arabiya.
 
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's forces broke through rebel defenses at the city of Zawiya Saturday, witnesses said after a battle in which dozens of people were killed.
The attack on the city, about 30 miles west of Tripoli, saw an improvised force of rebels armed with hunting rifles and swords take on troops from the elite Khamis Brigade - named after the son of Gadhafi who commands it.
The witnesses said that forces loyal to the regime had overcome rebel positions with tanks, heavy mortar shelling, machinegun fire.
The rattle of gunfire and explosions could be heard as they spoke to The Associated Press by phone. They did so on condition of anonymity because of fears for their safety.
They added that several fires were raging in Zawiya Saturday.

"Now with all the artillery, tanks and armored vehicles, we're seeing battles and killings we haven't seen in Iraq. I consider it total genocide," said one witness who spoke to Al-Arabiya television.
"The battles have now entered the city. More than 15 armored vehicles entered two hours ago along with a tank. There is heavy firing in all the areas and mosques have announced 'jihad' against these brigades," the man told Al-Arabiya.
Skynews-"British forces on standby"
 
Mungu alipoweka ukomo wa mwanadamu kuishi hakukosea, gadafi atang`oka tu, iwe leo au miaka elfu ijayo,atawaua sana lakini mwishoni na yeye njia ni hiyo hiyo.
 
Wamarekani wanajiandaa kwenda kumung'oa Gadhafi kijeshi. Subirini mtaona.
 
Commander Warns US against Military Intervention in Libya
TEHRAN (FNA)- Chief of Staff of Iran's Armed Forces Major General Hassan Firouzabadi warned the US officials of the fatal consequences and aftermaths of Washington's military intervention in Libya.

A1021878.jpg

"Any kind of US measure and interference in Libya will not only stabilize Islamic Revolutions in the region and further clarify their path and direction, but also cause a severe blow to the US economy and increase their (Americans') debts and budget deficit," Firouzabadi cautioned in his remarks on Saturday.

He dismissed the Washington and Pentagon officials' explicit hints about an imminent US military intervention in Libya, and said, "The Libyan people have risen and shown that they can liberate their country and they are much different from the Iraqi and the Afghan people."

The top military official noted that the capitalist system is seeking to develop its strategies in the wealthy and Muslim states which possess abundant oil wells and resources, and mentioned, "The reality is that the US wants to stage a military intervention to find control over Libya's oil wells as it did in Iraq with the Iraqi oil."

The US has said it is closely monitoring the situation in Libya and is in constant touch with its allies like NATO on possible actions against the Gaddafi regime, as it dispatched two military aircrafts to the region.

The Pentagon, which has dispatched considerable air and naval assets to the region along with 400 marines, said it is closely monitoring the situation in Libya.

He said the Pentagon is in constant contact with its other allies, including NATO and Europe.

"We are still with options on the table. The overall operation is called Operation Odyssey Dawn," Lapan said.

Source:
 
There's a natural mystic blowing through the air;
If you listen carefully now you will hear.
This could be the first trumpet, might as well be the last:
Many more will have to suffer,
Many more will have to die - don't ask me why.


Things are not the way they used to be,
I won't tell no lie;
One and all have to face reality now.
'Though I've tried to find the answer to all the questions they ask.
'Though I know it's impossible to go livin' through the past -
Don't tell no lie.

There's a natural mystic blowing through the air -
Can't keep them down -
If you listen carefully now you will hear.

There's a natural mystic blowing through the air.

This could be the first trumpet, might as well be the last:
Many more will have to suffer,
Many more will have to die - don't ask me why.

There's a natural mystic blowing through the air -
I won't tell no lie;
If you listen carefully now you will hear:
There's a natural mystic blowing through the air.
Such a natural mystic blowing through the air;
There's a natural mystic blowing through the air;
Such a natural mystic blowing through the air;
Such a natural mystic blowing through the air;
Such a natural mystic blowing through the air.


 
Watz mpaka saa hizi hakuna mshikamano wala umoja wenzetu wameuawa arusha siye kimya, mbalali siye kimya , gongolamboto siye kimya je libya?

Umepotoka Mkuu kwa hili kwani kuna watu wengi tu wametoa salamu zao za pole kwa wafiwa na waliopata na matatizo kutokana la madhila yaliyowakuta na kuwaombea heri wale wote waliofariki na bado pole na misaada ya hali na mali inaendelea kutolewa......

wewe ulitaka sisi tufanyeje?!........Tunywe sumu ili tufe wote...........come on guy!!!! usipimeeeeeeeee
 
GADDAF is going to win,the MUTINY is no longer
Witnesses: Anti-Gadhafi fighters hold ground in Zawiya
tzvids.libya.benghazi.protester.jpg
By the CNN Wire Staff
March 5, 2011 -- Updated 2153 GMT (0553 HKT)

Tripoli, Libya (CNN) -- Foes of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi claimed successes Saturday on two key battle fronts, preventing pro-government forces from taking Zawiya near the nation's capital and capturing the strategic eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf. They announced on opposition-controlled radio the seeds of an alternative government in the form of a National Transitional Council and declared it to be the country's sole legitimate representative.

The council held its first meeting Saturday in the eastern city of Benghazi. The council called Benghazi its temporary location until the "liberation" of the capital, Tripoli, according to a decree it issued late in the day.

After a lull in fighting, clashes erupted again Saturday evening. Another eyewitness said security forces on the eastern and western sides of the city remain intent on advancing inside the city, and clashes have occurred in both areas.

The pro-Gadhafi security forces are using tanks, armed vehicles and heavy weapons, and the anti-Gadhafi forces are well-armed, the second witness said. Many deaths and injuries have occurred in the latest round of fighting, and protesters managed to seize tanks and weapons from the security forces. Rebels captured the strategic oil town of Ras Lanuf on Saturday -- one day after pro-Gadhafi forces fought with opposition members there, fighters and commanders said.

The development appeared to embolden opposition members, who prepared to advance west to Gadhafi's birthplace of Sirte.

Full Story:
 
GADDAF is going to win,the MUTINY is no longer

Nashangaa kunguvu yote ya umma imeishia wapi? hata hivyo nahisi ni sababu alivyowaua kama vile anachinja kuku wa sherehe hivyo wengi wakaingiwa na uoga otherwise wangekuwa wamemng'oa madarakani tayari. Poleni wananchi wa Libya kwa mauaji na kushindwa kumwondoa Gaddafi
 
Nashangaa kunguvu yote ya umma imeishia wapi? hata hivyo nahisi ni sababu alivyowaua kama vile anachinja kuku wa sherehe hivyo wengi wakaingiwa na uoga otherwise wangekuwa wamemng'oa madarakani tayari. Poleni wananchi wa Libya kwa mauaji na kushindwa kumwondoa Gaddafi

Libya sasa hivi kumepoa kama masaki vile...
Puumbav
 
Gadhafi ana huruma sana na wananchi wake. Vurugu lote hili linaloendeshwa na waasi na juu ya kwamba uwezo anao lakini bado hajapendelea kutumia nguvu kuwashikisha adabu.Pamoja na hivyo muda sasa umefika awache kuwachekea chekea,wanaweza wakampindua.
 
Gaddafi son's LSE thesis 'written by Libyan academic'

College sets up inquiry into Saif Gaddafi's PhD and the £1.5m donation he later made
By Jonathan Owen
Sunday, 6 March 2011




Fresh evidence emerged yesterday revealing how Saif Gaddafi, the son of the Libyan leader, plagiarised his PhD thesis at the London School of Economics. One Libyan academic drafted in to help Saif Gaddafi was later rewarded with an ambassador's posting to Europe. The new details came as a Tory MP called for the LSE's entire governing council to resign. The beleaguered institution also faced allegations that an academic had been pressured to admit a relative of an aide to President Bill Clinton to study there.

The LSE, widely criticised for the way it solicited funding from Libya, resulting in it being dubbed the "Libyan School of Economics", has launched an inquiry into the plagiarism and funding controversy.

Colonel Gaddafi's enlisted Libyan academics to help ghost-write his thesis, according to Professor Abubakr Buera of Benghazi's Garyounis University. "I learnt that Saif gathered some PhD holders from Garyounis University in Benghazi, Libya, to help him write his doctoral dissertation. Among the people he consulted was a professor of economics who was a graduate from Germany. His name is Dr Menesi; what gives credibility to this allegation is that Dr Menesi, who was then retired, was brought back to active service as a government bank chairman in Libya, then governor to the Central Bank in Libya, then minister of finance, and finally Libya's ambassador to Austria."

Full Story:
 
Heavy Gunfire in Tripoli, but Gov't Denies Fighting

Libyan government calls fire 'celebrations'



getimage.aspx

By Mark Russell, Newser Staff

Posted Mar 6, 2011 5:28 AM CST

getimage.aspx


Heavy Gunfire in Tripoli, but Gov't Denies Fighting
Anti-Libyan Leader Moammar Gadhafi rebels in the oil town of Ras Lanouf yesterday. Heavy arms fire was reported being heard in Tripoli this morning, but a government spokesman denied there was fighting.
(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

(Newser) – The fighting in Libya has moved into Tripoli, with heavy machine-gun fire reported in the capital early this morning for the first time in the uprising's two-week history, reports Reuters.

But it is unclear just who was involved, and the government denies there is any fighting at all: "These are celebrations because government forces have taken control of all areas to Benghazi and are in the process of taking control of Benghazi," said a government spokesman, referring to the retaking of a town just outside Tripoli.

"I assure you..., there is no fighting going on in Tripoli," said the spokesman. "Everything is safe. Tripoli is 100 percent under control. What you are hearing is celebratory fireworks.

People are in the streets, dancing in the square." In addition to heavy arms fire, ambulance sirens and car horns were also being heard. The government spokesman added: "I would like to advise not to go there for your safety."

SOURCE: Heavy Gunfire in Tripoli, but Gov't Denies Fighting - Libyan government calls fire 'celebrations'
 
Gunfire erupts in Libyan capital

Heavy shooting reported in Tripoli, as protests against Muammar Gaddafi's more than
41-year-old rule continue.


Last Modified: 06 Mar 2011 09:32 GMT

Sustained gunfire erupted in the centre of Libya's capital, Tripoli, an area that has so far been relatively free of violence.

It was unclear who was carrying out the shooting, which started early on Sunday, or what caused it, Anita McNaught, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the capital, said.

Automatic weapon rounds, some of it heavy calibre, echoed around central Tripoli along with pro-government chants, whistling and a cacophony of car horns as vehicles sped through the vicinity, witnesses said.
However, a government spokesman denied any fighting was under way in Tripoli. "I assure you, I assure you, I assure you, I assure you, there is no fighting going on in Tripoli," Mussa Ibrahim told the Reuters news agency.

"Everything is safe. Tripoli is 100 per cent under control. What you are hearing is celebratory fireworks. People are in the streets, dancing in the square."

Our correspondent, reporting from Green Square in Tripoli, said that thousands of people had turned out to show their support to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

"The square is absolutely thronged with supporters of Gaddafi," McNaught said. But she added that some of these 'supporters' had admitted to a fellow British journalist on Sunday that they were in fact army and police personnel in civillian clothes.

Tripoli is the main stronghold of Gaddafi, who is facing a sustained rebellion that has posed the biggest challenge ever to his more than 41-year-old rule.

Libyan state television said the shots in Tripoli were in celebration of Gaddafi forces having reclaimed the cities of Misurata and Az-Zawiyah, which lies just 50km west of the capital, a day after anti-government fighters repelled repeated attacks by forces loyal to Gaddafi.

The Libyan government has announced widespread tax cuts to mark what it called "victory" over the rebels.

Conflicting reports

Gaddafi's forces on Sunday continued to launch counter-attacks on anti-government rebels along the central Libyan coast, with airstrikes and ground battles reported in Bin Jawad, Ras Lanuf and Misurata.

However, residents of Misurata told Al Jazeera that reports the city had been recaptured were false.

Read more of our Libya coverage "There's absolutely no grounds for that claim whatsoever," Sadoun Mistrai, one resident, said.

However, since then residents said government tanks had begun shelling the town. "Misurata is currently under attack," a resident told Al Jazeera.

Reporting from Ras Lanuf, Al Jazeera's Jacky Rowland said an aircraft flew in and dropped a bomb on the area on Sunday.

"We think that the pilot was targeting some heavy anti-aircraft guns that were along the roadside," Rowland reported. The area, in the country's central coast, houses a major refinery and petrochemical complex.

Ras Lanuf, and the nearby town of Bin Jawad, have seen fierce fighting between Libyan government forces and rebels, with reports of opposition fighters having shot down a government helicopter earlier on Sunday.

After Sunday's air attack caused some rebels to briefly flee the area, Rowland reported rebels again heading west toward the front-line.

"We are seeing people loading up with ammunition and guns, vehicles and also ambulances, tearing down the road, pressing forward in the direction of Bin Jawad, which is a town about 30-40km to the west of here, where there is still fighting going on in the streets between pro and anti Gaddafi forces," she said.

Earlier on Sunday, rebels said they had come under sniper fire and air attack on the frontline.

"They claim that there were some very young people up on rooftops shooting down at them and they said that they were then attacked from the air," Rowland said.

Increased movement

While the rebels have a strong presence in Ras Lanuf, they told our correspondent the town was still held by Gaddafi loyalists.

"What we're seeing is a lot of movement, for the first time in days," Rowland said, adding that the rebel forces are completely disorganised, constantly swinging between euphoria and panic.

"I think that their biggest strength, as far as the rebels are concerned, is the sheers numbers of volunteer fighters. People with no previous military experience came to the call, learning pretty quickly how to operate ... an anti-aircraft carrier."

2011351039472371_20.jpg


Hoda Abdel-Hamid, Al Jazeera's correspondent, had earlier said that anti-Gaddafi forces told her they are gaining ground in the area surrounding the capital and may be as close as 40km to Sirte, a Gaddafi stronghold.

"The rebels have advanced easily through many other towns, where they have been met with general support, the battle for Sirte is likely to be much tougher," she said.

"Some people fear the big battle will be there." The Associated Press news agency reported that Libyan warplanes had launched air strikes on an anti-Gaddafi force advancing towards the city of Sirte

An AP television crew saw the air strikes targeting the anti-Gaddafi forces on Sunday, the news agency reported.

State TV meanwhile showed pictures of tanks, armoured-personnel carriers and other weapons it said were seized on Saturday from rebels in Az-Zawiyah.

But witnesses told Al Jazeera rebel forces there were able to repel heavy government assaults on their positions on Saturday when Gaddafi's forces encircled the city.

More than 30 people were killed and as many as 200 people were said to have been wounded in the fighting that drove government forces out of the town.

Youssef Shagan, a spokesman for the fighters in the town, said that Gaddafi's forces had entered Az-Zawiyah at 6am (04:00 GMT) with hundreds of soldiers, along with tanks and armoured vehicles.

Gaddafi's forces had broken through defences into Martyrs' Square, in the heart of the town, but hours later were pushed back, Shagan said.

Benghazi, Libya's second city, is the stronghold of protesters and is firmly in the hands of anti-government forces, but Libyan state television said on Sunday that forces loyal to Gaddafi are on their way to take back the city.

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

UJUMBE HUMU:

Mapigano makali sana, yaingia katikati ya Jiji kuu la Tripoli nchini Libya kwa mara ya kwanza tangu vugu vugu la Nguvu ya Umma kumng'oa dikteta Moammar Qadhafi ianze.

Licha ya kishinindo kikuu kusikika karibu kila kona katikati ya jiji hilo na kufoka kwa zana za kivita za kisasa zaidi kuendelea kushika mawimbi kati kati ya mi-honi ya magari yaendeshwayo kwa kasi sana kuendelea kushika kasi, uongozi wa serikali ya Gaddafi yakanusha vikali kuwepo kwa kitu vita maeneo hayo. Wao wadai ya kwamba kuna sherehe tu ya waandamanaji wanaoendelea kumshabikia kiongozi wa nchi hiyo asing'olewe madarakani.

Hata hivyo, hivi ghiliba na propaganda za nchi hiyo ziliingia dosari baada ya watu wengi waliohojiwa na shirika moja la habari (Reuters) maeneo ya Green Square kuthibitisha kwamba 'wao ni wanajeshi wa Gaddafi katika nguo za kiraia ambao walipelekwa uwanjani hapo kuonyesha sura ya wananchi kuendelea kuunga mkono serikali ya nchi hiyo.
 
A look at anti-government protests and political unrest across the Middle East

By The Associated Press (CP) – 2 hours ago

A look at anti-government protests, political unrest and key developments
in the Middle East on Sunday:

___
LIBYA:

Libyan helicopter gunships strafe opposition fighters as forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi pound them with artillery and rockets, dramatically escalating a counteroffensive to halt the rapid advance of rebels toward the capital, Tripoli.

Another scene of heavy fighting is the city of Misrata, 120 miles (200 kilometres) east of Tripoli, where a doctor tells The Associated Press 20 people were killed and 100 wounded.
___
YEMEN:
Government supporters wielding knives and handguns attack protesters in the country's south, leaving one dead in the latest of weeks of demonstrations demanding the president step down.
In a separate development in the increasingly chaotic nation, suspected al-Qaida gunmen kill four soldiers from the elite Republican Guard forces in a mountainous region.
___
BAHRAIN:
Thousands of Shiite opposition supporters block the entrance to the Bahraini prime minister's office but fail to disrupt a government meeting as the campaign for reform in the strategic Gulf nation enters its third week.
Bahrain's Shiite majority has long complained of discrimination and political persecution in the island nation, which is ruled by a Sunni dynasty.
___
EGYPT:
Egypt's prime minister-designate names a caretaker Cabinet to help lead the country through reforms and toward free elections after the uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. The changes include new faces in the key ministries of foreign affairs, interior and justice.
___
SAUDI ARABIA:
Saudi authorities release a Shiite cleric two days after Shiites in the eastern region demonstrate to demand his release. Tawfiq al-Amer, who was arrested last week after he called for a constitutional monarchy, was released, a close associate of al-Amer says.

SOURCE: The Canadian Press: A look at anti-government protests and political unrest across the Middle East
 
Back
Top Bottom