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Africa North
Gaddafi ready for Libya's Day of Rage
2011-02-10
[Asharq al-Aswat] Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Qadaffy
... dictator of Libya since 1969. From 1972, when he relinquished the title of prime minister, he has been accorded the honorifics Guide of the First of September Great Revolution of the Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya or Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution. With the death of Omar Bongo of Gabon on 8 June 2009, he became the longest serving of all current non-royal national leaders. He is also the longest-serving ruler of Libya since Tripoli became an Ottoman province in 1551. When Chairman Mao was all the rage and millions of people were flashing his Little Red Book, Qadaffy came out with his own Little Green Book, which didn't do as well. Qadaffy's instability has been an inspiration to the Arab world and to Africa, which he would like to rule...
has dealt with the calls being issued by the National Conference for the Libyan Opposition [NCLO] and Libyan [political] activists for a Libyan "Day of Rage" to take place on 17 February, modeled on similar events in Tunisia and Egypt, by issuing an unprecedented warnings against any attempts to create chaos and instability in Libya.

In the last few days, Qadaffy privately met with Libyan political activists, journalists, and media figures and he issued severe warnings that these professions would be held responsible should they participate in any way in disturbing the peace or creating chaos in Libya. This was a source of frustration to those who attended these meetings and who had expected Qadaffy to inform them of his intention to carry out important political and economic reforms.
Why on earth would they expect even an "intention"?
The opposition "Libya Al-Youm" website that is based in London quoted eye-witnesses who attended these meetings with Qadaffy, reporting that Qadaffy addressed the audience -- the majority of whom were from cities in eastern Libya -- in a tone of warning against the consequences of participating in any potential disturbances.

This represents the first official Libyan response to concerns about the opposition's calls for a "Day of Rage" on 17 February 2011, the anniversary of previous anti-Qadaffy protests in 2006. In these meetings which took place amidst a media blackout, Qadaffy -- who has been in power since 1969 -- also spoke about the problems that the cities of Benghazi, Al Bayda, Darna, and Tobruk, are suffering from, particularly those of neglect, the collapse of infrastructure, unemployment, and corruption.
And whose fault is that, pray tell?
Sources who attended these secret meetings revealed that Qadaffy expressed his concern and anger about what is happening in Egypt, and said that the Libyan leader particularly stressed his anger towards the Al Jizz channel and Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, for inciting the Egyptians to turn against Mubarak. Qadaffy reportedly asked "why doesn't Qaradawi incite [people] against the US military bases in the Gulf?"
A very good question. Perhaps because the US military bases aren't oppressing them?
Commenting on the popular uprising that is calling for Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak's resignation and the toppling of his regime, sources who attended these meetings say that Qadaffy described Mubarak as being "poor" and not even owning the price of the clothes he was wearing. Qadaffy also claimed that Libya is providing Mubarak with [financial] support, and accused the Israeli Mossad of being behind the current unrest in Egypt.

Qadaffy also reportedly defended his friend and ally former Tunisian President Zing El Abidine Ben Ali, saying "the Tunisians hate him because his wife is a Trabelsi [maiden name; meaning from Tripoli]." Qadaffy criticized the revolution that was carried out by the people of Tunisia and the toppling of Ben Ali's regime, before moving away form this and stressing his concern at the return of security and stability to Tunisia.

Libyan activists have claimed that the Libyan intelligence service has been carrying out a large-scale campaign to shut down Libyan websites based outside of the country due to their ongoing coverage of the situation in Libya.

The NCLO has called for mass protests to take place inside and outside of Libya on the anniversary of the 17 February 2006 uprisings in the city of Benghazi where protests against the Danish cartoons of the prophet Muhammad were transformed into mass demonstrations against Qadaffy and his regime, resulting in the death of dozens of protestors and the injury of many more.
What a charmingly passive voice sentence. Nobody actually did the killing or injuring, it just -- somehow -- happened.
In a statement to Asharq Al-Awsat, the NCLO said that all Libyan internal and external oppositional forces intend to carry out protests and demonstrations at various levels against Qadaffy and his regime on the anniversary of the 17 February 2006 protests. The NCLO official also told Asharq Al-Awsat that he hoped that the people of Libya had learned from the victory of the Tunisian popular uprising.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Curly-toed slippers on hot stand-by...
Posted by: mojo   2011-02-10 15:24  

#2  Gaddafi knows that he won't be criticized no matter what he does to the Libyan people.

He has a history of state sponsored terrorist attacks on the west, directly took western hostages, violently and lethally abused the territorial sovereignty of western nations, amassed WMDs, openly threatened genocidal WMD strikes against a western nation, threatened the sanctity of western embassies' territory.

The result: Western weakness, craven obsequious submission, in the face of an enemy that is pathetically weak. The west has let him know that he is absolutely free.

Unleashing Gaddafi might in the end be judged as one of Bush's bigger blunders. Unfortunately he was largely immune from criticism as he acted like a weak dovish leftist and formally enjoyed the hawkish credentials of a Republican POTUS.
Posted by: Lumpy Sherong6725   2011-02-10 13:24  

#1  "Gaddafi ready for Libya's Day of Rage"

Oh, I just BET he is.

James,
It will get ugly if they as much as unfurl and single banner..

Karl,

My bet is that this will make the Egyptian thug vs. protesters dust up look like a pillow fight.
This unfortunately will be a blood bath if there are any protests.

James,

When was the last time there was a rational protest in the Middle East?

Karl,

That might be the famous Aleppo Food Riots of 678 A.D.
Posted by: James Carville/Karl Rove   2011-02-10 11:40  

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