Das hatte ich glatt vergessen. Wie die Massaker an den deutschen Minderheiten in Belgien, Holland, Norwegen, Luxemburg, Dänemark usw.
Druckbare Version
Laut einer neuen französischen Studie will das Transitional National Council(Rebellenregierung) nach dem Sturz Gadaffis die Sharia als oberstes Gesetz in Lybien einführen. Auch weiterhin sind gerade einmal 13 der 31 Mitglieder namentlich bekannt.
Hier gibts die Studie(leider auf französisch)
http://www.cf2r.org/images/stories/n...port-libye.pdf
Der Bericht über die Studie auf Englisch.
http://www.english.rfi.fr/africa/201...-report-claimsZitat:
Libya's anti-Kadhafi rebels no democrats, report claims
The anti-Kadhafi uprising in Libya is neither democratic nor spontaneous, according to a delegation which visited the country last month.Their report, published by two French-based thinktanks, claims the rebel Transitional National Council (TNC) wants to impose Islamic sharia law and that the uprising is motivated by regional resentment and vindictiveness.
While condemning Moamer Kadhafi’s regime, the group says that “true democrats” are aminority in the TNC, which has been recognised by France and a number of other countries.
The democrats are working alongside monarchists, radical Islamists and Kadhafi regime defectors, like the council’s chairman Mustafa Abdul Jalil, a former justice minister who twice confirmed the death sentences passed on five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor for allegedly deliberately infecting 400 children with HIV.
And, the observers point out, only 13 of the 31 TNC members’ names have been made public, with representatives of the west of the country, most of which is under Kadhafi’s control, kept secret for “debatable” reasons.
The movement is “an armed uprising of the east of the country … which tries to present itself as part of the Arab ‘spring’, with which it has nothing in common”, their report says.
The report seems most concerned at the threat of establishing a base for Islamists in the region.
Article I of the CNT's National Charter states that sharia should be the basis of the country's laws and the report claims that the Libyan Islamic Combatant Group and Al-Qaeda both claim to have fought against Kadhafi's forces during the uprising.
The revolt has inspired three to four million migrant workers to flee the country, “at a time when their own countries are suffering a high level of unemployment”, it says, adding that “all blacks in eastern Libya were considered to be mercenaries in the service of Kadhafi”.
And it dubs the Western intervention in the country “adventurist”, threatening to destabilise Africa and the Middle East by providing a base for radical Islamism in the region.
Nato air strikes have hit a hospital in Mizda, wounding about 40 civilians and Korean doctors, and other non-military targets in Misrata and Ziaouia, the report adds.
Accusing France, the UK and the US of going much further than the UN resolution authorising air strikes allowed, the delegation says that secret services were operating in the country before the motion was passed and continued to do so afterwards.
France, in particular, could lose business and influence in Libya if Kadhafi is not overthrown, thanks to an “exaggeration” of its role in supporting the rebels both in Paris and Beghazi, it claims.
Ein weiterer äußerst lesenswerter Artikel.
http://www.thenational.ae/news/world...or?pageCount=2Zitat:
Women of loyalist Libya see Qaddafi as their liberator
TRIPOLI // The young woman police officer swaggers through a Tripoli slum, her hair cut boyishly short, an empty gun holster and walkie-talkie hanging from her belt. A tattooed man with a cigarette dangling from his lips shrinks away.
He doesn't want to mess with 25-year-old Nisrine Mansour.
A member of the regime's vice squad, her hero is Libyan ruler Colonel Muammar Qaddafi. His image is on her mobile phone, his face emerging from rays of green - the regime colour. Her ringtone is a tinny pro-Qaddafi chant.
Colonel Qaddafi has bestowed many titles upon himself during his 42 years of iron-fisted rule over Libya, branding himself "King of Kings" in Africa and "Brother Leader of the Revolution" in Libya.
Women such as Ms Mansour give him another title: emancipator of women.
"Muammar Qaddafi is the one who opened the opportunities for us to advance. That's why we cling to him, that's why we love him," Ms Mansour says. "He gave us complete freedom as a woman to enter the police force, work as engineers, pilots, judges, lawyers. Anything."
Among Colonel Qaddafi's most ardent loyalists are Libyan women who have risen to high-profile roles in the police, military and government, and who credit Colonel Qaddafi with giving them greater opportunities than many of their sisters in the Arab world. They consider any threat to his regime a threat to their own advancement.
Even as Colonel Qaddafi's regime has cracked down brutally on dissent, locking up and torturing opponents, it has also long touted its policies of breaking cultural taboos concerning women's work and status in the conservative nation. The most well-known example is Colonel Qaddafi's personal guard of female bodyguards, but women have also been elevated to prominent positions in government ministries.
Colonel Qaddafi's policy was in part aimed at weakening traditional tribal and religious powers so he could impose his own vision of society.
It was only somewhat successful. Women who have gained prominence are a small minority in an otherwise strongly male-dominated Libya, far from the popular regime myth of a society filled with revolutionary fighting women. Advancement depends on total adherence to Colonel Qaddafi's authoritarian rule.
Women were also at the forefront of the protests that launched the anti-Qaddafi uprising in mid-February, demanding democracy for the country and - they hope - better rights for themselves. Still, while they have no rosy memories of their lives under Colonel Qaddafi, they say their struggle for equality is ongoing. Women activists were dismayed when the rebels appointed only one woman to the interim administration in their de facto capital of Benghazi.
"We are very disappointed," said Enas Al Dursy, a 23-year-old activist. "We feel like we are being marginalised."
For Ms Mansour, there is nothing a woman such as herself cannot aspire to in Colonel Qaddafi's Libya.
"I've never felt that I was treated differently because I'm a woman. Even when I'm picking up drunkards off the street, nobody ever said, 'She can't do that, she's a woman,'" Ms Mansour said.
A woman hugged her as she patrolled the rubbish-strewn alleyways of the Hara Kabira slum in Tripoli's walled old city - once the pretty, brightly painted Jewish quarter, now a crumbling mess of homes filled with impoverished Libyans and African migrant workers.
Throughout Colonel Qaddafi's Tripoli stronghold, female soldiers,- a rare sight in most Arab countries, patrol roadside checkpoints in khaki uniforms and headscarves. They keep order at gas stations made rowdy by severe shortages that cause long lines. Policewomen sporting large sunglasses cruise by in patrol cars.
Women are also involved in Colonel Qaddafi's mechanism of oppression against his opponents. Women run their own interrogation centre for suspected female anti-Qaddafi activists, according to a resident who said she was hauled into one in May.
Early on, Colonel Qaddafi created a cadre of female bodyguards, glamorously made-up women in form-fitting military-style uniforms and high-heeled boots known as "amazons". He pointed to them as evidence of his commitment to promoting non-traditional roles for women. Next page
Just over a quarter of Libya's labour force were women in 2006, low by world standards but high for the Arab world. Only Lebanon, Syria and Tunisia had higher rates, and the increase in women's participation in Libya over the past 20 years was by far the highest in the region, rising from 14 per cent in 1986, according to the UN International Labour Organization.
In her studio in an upscale Tripoli suburb, 25-year-old Radia al Bodi, a television anchor for Libyan state TV, said women such as herself would fight to defend Colonel Qaddafi's regime because of the promise it offered women.
"This is all because of Father Muammar," said Ibtisam Saadeddin, a 35-year-old soldier who wore gold-edged pins of a smiling Colonel Qaddafi on her khaki uniform and headscarf. "He is our air and sustenance. We can't be without him."
Alle hier in diesem Strang vor Wochen aufgestellte Prognosen, dass der Krieg in Libyen Monate dauern wuerde, haben sich bestaetigt. Die Strategie Deutschlands, sich aus dem Krieg herauszuhalten, hat sich als voellig richtig erwiesen.
Das wird ein Endloskrieg werden. Einen Plan-B bzw. eine Exitstrategie im Falle eines Ueberlebens von Gadhafi gibt es immer noch nicht.
Nur Idioten glauben, dass Gadhafi aus der Luft zu besiegen sei.
http://nationalinterest.org/commenta...h-tripoli-5455
Hätte man Gaddafi Bengazi einnehmen lassen, wäre der Krieg seit Monaten vorbei und die islamistischen Extremisten würden schon lange unter der Erde liegen. Leider wird nun genau das Gegenteil eintreffen. Die Moderaten werden unter der Erde verschwinden und der Islam wird sich wie eine Seuche in Libyen ausbreiten. Das neue Lybien wird entweder ein anarchistischer Staat wie Somalia oder ein zweiter Iran werden.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/...74L1H220110522Zitat:
Libya clerics see big role for Islam after Gaddafi
An Islamic revival is taking hold in rebel-held eastern Libya after decades of tough curbs on worship by Muammar Gaddafi, but clerics say this will not be a new source of religious extremism as the West may fear.
Leider zeigt der Lybieneinsatz mal wieder, wie schwach und uneins die Nato geworden ist. Schurkenstaaten wie Russland, China, Iran und Nordkorea werden sich natürlich höllisch freuen.Zitat:
Das wird ein Endloskrieg werden. Einen Plan-B bzw. eine Exitstrategie im Falle eines Ueberlebens von Gadhafi gibt es immer noch nicht.
Man kann nur hoffen, das Gaddafi nicht besiegt wird. Er und sein Machtapparat sind letztlich der Garant dafür, dass das Land nicht in den Islamismus abdriftet und wir einen zweiten Mullahstaat direkt vor unserer europäischen Haustürt ertragen müssen. Gaddafi mag zwar ein Bastard sein; er ist aber letztlich UNSER Bastard!!!Zitat:
Nur Idioten glauben, dass Gadhafi aus der Luft zu besiegen sei.
http://nationalinterest.org/commenta...h-tripoli-5455
Der selbsternannte Rebellenführer Mustafa Abdul Jalil hat einen dunklen Fleck auf der Stirn.
http://gulfnews.com/polopoly_fs/must...2603462595.jpg
Dies ist ein Zeichen besonders frommer (=radikaler) Muslime, die mindestens 5 mal am Tag beten und dabei die Stirn auf den Boden drücken.
Seine kleinen Schweinsaugen erinnern mich irgendwie an den hier:
http://stopahmadinejadrally.files.wo...madinejad1.jpg
Nicht nur die Wahlen in der Tuerkei, sondern auch die unheilvolle Entwicklung in Aegypten haben deutlich vor Augen gefuehrt, dass die gesamte Region sich in Richtung radikaler Islam hinwenden wird. Westliche Demokratie und westliches Wertegefuege alles Pustekuchen.
Es wird Zeit, dass der Westen seine rosarote Brille bzgl. Nahost langsam ablegt und einen Sinn fuer die Wirklichkeit bekommt. Die Wahrheit liegt auf der Strasse und alle Agenten der westlichen Geheimdienste seien aufgefordert, dort mal genauer hinzuschauen. Man muss aber auch in Muelleimern herumwuehlen und sich in Hinterhoefe begeben, um der Wahrheit ein wenig auf die Spur zu kommen...
Die westlichen Politiker sind einfach viel zu sehr abgehoben, um die Lage richtig einschaetzen zu koennen. Vom wirklichen Leben der Menschen auf der Strasse, von ihren Zielen und Sehnsuechten, verstehen die nur sehr wenig.
Barry Rubin in einer hervorragenden Analyse bzgl. der kommenden Entwicklung in Nahost:
http://www.gloria-center.org/meria/2011/03/rubin.html
Südafrikas Präsident verurteilt NATO-Angriffe auf Libyen scharf
Johannesburg (dapd). Der südafrikanische Präsident Jacob Zuma hat die NATO-Angriffe auf Libyen scharf verurteilt. Er handele sich um "eine missbräuchliche Verwendung" einer von den arabischen und afrikanischen Staaten gestützten Resolution des UN-Sicherheitsrats, die eine Flugverbotszone über Libyen und den Einsatz von Gewalt zum Schutz der Zivilbevölkerung erlaube, sagte Zuma am Dienstag vor dem Parlament.
"Wir sind fest davon überzeugt, dass die Resolution missbraucht wird für einen Regierungswechsel, politische Morde und eine Besatzung durch ausländische Streitkräfte", sagte Zuma. Der Präsident war erst kürzlich im Auftrag der Afrikanischen Union (AU) zu Vermittlungsgesprächen in die libysche Hauptstadt Tripolis gereist. Die libyschen Rebellen hatten den AU-Vorschlag zu einem Waffenstillstand sowie Gesprächen abgelehnt....
http://de.nachrichten.yahoo.com/s%C3...113135119.html
Die Rebellen wie auch der Westen wollen G beseitigen, obwohl davon nichts in der Resolution steht.
Wieviele Opfer wird der Bürgerkrieg noch kosten?