Permalink Reply by Hope on February 21, 2011 at 3:13pm Hey Noor, loong time no see..
I just looked at this site here http://www.libya-watanona.com/libya/ yeah it's very awful!
Permalink Reply by Noor on February 21, 2011 at 3:34pm
Permalink Reply by Hope on February 21, 2011 at 3:38pm Here is some of the English part of the site.
The National Front for the Salvation of Libya (NFSL)
http://www.libya-watanona.com/news/nfsl/nf060510e.htm
If, one day, a people desires to live, then fate must answer their ...Sandwiched between Tunisia, as it surmounts the impossible, and Egypt, as it wakes the sleeping giant, Libya has been, for the last 41 years, seemingly acquiescent to Gaddafi’s regime, despite its remarkable, historical struggle for independence against Mussolini’s Italy. Since the earliest days of the Tunisian uprising, many people have speculated as to whether the Sidi Bouzid contagion would infect the Libyan masses...
As millions of Tunisians courageously took to the streets, in some of the most awe-inspiring events of this young century, my imagination—and the imaginations of thousands of Libyans—began to bubble fervently. What would it be like if we awoke one morning to find that after 41 years, Gaddafi was no longer in power?
Enough Gaddafi!
There is nothing worse than feeling obliged to justify why you have done something that seems so trivial to you—or even positive to you—because others perceive it as blasphemous. You wake up one day, you check your messages, and you find an invitation to a gathering of people who share so much with you. They share the same country of origin, same religion, same experiences here in the States, same family concerns, or maybe they even share the same history....
By: Ahmed Addarrat
t has been 58 years since a deciding Haitian vote at the United Nations granted Libya her independence. For myself, and I believe for many other Libyans, this day comes with a diluted sense of joy. Over the past 40 years, Libyans have endured another chapter of tyranny at the hands of one of their own, transitioning from colony to sovereign nation to dictatorship...
Enough Gaddafi Blog: Human Rights Watch (HRW) was recently given permission to report on Libya’s human rights conditions from within the country. Needless to say, the opportunity is unprecedented, given Libya’s isolation and the Gaddafi regime’s allergic reaction to any form of scrutiny—whether from inside or outside...
By Najla Abdurrahman
In musing about the creation of this organization and its mission statement, I can't help but be struck by the subtle irony of the name itself—Enough Gaddafi—for it is acutely emblematic of the central tragedy of the Libyan experience over the past forty years: namely, that no matter how much the majority of its citizens (and certainly those of us who make up the Libyan diaspora) might wish, the Libyan people have been unable to separate their lives, their image in the world...
By: Ahmed Addarrat
Recent allegations of abuses in women’s shelters in Benghazi shed light on the Gaddafi regime’s embarrassing lack of accountability, despite attempts to revamp the Gaddafi brand. After all, how can there be accountability in a country ruled by men—men who are beyond reprisal—and not laws? To most people familiar with Libya, these recent allegations indicate more of the same in a country committed to changing its image...
Asma Yousef (Enough! Blog)
At his United Nations debut, Colonel Moammar Gaddafi of Libya reminded the rest of the world of what it already knew, that he has completely lost touch with reality. Gaddafi’s visit to the United States, the first in forty years, offered him an opportunity to redeem himself in the aftermath of his unabashed warm welcome to the only man convicted of bombing the Pan Am 103 airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988...
Permalink Reply by Hope on February 21, 2011 at 4:21pm When you break the necklace, all beads will fall down...
thus description of the arab revolt....
my egyptian friend told me, I wish for the Saudis the same thing..
but, I prefer reforms rather than revolution..and if reforms didn't work then, revolution is the second option!
I'm peaceful :)
Permalink Reply by Noor on February 21, 2011 at 6:22pm thank you .. yes we need your hearts with us .. he is criminal killing his own people
Permalink Reply by Noor on February 21, 2011 at 6:25pm
Permalink Reply by Albert Bakker on February 21, 2011 at 4:56pm Here is a regime of an utterly despicable megalomaniac psychopath with the intellectual maturity of a 2 year old, another dynasty of genetically inferior human waste, that hires mercenaries to murder their own people, sends warplanes to bomb their own people.
Qaddafi has by his own low criminal instincts assured his eradication and that of his dynasty. Wherever he flees, he's dead. Good riddance!!
Permalink Reply by Hope on February 21, 2011 at 5:17pm well said Albert..
It's a lesson, and all Arab leaders are shaking right now.
Permalink Reply by Albert Bakker on February 22, 2011 at 1:24am You are right, you see them struggling to come up with an adequate response. But that's what they should have done all the time. Now it's too late for them. They're gone. And the Saudi royals are pacing around in their air-conditioned villas right now with a big brown stain on the back of their robes. Abdullah will be dead soon anyway, he's started to rot away already.
Permalink Reply by Albert Bakker on February 22, 2011 at 12:57am At the same time when that demented pig Qadaffi, that fucking retard, sends warplanes to bomb his own people (two pilots ordered to bomb protesters defected to Malta) the EU (note that they are too bombing children in Afghanistan to keep a "democratically elected" puppet regime there in power) made itself, to the everlasting shame of it's citizens, once again completely ridiculous by piously calling for "dialogue and restraint." (I thought that standard answer was reserved for the Israeli when they once again go out to bomb the Palestinian people into submission.)
As it turns out, but not really say it out right, they couldn't care less about the Libyans, they care about Qadaffi keeping refugees, among which many from Somalia (another unparalleled success of US interventions by proxy btw) out of the EU.
Oh but hey care about other things as well.
Declaration by the High Representative, Catherine Ashton, on
behalf of the European Union on events in Libya
"The European Union is extremely concerned by the events unfolding in Libya and the
reported deaths of a very high number of demonstrators. We condemn the repression
against peaceful demonstrators and deplore the violence and the death of civilians. We
express our sympathy to the families and friends of the victims.
The EU urges the authorities to exercise restraint and calm and to immediately refrain from
further use of violence against peaceful demonstrators. Freedom of expression and the
right to assemble, as provided for in particular by the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, are human rights and fundamental freedoms of every human being which
must be respected and protected. The EU calls on the authorities to immediately cease the
blocking of public access to the internet and mobile phone networks. The EU also calls
upon the authorities to allow media to work freely throughout the country.
The legitimate aspirations and demands of the people for reform must be addressed
through open and meaningful Libyan-led dialogue.
The European Union expects full cooperation by the authorities in protecting EU citizens."
Permalink Reply by Noor on February 22, 2011 at 1:09pm
Permalink Reply by Noor on February 22, 2011 at 8:04am pllllllllllllllllllz people from USA and all the world talk to your governments
i KNOW you dont like criminals ..
look at khdafi .. he is killing our men and people plllllllllllllllz we need humans right to help us
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