Western war on Libya

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he was horrified by video footage showing migrants being sold as slaves in Libya and that these auctions should be investigated as possible crimes against humanity.

UN Chief: Libya Slave Auctions Possible Crime against Humanity
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960830000821

Last week footage of an apparent live auction in Libya was aired where black men were presented to North African buyers as potential farmhands and sold off for as little as $400, Daily Mail reported.

"Slavery has no place in our world and these actions are among the most egregious abuses of human rights and may amount to crimes against humanity," Guterres told reporters.

"I am horrified at news reports and video footage showing African migrants in Libya reportedly being sold as slaves," he said, adding: "I abhor these appalling acts."

Guterres called on "all competent authorities" to investigate the slave auctions without delay, adding that he had asked the "relevant United Nations actors to actively pursue this matter."

Libyan Deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Metig said his UN-backed Government of National Accord would investigate the allegations, in a statement posted Sunday on the Facebook page of the GNA's press office.

Guterres wants Libyan authorities as well as the International Criminal Court, which has a mandate to open war crimes investigations in Libya, to look into the slave auctions, said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.

The UN chief has mobilized the UN high commission for human rights, his envoy in Libya Ghassan Salame, the UN office for drugs and crime, which has responsibility for human trafficking, and the International Organization for Migration, to take action, said Haq.

The images have triggered outrage from African leaders and calls for an inquiry.

Guinean President Alpha Conde, who is also chairman of the African Union, on Friday called for an inquiry and prosecutions relating to what he termed a "despicable trade... from another era."

Burkina Faso recalled its ambassador to Tripoli after expressing "shock" at the images, said Foreign Minister Alpha Barry.

President Roch Marc Christian Kabore has demanded information from Libya about the fate of some 30 Burkinabe migrants detained in the camps, said Barry.

Senegal's government expressed "outrage at the sale of Sub-Saharan African migrants on Libyan soil" that constituted a "blight on the conscience of humanity."

Niger's President Mahamadou Issoufou said the issue had made him "deeply angry" and urged Libyan authorities and international organizations to do "everything possible to stop this practice."

The UN Security Council will on Tuesday discuss human trafficking during a special debate expected to focus on the treatment of migrants in Libya.
 
Following the release of a CNN documentary that lifted the lid on the extent of the slave trade in the post-Gaddafi Libya, the international community has called upon Tripoli to take urgent action against human traffickers.

21st Century Libya: ‘African Migrants Being Sold as Goods’ in Capital City
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201711221059338713-libya-slave-trade-cnn-un/

Going undercover to a slave auction, CNN journalists exposed the grim world of slave traders, who operate with seeming impunity in Libya’s capital, Tripoli, selling people for as little as $400.

The revelations shed light on the realities of the post-Gaddafi Libya, where political weakness of the local government, economic stagnation, and the presence of illegal armed groups have put migrants, who come predominantly from Western and Central Africa, in grave danger.

After its release, the report sent major shockwaves around the world, prompting the international community to call for urgent action against the traders and pressing the Libyan government to double down in its efforts to combat the rampant human trafficking that has plagued the country ever since the Arab spring.

This Tuesday, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 2388, affirming its commitment to fighting illegal human smuggling and urged national governments to punish those responsible.

In a public statement, UN Secretary-General António Guterres expressed his shock at the extent of the slave trade in Libya and declared that “slavery and other such egregious abuses of human rights have no place in the 21st century.”

“In recent days we have all been horrified by images of African migrants being sold as 'goods' in Libya.”

“It is our collective responsibility to stop these crimes”, the Secretary-General added.

His views were echoed by the leaders of African-led international organizations.

For instance, Chairman of African Union Alpha Conde went on record to condemn the situation in Libya.

“On behalf of the African Union, I express my outrage at the despicable trade of migrants currently taking place in Libya and I strongly condemn the practice of another age”.

Similarly, President of the Economic Community of West African States Marcel Alain de Souza blasted human traffickers and urged greater coordination on the international level to effectively tackle the slave trade.

“What occurs is utterly dreadful. […] Such acts, as you know, occur in Libya, where humans are sold as slaves at public auctions.”

“This occurred in the past centuries, but it was beyond our imagination that such practices can be encountered today: people are sold, so that they work in the fields”, said de Souza at a press conference in Tunis.

“We must fight against such crimes and unite in our effort to stop them”, he added.

Other African states took an even harder line with regards to Libyan government’s supposed tolerance of slave trade.

For example, the West African nation of Burkina Faso recalled its ambassador from Libya in protest and expressed its ‘indignation at … the images of the slave trade’ to Tripoli’s envoy.

Libyan government fired back by arguing that it cannot solve the global problem alone and other countries should come to its aid in resolving the crisis.

However, Tripoli caved in to public pressure and announced that it will open an investigation into “these inhuman acts”.

Nevertheless, this was insufficient to dampen the public outcry over the alleged inability and unwillingness of the local government to combat the slave trade.

Last Saturday, over a thousand people staged a peaceful protest near the Libyan embassy in Paris, calling for further action on the part of Tripoli.

Speaking to Sputnik, one of the protestors said that “ever since Gaddafi’s downfall, Libya has become a major destination of migrants due to the general chaos in the country”.

“Migrants are being hunted by the local militias and the Libyan authorities pretend that they are not aware of the situation”.

“But of course they know, they themselves engage in those activities!”


The report of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) showed that there are slave markets in Northern Africa, in which hundreds of African migrants and refugees bound for Libya are being sold.

IOM Reveals Slave Markets Operate in Southwestern Libya
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201704111052528567-iom-libya-slave-market/

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported on Tuesday about the existence of slave markets in Northern Africa, in which hundreds of African migrants and refugees bound for Libya are being sold.

The report emerged amid the rescue of a number of sub-Saharan migrants after they had been sold and held captive for months in slave markets in Sabha in southwestern Libya.

"Over the past few days, I have discussed these stories with several who told me horrible stories. They all confirmed the risks of been sold as slaves in squares or garages in Sabha, either by their drivers or by locals who recruit the migrants for daily jobs in town, often in construction, and later, instead of paying them, sell their victims to new buyers. Some migrants – mostly Nigerians, Ghanaians and Gambians – are forced to work for the kidnappers/slave traders as guards in the ransom houses or in the ‘market’ itself," an IOM Niger staffer said as quoted in the report.

The African captives, in particular, are being forced to call their relatives and request that they pay for their release, the IOM said citing a witness.

According to the IOM, the staff in Libya has managed to gain access to several detention centers where migrants who fall into the hands of smugglers face systematic malnutrition, sexual abuse and even murder.

Lybia serves as one of the main transit points for African migrants seeking passage to Europe to escape violence and poverty in their native homelands.


People for sale - Where lives are auctioned for $400 (Video)
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/libya-migrant-auctions/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2017/11/13/libya-migrant-slave-auction-lon-orig-md-ejk.cnn (6:49 min.)

Tripoli, Libya (CNN) -- "Eight hundred," says the auctioneer. "900 ... 1,000 ... 1,100 ..." Sold. For 1,200 Libyan dinars -- the equivalent of $800.

Not a used car, a piece of land, or an item of furniture. Not "merchandise" at all, but two human beings.

One of the unidentified men being sold in the grainy cell phone video obtained by CNN is Nigerian. He appears to be in his twenties and is wearing a pale shirt and sweatpants.

He has been offered up for sale as one of a group of "big strong boys for farm work," according to the auctioneer, who remains off camera. Only his hand -- resting proprietorially on the man's shoulder -- is visible in the brief clip.


After seeing footage of this slave auction, CNN worked to verify its authenticity and traveled to Libya to investigate further.

Carrying concealed cameras into a property outside the capital of Tripoli last month, we witness a dozen people go "under the hammer" in the space of six or seven minutes.

"Does anybody need a digger? This is a digger, a big strong man, he'll dig," the salesman, dressed in camouflage gear, says. "What am I bid, what am I bid?"

Buyers raise their hands as the price rises, "500, 550, 600, 650 ..." Within minutes it is all over and the men, utterly resigned to their fate, are being handed over to their new "masters."

After the auction, we met two of the men who had been sold. They were so traumatized by what they'd been through that they could not speak, and so scared that they were suspicious of everyone they met.

Crackdown on smugglers - Each year, tens of thousands of people pour across Libya's borders. They're refugees fleeing conflict or economic migrants in search of better opportunities in Europe.

Most have sold everything they own to finance the journey through Libya to the coast and the gateway to the Mediterranean.

But a recent clampdown by the Libyan coastguard means fewer boats are making it out to sea, leaving the smugglers with a backlog of would-be passengers on their hands.

So the smugglers become masters, the migrants and refugees become slaves.

The evidence filmed by CNN has now been handed over to the Libyan authorities, who have promised to launch an investigation.

First Lieutenant Naser Hazam of the government's Anti-Illegal Immigration Agency in Tripoli told CNN that although he had not witnessed a slave auction, he acknowledged that organized gangs are operating smuggling rings in the country.

"They fill a boat with 100 people, those people may or may not make it," Hazam says. "(The smuggler) does not care as long as he gets the money, and the migrant may get to Europe or die at sea."

"The situation is dire," Mohammed Abdiker, the director of operation and emergencies for the International Organization for Migration, said in a statement after returning from Tripoli in April. "Some reports are truly horrifying and the latest reports of 'slave markets' for migrants can be added to a long list of outrages."

The auctions take place in a seemingly normal town in Libya filled with people leading regular lives. Children play in the street; people go to work, talk to friends and cook dinners for their families.

But inside the slave auctions it's like we've stepped back in time. The only thing missing is the shackles around the migrants' wrists and ankles.

Deportation 'back to square one' - Anes Alazabi is a supervisor at a detention center in Tripoli for migrants that are due to be deported. He says he's heard "a lot of stories" about the abuse carried out by smugglers.

"I'm suffering for them. What I have seen here daily, believe me, it makes me feel pain for them," he says. "Every day I can hear a new story from people. You have to listen to all of them. It's their right to deliver their voices."

One of the detained migrants, a young man named Victory, says he was sold at a slave auction. Tired of the rampant corruption in Nigeria's Edo state, the 21-year-old fled home and spent a year and four months -- and his life savings -- trying to reach Europe.

He made it as far as Libya, where he says he and other would-be migrants were held in grim living conditions, deprived of food, abused and mistreated by their captors.

"If you look at most of the people here, if you check your bodies, you see the marks. They are beaten, mutilated."

When his funds ran out, Victory was sold as a day laborer by his smugglers, who told him that the profit made from the transactions would serve to reduce his debt. But after weeks of being forced to work, Victory was told the money he'd been bought for wasn't enough. He was returned to his smugglers, only to be re-sold several more times.

The smugglers also demanded ransom payments from Victory's family before eventually releasing him.

"I spent a million-plus [Nigerian naira, or $2,780]," he tells CNN from the detention center, where he is waiting to be sent back to Nigeria. "My mother even went to a couple villages, borrowing money from different couriers to save my life."

As the route through north Africa becomes increasingly fraught, many migrants have relinquished their dreams of ever reaching European shores. This year, more than 8,800 individuals have opted to voluntarily return home on repatriation flights organized by the IOM.

Opinion: Abuse of migrants in Libya is a blot on world's conscience

While many of his friends from Nigeria have made it to Europe, Victory is resigned to returning home empty-handed.

"I could not make it, but I thank God for the life of those that make it," he says.

"I'm not happy," he adds. "I go back and start back from square one. It's very painful. Very painful."
 
Following the release of a CNN documentary that lifted the lid on the extent of the slave trade in the post-Gaddafi Libya, the international community has called upon Tripoli to take urgent action against human traffickers.

21st Century Libya: ‘African Migrants Being Sold as Goods’ in Capital City
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201711221059338713-libya-slave-trade-cnn-un/

Going undercover to a slave auction, CNN journalists exposed the grim world of slave traders, who operate with seeming impunity in Libya’s capital, Tripoli, selling people for as little as $400.

You sure do notice when things break down, or more to the point, are broken down, by these these psychopaths, and their wars etc., that it always reverts to pretty much a pure STS scenario. Suffering, violence, human trafficking, organ harvesting...

And it is all done under the guise of humanitarian interventions.

It is always possible that that is what they have planned for the rest of us when the SHTF. So always good to stay vigilant and keep your eye on the prize. OSIT
 
H2O said:
Following the release of a CNN documentary that lifted the lid on the extent of the slave trade in the post-Gaddafi Libya, the international community has called upon Tripoli to take urgent action against human traffickers.

21st Century Libya: ‘African Migrants Being Sold as Goods’ in Capital City
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201711221059338713-libya-slave-trade-cnn-un/

Going undercover to a slave auction, CNN journalists exposed the grim world of slave traders, who operate with seeming impunity in Libya’s capital, Tripoli, selling people for as little as $400.

You sure do notice when things break down, or more to the point, are broken down, by these psychopaths, and their wars etc., that it always reverts to pretty much a pure STS scenario. Suffering, violence, human trafficking, organ harvesting...

And it is all done under the guise of humanitarian interventions.

It is always possible that that is what they have planned for the rest of us when the SHTF. So always good to stay vigilant and keep your eye on the prize. OSIT

When we, as a Species, continue down the slippery slopes of deep degradation (planet wise) to the lowest levels of primitive behaviors, where the Animal Kingdom remains more organized and "civilized" ... we're doomed as a Species? If you give it considerable thought, we are "all slaves" in it's numerous applications, subjected to the demands of "a select few self appointed Generational Master's." These parasites have been allowed to acquire more power, wealth and dominance, due to our own blind ignorance. Each generation has brought forth those, who have been able to peer through the veil and see the horror on the other side but their numbers were few and their warnings ignored and cast aside. As our World continues to deteriorate in a downward spiral, more are beginning "to wake up" to the true horror of our condition and for many, how - we, ourselves have contributed to our own demise, through our lack of understanding and the knowledge needed to elicit change.

Gaddafi was a rare individual, a visionary of sorts, who was able to reverse the downward trend and set a template for other Nations to follow. Gaddafi even forewarned and predicted what would befall Libya, if he was "suddenly removed". True to his word, everything he predicted has come to pass, including open slavery.

Today, in the U.S., we celebrated a traditional "Thanksgiving." For many, it's true meaning has been lost over time. Now, it's "that day" before Black Friday. We have become "slaves" to consumerism but has slavery, in one form or another, been ingrained in our social fabric from the beginning? Looking back to our "founding Father's" a high percentage were slave owners and traders.

How many of America's founding fathers were slave owners?
https://www.quora.com/How-many-of-Americas-founding-fathers-were-slave-owners

Of the 55 delegates to the Constitutional Convention, 49% owned slaves.

The slave owners were:

1.Richard Bassett (DE)
2.Jacob Broom (DE)
3.John Dickinson (DE)
4.George Read (DE)
5.William Houstoun (GA)
6.William Few (GA)
7.William Samuel Johnson (CT)
8.Daniel Carroll (MD)
9.Luther Martin (MD)
10.John Francis Mercer (MD)
11.Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer (MD)
12.William Livingston (NJ)
13.William Blount (NC)
14.William Richardson Davie (NC)
15.Alexander Martin (NC)
16.Richard Dobbs Spaight (NC)
17.Pierce Butler (SC)
18.Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (SC)
19.Charles Pinckney (SC)
20.John Rutledge (SC)
21.John Blair (VA)
22.James Madison (VA)
23.George Mason (VA)
24.Edmund Randolph (VA)
25.George Washington (VA)
26.George Wythe (VA)
27.Robert Morris (PA)

There are borderline cases among the above.

Robert Morris did not personally own slaves but did own a slave ship and invested in plantations using slaves. I've listed him as a slave owner since he was a direct participant in slavery and the slave trade.

Some slave owners emancipated their slaves (Richard Bassett and John Dickinson). Other slave owners opposed slavery and supported abolition (Jacob Broom and William Samuel Johnson). Other slave owners opposed the slave trade if not slavery itself.

Of the 26 slave owners, 19 owned multiple slaves and relied on slave labor for their livelihood.

In the Comment section:

*** Historians have accepted the following seven men as the key founding fathers: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, John Jay, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin became and abolitionist and freed his slaves. Alexander Hamilton was an abolitionist as well. He grew up around other wealthy whites, but his family suffered financial problems and then his father abandoned the family, so he didn't have the money to afford to be a slave owner. However, if he felt slavery would benefit what was best for the country, he would support it over his stance as an abolitionist.

Thomas Jefferson was the worst of all. Go to this site and you will read some interesting facts about him: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/is.... Yeah, this is the guy who wrote "all men are created equal". He inherited slaves, he multiplied his slaves and not until him and the other founding fathers died did their slaves achieve freedom.

*** It depends on how you define “founding father.” If the definition includes all of the signatories to the Declaration of Independence, then the percentage of slave owners is much higher. About 70% of the signatories owned slaves.

As an aside, ownership of slaves in all states was rare. Only a select few could afford a slave, and if a family did own a slave, it was usually one or two house servants. Still rarer were families who owned plantations where large numbers of slaves were utilized.
 
The civil war initiated in Libya by NATO and its allies has been going on for more than six years. Since it started, the sustainable developing state transformed into a territory torn by various groups including ISIS.

US and EU to ‘colonize’ Libya Nov 23, 2017
https://www.newsghana.com.gh/us-and-eu-to-colonize-libya/

A real fight against the terrorists and armed militants, however, began with the ascend of the Libyan National Army commander Field Marshal Halif Haftar who united those indifferent to the future of their country. Due to his actions, Libya’s second largest city of Benghazi, the strategically important Mediterranean town of Ras Lanuf, and the port of Al-Sidr were liberated. Meanwhile Haftar’s achievements are a reason for the western leaders’ concern as if he comes to power all their ‘Libyan’ plans shall fail. What are these plans?

First, according to the leaked emails of Hillary Clinton, who was Secretary of State when the revolution started, one of the main incentives for the intervention were vast oil reserves. The West feared that Muammar Qaddafi would become a powerful African leader capable of holding out against the pressure of the U.S. and its regional allies. Obviously, Washington still intends to replace toppled Qaddafi with a loyal politician and plunder the resources by opening the country to oil and gas companies.

But it’s not only about oil. The leaked documents show that in 2011, Libya possessed outstanding gold and silver reserves. Using them, the government could create a new African currency to replace euro and dollar. Clearly, Qaddafi’s plans were in conflict with the interests of European leaders, France in particular. According to Vice, this was one of the main reasons why the then French President Nicolas Sarkozy opted in to the invasion. Curiously enough, most part of the gold disappeared.

In fact, before the 2011 events some European leaders maintained great personal relations with Muammar Qaddafi. Back in 2007, Sarkozy received 50 billion euro from him to support the presidential campaign and win the elections eventually. The French president never repaid. The former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi publicly claimed they were friends with Qaddafi, and several months before the revolution invited the latter to Rome where they celebrated the 4th anniversary of the treaty on friendship and cooperation between the two countries.

Before plundering Libya and bringing it to ruin, western politicians attempted to blunt the Libyan leader’s vigilance to borrow as much as possible and to carry out a surprising assault on the unsuspecting ally without paying off their debts.

For the West, the intervention was some kind of a ‘crusade’. To impede an emerging regional leader and exploit the resources of a foreign state, America and its European allies provoked a war that lead to the death of tens of thousands of civilians as it was in Iraq and is now happening in Syria.

Today, however, politicians lay the blame on one another. In 2016, Hillary Clinton shifted the blame for the mess in Libya and eventually the murder of the U.S. ambassador to the country in Benghazi in 2012. ‘The decision was the president’s,’ she said during the Democratic debates noting she had been responsible for intelligence only. Back in 2013, Silvio Berlusconi claimed that Sarkozy initiated the intervention adding that he wanted to resign after the invasion.

This proves one more time that the original plan of western countries failed. The attack on Libya shall remain one of the most serious mistakes in NATO history. However, the West is still waiting for a moment to completely devastate the country and capture its’ yet abundant resources.
 
angelburst29 said:
Following the release of a CNN documentary that lifted the lid on the extent of the slave trade in the post-Gaddafi Libya, the international community has called upon Tripoli to take urgent action against human traffickers.

21st Century Libya: ‘African Migrants Being Sold as Goods’ in Capital City
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201711221059338713-libya-slave-trade-cnn-un/

IOM Reveals Slave Markets Operate in Southwestern Libya
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201704111052528567-iom-libya-slave-market/

People for sale - Where lives are auctioned for $400 (Video)
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/libya-migrant-auctions/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2017/11/13/libya-migrant-slave-auction-lon-orig-md-ejk.cnn (6:49 min.)

UN Chief: Libya Slave Auctions Possible Crime against Humanity
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960830000821

"Libyan slave trade" story is fake news
https://www.sott.net/article/369192-Libyan-slave-trade-story-is-fake-news

Just so every person reading this article understands clearly...

"THE NEWS ABOUT SLAVERY IN LIBYA IS A LIE"


The Great Tribes of Libya have confirmed to me personally that the slavery stories out of Libya are fake. The photos and videos are old and re-edited. I know this is true because I have some of the photos and videos in my files from 2011. Since the Zionists do not have Ghadafi to slander, they are now attempting to gin up hatred for Libya again - accusing the Libyans of doing what their own mercenaries did in 2011.

In the 2011 invasion and destruction of Libya by the New World Order (NWO) Zionists, over 250,000 radical Islamic mercenaries were brought into Libya by Clinton and Obama using NATO as their proxy army to assist in the heinous crimes committed against the innocent Libyan people. At the top of the list of crimes against humanity was the attempt to ethnically cleanse Libya of all dark skinned people. The criminal mercenaries supported by Clinton/Obama/McCain/Sarkozy and others made no bones about their intentions and it was reported in a number of publications.

In Libya, about 30% of the population is dark skinned. These are Libyan citizens, not mercenaries and not refugees. During the 2011 illegal attack on Libya, 5 black Libyan cities were raised to the ground by NATO mercenaries. The people who lived in those cities were either slaughtered or forced to live horrendous lives in miserable makeshift camps. I have proof of this, I have photos of the mass graves of mostly black bodies in Libya. There are over 128 of these mass graves. The criminals responsible for this are the UN, the Western Imperialists (US, UK, France and others that joined the death bombings of innocents in 2011), Israel, the Saudi Arabian Wahabists, Qatar and Turkey. But the criminals who are at the top are the Khazarian Mafia, the evil Rothschild Banksters that control the military industrial complex using their fiat toilet paper and reaping benefits from both sides of any conflict.

In Libya today, the people suffer terribly at the hands of the UN Zionist puppets. These criminals have destroyed Libya beyond the bombing and destruction of 2011. They have stolen Libyan resources, they have destroyed (intentionally) the value of the Libyan dinar (before 2011 was 1.35 dinar for 1 US dollar, now it is 8 dinars for 1 US dollar). There is little food, no medicine, water is restricted, electricity is always short, no jobs, armed thugs roam the streets. The UN puppet government that was forced upon Libya without a vote and without the support of the Libyan people, does absolutely nothing to help the people. There is no governing, there is only theft. Recently, Serraj, the criminal head of the UN puppets stole 50 million dinars and gave it to a terrorist militia leader, bribing him to attack the Wershaffana tribe in Tripoli. The Wershaffana tribe is the 2nd largest tribe in Libya and holds the gates to Tripoli. The UN puppets see themselves losing so they take desperate measures, all the while the Libyan people continue to suffer.

Even still these Zionist puppets are losing. The Libyan tribes (representing all Libyans) continue to gain ground against the hated illegal occupiers of their country.

There is another big problem that the Zionists have in Libya. Looming in the very near future is a countrywide election to elect a new leader and a new government by the people. There is not a chance in hell that any puppet, any terrorist, any rat Libyan traitor or any radical Islamist will be elected. That throws out all of the Zionists, all of the illegal occupiers and hands Libya back to her people. This event will not be tolerated by the Zionists, they must maintain their illegal control of Libya and her assets. What to do? The same answer as always a "false flag" LIE to promote their agenda. That lie was put out by CNN this week and picked up by all the Zionist controlled media mafia. "Slave traders in Libya"- their new lie fomenting (they hope) a required invasion of Libya - again.

Meanwhile, the CIA is not finished, of course. They are promoting the slave trade mantra and providing old videos and photos, but they also have their long time stooge, Khalifa Haftar, on the ground in Libya attempting to promote himself into a leadership position in Libya. Haftar is a Libyan rat TRAITOR to his country. He turned against his country during the Chad wars and when Chad was losing he was spirited out of Africa by the CIA along with about 30 of his treasonous comrades to Langley, VA., where he resided for more than 30 years supported and owned by the CIA. In 2011 he as dropped into Libya to lead the mercenaries sent in to destroy Libya. Sometime in 2012, Khalifa Haftar had a change of heart and said he wanted to help clean Libya of the mercenaries he had been leading. No one believes this, Haftar was just complying with the orders of his CIA masters. He wormed his way into the Libyan National Army and bribed enough rats inside the House of Representatives to appoint him leader of the LNA. Even still he has no support in Libya. Recently, his true colors have begun to show again, 30+ dead Libyans found outside of Benghazi along the rode had been prisoners of Haftar. He assassinated all of them. He has also hired a lobby group in Washington DC to promote his soon to be (in his dreams) leader of Libya.

The latest Haftar trick is a petition (to make him leader) that he is promoting all over Benghazi. He is attempting to get enough signatures to show that he should be leader. But he is having trouble getting signatures so he is offering money if you sign. You have to wonder how Haftar has enough money to pay for signatures, to travel all over the world, to purchase his arms (no one else in Libya can get arms), to can hire a lobby group in DC for $20,000 per month, etc. The Libyans have no ability to pay a salary big enough to support all of his activities. It is incredibly obvious that the CIA is funding him and giving him orders. What is sad is the exploitation of the suffering Libyan people, having all their lives ruined by the Zionists, just to have those same Zionists offer them $ to do their bidding. The Zionists create a situation so horrible that in order to survive they turn brother against brother.

Still the Libyan tribes fight on, they are moving ahead and they know that in the end they will have their country back. The dark state, the cabal, the Khazarian mafia, whatever you want to call it, cannot penetrate the tribal structure. They are like a family and they know if one of their members has been compromised. We were told by the DIA agent in our home that never in the history of the world has any intelligence group penetrated the tribes in any country. This is the power of the Libyan Tribes, the Egyptian tribes, the Syrian tribes, etc. They will not be broken, they have existed for over 8000 years, they will prevail.
 
angelburst29 said:
21st Century Libya: ‘African Migrants Being Sold as Goods’ in Capital City
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201711221059338713-libya-slave-trade-cnn-un/

IOM Reveals Slave Markets Operate in Southwestern Libya
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201704111052528567-iom-libya-slave-market/

People for sale - Where lives are auctioned for $400 (Video)
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/libya-migrant-auctions/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2017/11/13/libya-migrant-slave-auction-lon-orig-md-ejk.cnn (6:49 min.)

UN Chief: Libya Slave Auctions Possible Crime against Humanity
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960830000821

"Libyan slave trade" story is fake news
https://www.sott.net/article/369192-Libyan-slave-trade-story-is-fake-news

Just so every person reading this article understands clearly...

"THE NEWS ABOUT SLAVERY IN LIBYA IS A LIE"


The Great Tribes of Libya have confirmed to me personally that the slavery stories out of Libya are fake. The photos and videos are old and re-edited. I know this is true because I have some of the photos and videos in my files from 2011. Since the Zionists do not have Ghadafi to slander, they are now attempting to gin up hatred for Libya again - accusing the Libyans of doing what their own mercenaries did in 2011.

I'm still coming across stories on the Libyan Slave Trade?

Journalist: US Media Fret Over Libyan Slave Markets, Ignore NATO’s Culpability 29.11.2017
https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201711291059521361-libya-slave-trade-nato-culpable/

A shocking expose on the refugee slave trade in Libya has become the story of the day as both mainstream and alternative outlets rush to cover the open-air slave markets where human beings are bought and sold for a few hundred American dollars.


Hundreds of African community members in Berlin rallied outside the Libyan Embassy on Saturday to protest against slavery in Libya.

Hundreds protest Libya slave auctions in Germany 25/11/2017 (Video)
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/hundreds-protest-libya-slave-auctions-germany/

The demonstrators demanded an end to enslavement, torture, rape and murder of black people in the north African country.

An Ethiopian demonstrator, Gizaw, said, “to stop this situation German [sic] has to intervene, EU has to intervene, England, Britain has to intervene and stop financing these criminals in Libya.”

The protest was prompted by last week’s footage of sub-Saharan Africans being sold at slave auctions for as little as $400 (€335). People smugglers are targeting migrants en route to Europe.

After widespread outrage, the Libyan Government of National Accord opened an investigation into possible human rights violations.


Twenty-first century slave markets. Human beings sold for a few hundred dollars. Massive protests throughout the world.

Media Erase NATO Role in Bringing Slave Markets to Libya 28 November 2017
https://www.globalresearch.ca/media-erase-nato-role-in-bringing-slave-markets-to-libya/5620710

The American and British media have awakened to the grim reality in Libya, where African refugees are for sale in open-air slave markets. Yet a crucial detail in this scandal has been downplayed or even ignored in many corporate media reports: the role of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in bringing slavery to the North African nation.

In March 2011, NATO launched a war in Libya expressly aimed at toppling the government of longtime leader Muammar Qadhafi. The US and its allies flew some 26,000 sorties over Libya and launched hundreds of cruise missiles, destroying the government’s ability to resist rebel forces.

US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, along with their European counterparts, insisted the military intervention was being carried out for humanitarian reasons. But political scientist Micah Zenko (Foreign Policy, 3/22/16) used NATO’s own materials to show how “the Libyan intervention was about regime change from the very start.”

NATO supported an array of rebel groups fighting on the ground in Libya, many of which were dominated by Islamist extremists and harbored violently racist views. Militants in the NATO-backed rebel stronghold of Misrata even referred to themselves in 2011 as “the brigade for purging slaves, black skin”—an eerie foreshadowing of the horrors that were to come.

The war ended in October 2011. US and European aircraft attacked Qadhafi’s convoy, and he was brutally murdered by extremist rebels—sodomized with a bayonet. Secretary Clinton, who played a decisive role in the war, declared live on CBS News (10/20/11), “We came, we saw, he died!” The Libyan government dissolved soon after.

In the six years since, Libya has been roiled by chaos and bloodshed. Multiple would-be governments are competing for control of the oil-rich country, and in some areas there is still no functioning central authority. Many thousands of people have died, although the true numbers are impossible to verify. Millions of Libyans have been displaced—a staggering number, nearly one-third of the population, had fled to neighboring Tunisia by 2014.

Corporate media, however, have largely forgotten about the key role NATO played in destroying Libya’s government, destabilizing the country and empowering human traffickers.

Moreover, even the few news reports that do acknowledge NATO’s complicity in the chaos in Libya do not go a step further and detail the well-documented, violent racism of the NATO-backed Libyan rebels who ushered in slavery after ethnically cleansing and committing brutal crimes against black Libyans.

O NATO, Where Art Thou? CNN (11/14/17) published an explosive story in mid-November that offered a firsthand look at the slave trade in Libya. The media network obtained terrifying video that shows young African refugees being auctioned, “big strong boys for farm work,” sold for as little as $400.

The flashy CNN multimedia report included bonuses galore: two videos, two animated gifs, two photos and a chart. But something was missing: The 1,000-word story made no mention of NATO, or the 2011 war that destroyed Libya’s government, or Muammar Qadhafi, or any kind of historical and political context whatsoever.

Despite these huge flaws, the CNN report was widely celebrated, and made an impact in a corporate media apparatus that otherwise cares little about North Africa. A flurry of media reports followed. These stories overwhelmingly spoke of slavery in Libya as an apolitical and timeless human rights issue, not as a political problem rooted in very recent history.

In subsequent stories, when Libyan and United Nations officials announced they would launch an investigation into the slave auctions, CNN (11/17/17, 11/20/17) again failed to mention the 2011 war, let alone NATO’s role in it.

One CNN report (11/21/17) on a UN Security Council meeting noted, “Ambassadors from Senegal to Sweden also blamed trafficking’s root causes: unstable countries, poverty, profits from slave trading and lack of legal enforcement.” But it failed to explain why Libya is unstable.

Another 1,200-word CNN follow-up article (11/23/17) was just as obfuscatory. It was only in the 35th paragraph of this 36-graf story that a Human Rights Watch researcher noted, “Libyan interim authorities have been dragging their feet on virtually all investigations they supposedly started, yet never concluded, since the 2011 uprising.” NATO’s leadership in this 2011 uprising was, however, ignored.

An Agence France-Presse news wire that was published by Voice of America (11/17/17) and other websites similarly failed to provide any historical context for the political situation in Libya. “Testimony collected by AFP in recent years has revealed a litany of rights abuses at the hands of gang leaders, human traffickers and the Libyan security forces,” the article said, but it did not recount anything that happened before 2017.

Reports by the BBC (11/18/17), the New York Times (11/20/17), Deutsche Welle (reprinted by USA Today, 11/23/17) and the Associated Press (reprinted by the Washington Post, 11/23/17) also failed to mention the 2011 war, let alone NATO’s role in it.

A New York Times story (11/19/17) was exceptional in connecting the rise in Libyan slavery to Muammar Qadhafi’s overthrow–yet it failed to mention the US’s leading role in that overthrow.

Another New York Times story (11/19/17) did provide a bit of context:

Since the Arab Spring uprising of 2011 ended the brutal rule of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, Libya’s coast has became a hub for human trafficking and smuggling. That has fueled the illegal migration crisis that Europe has been scrambling to contain since 2014. Libya, which slid into chaos and civil war after the revolt, is now divided among three main factions.

Yet the Times still erased NATO’s key place in this uprising of 2011.

In an account of the large protests that erupted outside Libyan embassies in Europe and Africa in response to reports of slave auctions, Reuters (11/20/17) indicated, “Six years after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi, Libya is still a lawless state where armed groups compete for land and resources and people-smuggling networks operate with impunity.” But it did not provide any more information about how Qadhafi was toppled.

A report in the Huffington Post (11/22/17), later republished by AOL (11/27/17), did concede that Libya is “one of the world’s most unstable [sic], mired in conflict since dictator Muammar Gaddafi was ousted and killed in 2011.” It made no mention of NATO’s leadership in that ousting and killing.

Part of the problem has been the unwillingness of international organizations to point out the responsibility of powerful Western governments. In his statement on the reports of slavery in Libya, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres (11/20/17) did not mention anything about what has happened politically inside the North African nation in the past six years. The UN News Centre report (11/20/17) on Guterres’ comments was just as contextless and uninformative, as was the press release (11/21/17) on the issue from the International Organization for Migration.

Al Jazeera (11/26/17) did cite an IOM official who suggested, in Al Jazeera‘s words, that “the international community should pay more attention to post-Gaddafi Libya.” But the media outlet provided no context as to how Libya became post-Qadhafi in the first place. In fact, Al Jazeera‘s source went out of his way to make the issue apolitical: “Modern-day slavery is widespread around the world and Libya is by no means unique.”

While it is true that slavery and human trafficking happen in other countries, this widespread media narrative depoliticizes the problem in Libya, which has its roots in explicit political decisions made by governments and their leaders: namely, the choice to overthrow Libya’s stable government, turning the oil-rich North African nation into a failed state ruled by competing warlords and militias, some of which are involved in and profit from slavery and trafficking.

Selective Attention to NATO’s Aftermath in Libya - Corporate media reporting on Libya largely mirrors reporting on Yemen (FAIR.org, 11/20/17, 8/31/17, 2/27/17), Syria (FAIR.org, 4/7/17, 9/5/15) and beyond: The role of the US government and its allies in creating chaos abroad is minimized, if not outright ignored.

Strikingly, one of the only exceptions to this overwhelming media trend came back in April from, of all places, the New York Times editorial board.
The Times editorial (4/14/17) did not mince words, directly linking the US-backed military operation to the ongoing catastrophe:

None of this would be possible if not for the political chaos in Libya since the civil war in 2011, when — with the involvement of a NATO coalition that included the United States — Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi was toppled. Migrants have become the gold that finances Libya’s warring factions.

This is a significant reversal. Immediately after NATO launched its war in Libya in March 2011, the Times editorial board (3/21/11) cheered on the bombing, effusing, “Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi has long been a thug and a murderer who has never paid for his many crimes.” It waxed poetic on the “extraordinary,” “astonishing” military intervention, and hoped for Qadhafi’s imminent downfall.

The April 2017 Times editorial stopped far short of a being a mea culpa, yet it was still a rare admission of truth.

At the time this surprisingly honest editorial was written, there had briefly been a bit of media attention to Libya. The International Organization for Migration had just conducted an investigation into slavery in post–regime change Libya, leading to a string of news reports in the Guardian (4/10/17) and elsewhere. Practically as soon as this appalling story got the interest of corporate media, however, it quickly died out. Attention shifted back to Russia, North Korea and the bogeymen of the day.

This Guardian piece (4/10/17) cites “the overthrow of autocratic leader Muammar Qadhafi,” but does not say that the US (or Britain) was instrumental in overthrowing him.

When Western governments were hoping to militarily intervene in the country in the lead-up to March 19, 2011, there was a constant torrent of media reports on the evils of Qadhafi and his government—including a healthy dose of fake news (Salon, 9/16/16) Major newspapers staunchly supported the NATO intervention, and made no secret of their pro-war editorial lines.

When the US government and its allies were preparing for war, the corporate media apparatus did what it does best, and helped sell yet another military intervention to the public.

In the years since, on the other hand, there has been exponentially less interest in the disastrous aftermath of that NATO war. There will be short spikes of interest, as there was in early 2017. The most recent spurt of press coverage was inspired by the publication of CNN‘s shocking video footage.
But the coverage invariably rapidly peaks and goes away.

The Extreme Racism of Libyan Rebels - The catastrophe Libya might endure after the collapse of its state had been predictable at the time. Qadhafi himself had warned NATO member states, while they were waging war against him, that they were going to unleash chaos throughout the region. Yet Western leaders—Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in the US, David Cameron in the UK, Nicolas Sarkozy in France, Stephen Harper in Canada—ignored Qadhafi’s admonition and violently toppled his government.

Even from the small number of media reports on slavery in Libya that do manage to acknowledge NATO’s responsibility for destabilizing the country, nevertheless, something is still missing.

Looking back at Libya’s anti-Qadhafi rebels, both during and after the 2011 war, it is very clear that hardline anti-black racism was widespread in the NATO-backed opposition. A 2016 investigation by the British House of Common’s Foreign Affairs Committee (Salon, 9/16/16) acknowledged that “militant Islamist militias played a critical role in the rebellion from February 2011 onwards.” But many rebels were not just fundamentalist; they were also violently racist.

It is unfortunately no surprise that these extremist Libyan militants later enslaved African refugees and migrants: They were hinting at it from the very beginning.

Most American and European media coverage at the time of NATO’s military intervention was decidedly pro-rebel. When reporters got on the ground, however, they began publishing a few more nuanced pieces that hinted at the reality of the opposition. These were insignificant in number, but they are enlightening and worth revisiting.

Three months into the NATO war, in June 2011, the Wall Street Journal‘s Sam Dagher (6/21/11) reported from Misrata, Libya’s third-largest city and a major hub for the opposition, where he noted he saw rebel slogans like “the brigade for purging slaves, black skin.”

Dahger indicated that the rebel stronghold of Misrata was dominated by “tightly knit white merchant families,” whereas “the south of the country, which is predominantly black, mainly backs Col. Gadhafi.”

Other graffiti in Misrata read “Traitors keep out.” By “traitors,” rebels were referring to Libyans from the town of Tawergha, which the Journal explained is “inhabited mostly by black Libyans, a legacy of its 19th-century origins as a transit town in the slave trade.”

Dagher reported that some Libyan rebel leaders were “calling for the expulsion of Tawerghans from the area” and “banning Tawergha natives from ever working, living or sending their children to schools in Misrata.” He added that predominately Tawergha neighborhoods in Misrata had already been emptied. Black Libyans were “gone or in hiding, fearing revenge attacks by Misratans, amid reports of bounties for their capture.”

The rebel commander Ibrahim al-Halbous told the Journal, “Tawergha no longer exists, only Misrata.”

Al-Halbous would later reappear in a report by the Sunday Telegraph (9/11/11), reiterating to the British newspaper, “Tawarga no longer exists.” (When Halbous was injured in September, the New York Times—9/20/11 —portrayed him sympathetically as a martyr in the heroic fight against Qadhafi. The Halbous brigade has in the years since become an influential militia in Libya.)

Like Dagher, the Telegraph‘s Andrew Gilligan drew attention to the slogan painted on the road between Misrata and Tawergha: “the brigade for purging slaves [and] black skin.”

Gilligan reported from Tawergha, or rather from the remnants of the majority-black town, which he noted had “been emptied of its people, vandalized and partly burned by rebel forces.” A rebel leader said of the dark-skinned residents, “We said if they didn’t go, they would be conquered and imprisoned. Every single one of them has left, and we will never allow them to come back.”

Gilligan noted “a racist undercurrent. Many Tawargas, though neither immigrants nor Gaddafi’s much-ballyhooed African mercenaries, are descended from slaves, and are darker than most Libyans.”

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization assisted these virulently racist rebels in Misrata. NATO forces frequently launched air attacks on the city. French fighter jets shot down Libyan planes over Misrata. The US and UK fired cruise missiles at Libyan government targets, and the US launched Predator drone strikes. The Canadian air force also attacked Libyan forces, pushing them out of Misrata.

In a public relations video NATO published in May 2011, early in the Libya war, the Western military alliance openly admitted that it intentionally allowed “Libyan rebels to transport arms from Benghazi to Misrata.” Political scientist Micah Zenko (Foreign Policy, 3/22/16) pointed out the implications of this video: “A NATO surface vessel stationed in the Mediterranean to enforce an arms embargo did exactly the opposite, and NATO was comfortable posting a video demonstrating its hypocrisy.”

Throughout the war and after, Libyan rebels continued carrying out racist sectarian attacks against their black compatriots. These attacks have been well documented by mainstream human rights organizations.

Human Rights Watch’s longtime executive director Kenneth Roth cheered on NATO intervention in Libya in 2011, calling the UN Security Council’s unanimous endorsement of a no-fly zone a “remarkable” confirmation of the so-called “responsibility to protect” doctrine.

Roth’s organization, however, could not ignore the crimes anti-Qadhafi militants committed against dark-skinned Libyans and migrants.

In September 2011, when the war was still ongoing, Human Rights Watch reported on Libyan rebels’ “arbitrary arrests and abuse of African migrant workers and black Libyans assumed to be [pro-Qadhafi] mercenaries.”

Then in October, the top US human rights organization noted that Libyan militias were “terrorizing the displaced residents of the nearby town of Tawergha,” the majority-black community that had been a stronghold of support for Qadhafi. “The entire town of 30,000 people is abandoned—some of it ransacked and burned—and Misrata brigade commanders say the residents of Tawergha should never return,” HRW added. Witnesses “gave credible accounts of some Misrata militias shooting unarmed Tawerghans, and of arbitrary arrests and beatings of Tawerghan detainees, in a few cases leading to death.”

In 2013, HRW reported further on the ethnic cleansing of the black community of Tawergha. The human rights organization, whose chief had so effusively supported the military intervention, wrote: “The forced displacement of roughly 40,000 people, arbitrary detentions, torture and killings are widespread, systematic and sufficiently organized to be crimes against humanity.”

These atrocities are undeniable, and they lead a path straight to the enslavement of African refugees and migrants. But to acknowledge NATO’s complicity in empowering these racist extremist militants, corporate media would have to acknowledge NATO’s role in the 2011 regime change war in Libya in the first place.
 
A quick recap of recent events in Libya ... October 20. 2017 was the sixth Anniversary of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi killed by rebels. Libyan National Army commander Field Marshal Halif Haftar has tried to stabilize Libya and is opposed to the internationally recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli. Currently there are two key powers in Libya: Government of National Unity led by Fayez Al-Sarraj in Tripoli and the House of Representatives, which is allied with the powerful military commander Khalifa Haftar.

Haftar was a close, like-minded friend and ally of the leader of the Libyan Revolution, Muammar Gaddafi, and stood alongside him in the Free Officers underground socialist group. In 1969, he participated in the overthrow of King Idris I alongside Gaddafi. Subsequently, he became the direct overseer of the majority of Libya’s military operations. In those years, he repeatedly visited the USSR, studied at one Soviet military academy, and learned Russian. He has not needed a translator at the talks in Moscow. Also, Saif Gaddafi, after his jailed release, has decided to enter Politics and help stabilize Libya.

6 Years Ago Today, the US Helped Murder Gaddafi to Stop the Creation of Gold-Backed Currency October 20, 2017
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/6-years-ago-us-killed-gaddafi-gold/

A real fight against the terrorists and armed militants, however, began with the ascend of the Libyan National Army commander Field Marshal Halif Haftar who united those indifferent to the future of their country. Due to his actions, Libya’s second largest city of Benghazi, the strategically important Mediterranean town of Ras Lanuf, and the port of Al-Sidr were liberated. Meanwhile Haftar’s achievements are a reason for the western leaders’ concern as if he comes to power all their ‘Libyan’ plans shall fail.


EXCLUSIVE: Gaddafi's Son 'Returning to Politics', 'He Will Never Leave Libya' 18.10.2017
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201710181058340834-libya-gaddafi-son-politics/

According to Khalid al Zaidi, "the current situation in Libya, the absence of dialogue and the misunderstanding of the actual state of affairs there make it
essential that Saif al-Islam Gaddafi returns to politics to try to reach a political settlement" in the country.

Mr. al Zaidi has also claimed that Saif Gaddafi is not supported by political powers, but by ordinary Libyans. "All Libyans are armed to the teeth, all tribes possess serious arsenals … Saif al-Islam will rely on the will of ordinary Libyans to take part in the fight against terror and stabilize the situation in the country." "The majority of tribes await action from Saif al-Islam. Right now he is the only hope for the country's residents."


Russia Ready to Work Closely With All Parties in Libya to Resolve Crisis 03.03.2017
https://sputniknews.com/world/201703031051231384-russia-libya-foreign-ministry/

The Russian side stressed the importance of establishing an inclusive intra-Libyan dialogue to create a unified government with the army and police force capable of ensuring security and the rule of law, to effectively counter the terrorist threat.

NATO Should Prevent Increase of Russia’s Presence in Libya – Stoltenberg October 09, 2017
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201710091058065866-nato-russia-presence-libya-stoltenberg/

NATO should not let Russia strengthen its presence in divided Libya as Moscow’s involvement in the peace settlement process in Syria has only created an "even more difficult situation," NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Monday.

"We are following closely the situation in Libya more generally. We have seen the effects of Russian presence in Syria, how that has created an even more difficult situation in Syria. Of course, we have to avoid anything similar happening in Libya. And we call on all actors, including Russia, to support the UN-led efforts and UN-recognized government [in Libya]," Stoltenberg said at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in Bucharest.

Link to original CNN "Exclusive Report" lacks "a date of publication". An article dated, Tue Nov 21, 2017, gives the first indication of when the CNN Report was released.

People for sale Where lives are auctioned for $400 NO published date.
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/libya-migrant-auctions/index.html

UN Chief: Libya Slave Auctions Possible Crime against Humanity Tue Nov 21, 2017
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960830000821

The video broadcast on CNN earlier this month, denounced by Joanne Moriarty as a fabricated lie, might be part of an elaborate scheme - to help pave the way for French President Macron and his delegation, in a planned trip to the African Nations, where Macron is scheduled to meet European and African officials at a Summit in Abidjan in Cote d'Ivoire? In his speeches, Macron relied heavily on the CNN report - to propose and seek support for his plans in setting up Military Action in Libya to deal with human traffickers. Macron's proposals, in turn, have opened the flood-gates for "Blackwaters Eric Prince's strategy" for stopping the Libyan refugee inflow into Europe by building three police bases in Libya and deploying 250 of his "foreign trainers" (similar to those he sent to Afghanistan). They would provide "leadership, intelligence, communications support, surveillance aircraft, and a couple of helicopters" to track migrant traffickers, locate their truckloads of migrants and intercept them." (Problem- reaction - solution?)

Macron Announces Plans of ‘Military Action’ in Libya Thu Nov 30, 2017
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960909000347

"We are proposing to take police and military action. We are not waging war but this is a country in a political transition," Macron said, Sputnik reported.

He told France 24 that groups of human traffickers were smuggling people from the Sahel region to the Mediterranean coast, from where they were sent on their way to Europe. Thousands have perished in the sea.

European and African officials have been meeting in Abidjan in Cote d'Ivoire to address this and other issues. Macron said he had discussed Libya action with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni.

Libya is one of the main transit countries for migrants. According to UN figures, 90 percent of migrants, who cross the Mediterranean to Europe depart from Libya. The civil war in Libya, as well as the unstable situation in the region, have brought the humanitarian situation in the country to a critical state. Over a million people are in need of humanitarian assistance in Libya.


French President Emmanuel Macron called the trafficking of migrants a “crime against humanity” on Tuesday as he began an African visit in Burkina Faso with his first major address on the continent.

Macron seeks support to rescue migrants trapped in Libya Wednesday 29 November 2017
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1200806/middle-east

Macron proposed a crackdown on human smugglers’ networks between Africa and Europe after video footage broadcast on CNN this month showed the auction and sale of migrant men as slaves in Libya. Migrants hope to survive an often deadly voyage across the Mediterranean from the chaotic nation.
Macron said he wants “Africa and Europe to help populations trapped in Libya by providing massive support to the evacuation of endangered people."
He said he will formally detail his proposal at a summit of the EU and the African Union (AU) in Ivory Coast Wednesday. The footage prompted wide spread outcry across West Africa, where many migrants pressured by climate change and high unemployment set off in search of a better life.

Already Burkina Faso’s foreign affairs minister has recalled his ambassador from Libya, calling it “unacceptable to have slaves in this 21st century.” Concerns about the treatment of migrants are expected to feature prominently at this week’s summit. Also high on the agenda is regional security, including the growing threat of extremism.

Macron is urging international support for a new military force that includes Burkina Faso and four other regional countries and is meant to counter a growing terror threat. Burkina Faso has seen two attacks on restaurants popular with foreigners, including one in August that killed 18 people.

The threat was underscored late Monday by an attempted assault on a French military vehicle just hours before Macron’s arrival. Authorities said two people on motorcycles had intended to use a grenade to attack a bus carrying French military members. The assailants missed their intended target but several people nearby were wounded, police said.

Also Tuesday, the French presidency’s spokesman said stones were thrown at a vehicle transporting members of the French delegation accompanying Macron’s visit, despite heavy security. [...] After Macron’s visit to Ivory Coast for the summit he will make a stop in Ghana before returning to France.


Emmanuel Macron's visit to Africa was tainted not only by attacks and protest on his first stop in Burkina Faso, but the president of the African nation left the room during Macron's speech at a local university in the African country.

Macron Publicly 'Humiliates' Burkina Faso President as French Leader's Africa Trip Goes Wrong Wed Nov 29, 2017
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960908000912

Meeting with the students of the University of Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso, the French leader reiterated his position that France’s paternalistic approach to the African countries should be ended. The tradition of African nations reproaching France in case if something goes wrong should also be broken, he said, adding that the students spoke to him "as if he were a president of Burkina Faso" when complaining about the poor state of the university, RT reported.

"Sometimes you talk to me like I'm still a colonial power," the French president said. "But I do not want to deal with electricity in universities in Burkina Faso," Macron added, smiling. Apparently warmed up by a mix of laughter, applause and whistling in the audience, he carried on. "It is the work of the president of Burkina Faso," he said, pointing at president Roch Marc Christian Kabore, who was listening to Macron's speech from the same stage.

At this point, Kabore suddenly stood up and left the room. "He's leaving... Stay there! So, he went to repair the air conditioning," Macron shouted after the African state leader. The video posted on Macron's Twitter account has been edited to exclude his comments addressed to Kabore.

Social media users reacted with saying the French leader "disrespected" his counterpart, having displayed "arrogance" and "immaturity." "Imagine a foreign country president having such an attitude in France and say the same thing to Macron," a Twitter user pointed out.

Hours before the French delegation arrived in Burkina Faso, two unknown hooded assailants on a motorcycle propelled a hand grenade at a bus carrying French troops. The attackers missed their intended target and wounded three civilians instead.

The French president acknowledged the incident, but tried to downplay it, shifting the focus on the persisting terrorist insurgency in the country instead of stationed French troops. “It's only a grenade, I don't forget the deaths your people had to suffer yesterday, and in the weeks and months before,” Macron said during a press conference at Burkina Faso's presidential palace.

“And they are victims of what? Not of a reaction to a visit by France's President. They are the victims of terrorism, of the deadly obscurantist terrorism against which we are all fighting with determination,” he added.

In a separate incident, the French delegation’s convoy was pelted with stones, and at least one vehicle was damaged. Macron was not in the convoy at the moment of the attack, as the president was meeting with his Burkina Faso’s counterpart Roch Marc Kabore, according to Macron's spokesman Bruno Roger-Petit.

“A vehicle from the delegation was the target of stone-throwing,” the spokesman said in a tweet. “But we’re not talking about hundreds of attackers or loads of cars destroyed.”

Students were protesting near the university where Macron was giving his speech. The rally participants chanted “Down with imperialism” and carried banners reading “French troops, out of Burkina Faso, out of Africa” and “No French bases in Burkina and Africa.”

The demonstrators tried to erect barricades on the road and set tires on fire. The riot police stepped in and deployed tear gas to disperse the crowds.

France has complicated relations with its former African colonies, which have been independent since 1960s. Their ties with the former metropole, however, were never completely severed. France has intervened military more than 30 times in the continent since the decolonization of Africa and has its troops stationed in a number of its former colonies.

Burkina Faso is not an exception, where French contingent participates in the anti-terrorism Operation Barkhane, which commenced back in 2014. On Tuesday, while responding to a question at the university why France sends more soldiers in than it receives African exchange students, the French president stated that the troops should only be “applauded” for their service.


ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast: Between 400,000 and 700,000 African migrants are living in camps in Libya, often under “inhuman” conditions, the chairman of the African Union Commission said Thursday at the close of a summit of European and African leaders.

AU estimates at least 400,000 African migrants now in Libya Thursday 30 November 2017
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1201626/middle-east

Moussa Faki Mahamat stressed the urgency of removing the thousands of migrants, including women and children, from the camps as he addressed the summit where migration was a top issue after recent footage of a migrant slave auction in Libya drew global horror and condemnation.

At least 3,800 migrants in one camp in Tripoli need to be removed as soon as possible, Mahamat said. Most of them come from West Africa. “That’s just one camp,” he said. “The Libyan government has told us there are 42,” and some contain an even larger number of migrants.

The International Organization for Migration says more than 423,000 migrants had been identified in the chaotic North African country as of last month. The majority are men from impoverished countries across sub-Saharan Africa.

The European Union and African leaders pledged Wednesday to do more to help the thousands of migrants stranded in squalid detention centers in Libya, the main jumping-off point for desperate people setting out in unseaworthy boats in search of better lives in Europe.

French President Emmanuel Macron said leaders from EU and African countries, including Libya, and the United Nations were discussing going after human traffickers with “concrete, military and police actions on the ground to trace back these networks.” “These smugglers are deeply linked to many terrorist networks and feed, sometimes finance, sometimes are the same as those who make war with us and who kill people every day in much of northern Africa,” Macron told French broadcasters France 24 and RFI. Some African nations are working to bring their citizens home.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said Wednesday that all Nigerians stranded in Libya and other parts of the world will be brought home and “rehabilitated,” calling it appalling that “some Nigerians were being sold like goats for few dollars in Libya.” (Article continues.)


Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, commander of ISIL terrorist is resurrected ... calling on his deputies and commanders to use Southern Libya as a place for recruitment.

Al-Baghdadi Attempting to Make Up for Iraq, Syria Losses in Libya Thu Nov 30, 2017
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960909000695

The Arabic edition of al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper reported on Thursday that al-Baghdadi's letters, some of them written last year and some of them in the past few weeks, indicate that the ISIL leader was after making up for his defeats in Syria and Iraq by calling on the terrorist groups' commanders and members to go to Libya.

It added that the letters written to 13 of al-Baghdadi's deputies and commanders in Libya stressed the need for them to use Southern Libya as a place for recruiting the members who have fled from the East in a bid to finally target Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria.

An Arab media outlet reported earlier this month that al-Baghdadi is still alive, adding that the terrorist group's ring leader has been sighted by eyewitnesses in one of the battlefields in Southeastern Deir Ezzur.

The Arabic-language Elam al-Harbi reported that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the commander of the ISIL terrorist group, has been sighted alive in one of the battlefields near the newly-freed town of Albu Kamal at the border with Iraq. No more details have been released about the report. Contradictory reports have surfaced the media on the fate of Al-Baghdad in the last two years, while some claim that he has been killed in attacks in Iraq or Syria, others say that he is still alive and on the move.


Al-Baghdadi Orders ISIL Commanders to Send More Child Soldiers to Battlefields Sat Dec 02, 2017
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960911001226

ISIL's Chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has ordered the terrorist group's commanders in Libya to send more child soldiers to the war after ISIL's recent heavy defeats in Syria and Iraq, media outlet reported on Saturday.


While Europe is unable to cope with the hundreds of thousands of African migrants who are fleeing the region, none other than the founder of the private military contractor Blackwater, Erik Prince, has suggested how the influx could be stopped.

Blackwater Founder Offers 'Humane, Professional' Way to Curb Libyan Migration 30.11.2017
https://sputniknews.com/world/201711301059567381-blackwater-prince-migrants-europe/

Prince has come with a strategy for stopping the Libyan refugee inflow into Europe. His plan suggests building three police bases in Libya and deploying 250 of his "foreign trainers" (similar to those he sent to Afghanistan). They would provide "leadership, intelligence, communications support, surveillance aircraft, and a couple of helicopters" to track migrant traffickers, locate their truckloads of migrants and intercept them."

The scheme, he says, would be more "humane and professional" than the methods which are currently applied by both Libya and Europe. They would also cost Europe just a "fraction of what it spends to intercept them in the Mediterranean," the former US Navy Seal said in his interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

Blackwater's "Notorious" Legacy - Prince's former company, the private military contractor Blackwater, now known as Academi, was set up in 1997 for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, countries which were left in chaos following US invasions.

Its stated purpose was rendering of training support for military and law enforcement agencies in foreign countries. However it draw the worldwide attention and outrage in 2007, after Nisour Square massacre in Baghdad, when several Blackwater mercenaries unjustifiably killed 14 unarmed Iraqi civilians and wounded more than 10. Four of the organization's guards were sentenced in a US court. One of them, Nicholas Slatten, has been sentenced to life in prison.

The company is also believed to be the biggest beneficiary of counter-narcotics expenditures in Afghanistan, while failing to eradicate opium production in the country.

​Prince himself has been under investigation by the US Department of Justice for alleged money laundering while attempting to broker military services to foreign governments. He sold Blackwater in 2010, has then founded another company, Frontier Services Group, which is operating in East Africa and Asia, according to its official website. Prince is now working in the United Arab Emirates as a security consultant.

The former serviceman came up with his plan following the latest news of turmoil in Libya: the UN is considering sanctions following the exposure of the country's slave trade. It has also criticized the EU for its policies of intercepting would-be migrants departing from Libya and sending them back.


Deep in the Pacific Ocean, the US Coast Guard is picking up and imprisoning suspected drug smugglers for up to 90 days; the sailors are chained aboard ships for weeks at a time, earning the vessels the name "floating Guantanamos."

Drug Smuggling Suspects Spend Weeks Shackled Aboard US 'Floating Guantanamos' 30.11.2017
https://sputniknews.com/us/201711301059565442-drug-smuggling-floating-guantanamo/

In an effort to crack down on the drugs trafficking trade, the US Coast Guard is picking up increasing numbers of suspected smugglers far away from its shores, detaining them on ships for weeks or months at a time without a trial.

The number of detainees has increased significantly in recent years. According to the New York Times Magazine, in the 12 months to September 2017 the US Coast Guard captured more than 700 suspects and chained them up aboard American ships for weeks at a time.

The policy has been likened to that pursued in Guantanamo Bay, the controversial US military prison in Cuba where hundreds of prisoners at a time have been detained without trial. Despite a pledge by former US President Barack Obama to close the prison, as of January 19, 2017 there were 41 detainees there.

​In January 2012, the US Defense Department started a program called "Operation Martillo (Spanish: Operation Hammer)," focused on intercepting drugs traffickers as they leave ports in South and Central America.

The operation was launched by the US Southern Command, under the command of General John Kelly, the current White House chief of staff. Since the operation began, the number of maritime detentions has increased significantly, from around 200 per year to more than 2,700 over the past six years.

The amount of time suspects spend chained aboard US ships before they are brought ashore for trial has also increased. A former Coast Guard lawyer referred to the US vessels as "floating Guantanamos."

The average detention time is 18 days and some men have been held for up to 90 days. US Coast Guard officials and federal prosecutors justify the detention by arguing that suspects are not formally under arrest when the Coast Guard detains them.

Commentators have criticized the policy as "US imperialism," which "appears to egregiously violate human rights." ​However, others had little sympathy for these who are caught at sea, apparently smuggling drugs.

The author of the New York Times Magazine article, Seth Freed Wessler, told PBS News hour that there is little evidence the detentions are having an impact on the flow of drugs into the US.

We can't really draw a line between what the US Coast Guard is doing and drug use in the United States. Cocaine use in particular. We're really talking about cocaine that goes up and down even as the number of people being detained each year in recent years has been going up and up and up," he said.

When they eventually come ashore, these men are charged in US courts and if convicted, serve their sentence in US prisons, which currently house more than 2.4 million inmates. Two Ecuadorian men who Wessler spoke to were sentenced to 10 and 11 years in federal prison.

Since January 2012, the United States, in partnership with various European and Latin American nations, has been conducting Operation Martillo (Martillo = Hammer), a multi-national, interagency and joint military operation to combat aerial and maritime drug trafficking off Central America's coasts. It began in January 2012 and has no end date, though its end is believed to be a few months away.

The Wired article also described how the Navy has been testing much of its new technology in fighting drug traffickers in Latin America before deploying it to other parts of the world, like Afghanistan and Africa.

Operation Martillo: What is it?
_https://securityassistance.org/blog/operation-martillo-what-it


America’s War-Fighting Footprint in Africa - Secret U.S. Military Documents Reveal a Constellation of American Military Bases Across That Continent.

The U.S. Military Moves Deeper into Africa April 27, 2017
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2017/04/27/1656778/-Tomgram-Nick-Turse-The-U-S-Military-Moves-Deeper-into-Africa

Research by TomDispatch indicates that in recent years the U.S. military has, in fact, developed a remarkably extensive network of more than 60 outposts and access points in Africa. The U.S. also operates “Offices of Security Cooperation and Defense Attaché Offices in approximately 38 [African] nations,” according to Falvo, and has struck close to 30 agreements to use international airports in Africa as refueling centers.


The US has established a military base in the southernmost reaches of Libya, documents reveal, as Washington cements its presence in Libya and beyond amid claims by Donald Trump it has "no role" in the country.

US boosts Libya presence with base in Sahara, files show May 3, 2017
http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/us-base-libya-africom-1120684962

Documents released under a freedom of information request show a US "contingency location" was set up around 2015 at al-Wigh, a Saharan desert oasis near Libya’s borders with Niger, Chad, and Algeria.

The base is positioned near smuggling routes from Niger and Chad, used by thousands of migrants attempting to reach the African coastline, and in a region where gun-runners move weapons between Libya, Niger, Chad and Mali.

It is listed as a "non-permanent" facility and its current status and force size is unknown. However, the documents show that the US command structure in Africa, Africom, set out plans to convert many "contingency locations" into semi-permanent bases for use by rapid US reaction forces.


The Nigerian ex-minister has lashed out at the slave owners in post-Gaddafi Libya saying they sell African migrants, who come to Libya, into slavery and "either murder, mutilate, torture or work them to death."

'Roasted Like Kebabs, Organs Harvested': Fate of Nigerian Migrants in Libya 01.12.2017
https://sputniknews.com/world/201712011059592777-kebab-libya-nigeria-migrants-slaves/

Femi Fani-Kayode, a onetime culture and aviation minister in Nigeria, claimed that a staggering 75 percent of migrants detained and kept by Libyan militias in North Africa are from his country. The Cambridge-educated lawyer added that the victims have their "bodies mutilated” and are "roasted like suya [shish kebabs]."


Up to 700,000 African migrants are stranded in detention camps across Libya, with many of them living in dire conditions. African and European countries are working together to reach a long-term solution to the crisis.

EU, African Leaders Unite to Combat Human Trafficking in Libya 01.12.2017
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201712011059590539-europe-africa-libya-migrant-crisis/

Leaders at an EU-Africa summit have agreed on the immediate evacuation of 3,800 migrants stranded in Libya, in a fresh attempt to tackle human trafficking from the North African country.

We have agreed, along with the EU and the UN, to set up a task force for repatriating at least 3,800 people," Moussa Faki Mahamat, chief of the African Union (AU) Commission, told journalists.

He said that there are as many as 700,000 African migrants in Libya, with many of them suffering atrocities and even being sold into slavery. He also said a fact-finding mission had seen a migrant camp in Tripoli where thousands of migrants were "living in inhumane conditions."

"But it's just one camp… the Libyan government tells us that there are 42 in all. There are definitely more than that. There are estimates of 400,000 to 700,000 African migrants in Libya," the official said.

Mahamat said that the AU has partnered with the United Nations and the European Union to find "longer-term solutions for the migration issue" in Libya.

The two-day summit in Abidjan, the economic capital of the Ivory Coast, gathered more than 80 nations from the AU and the EU, in an attempt to spur development in Africa. The meeting, however, took place amid the uproar after recent media revelations about the slave trade in Libya sent shockwaves across the world, prompting the international community to call for urgent action and pressing the Libyan government to increase its efforts to combat human trafficking.
 
Russia has expressed its openness to work with the United States to broker a solution for the crisis in Libya, according to Russia’s ambassador to the country.

Russia ready to work with US for Libya solution
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20171215-russia-ready-to-work-with-us-for-libya-solution/

The ambassador added that Moscow is ready to initiate the lifting of an international arms embargo on Libya which can only be done once it has a united army.

The US and Russia have been at lodger heads since Moscow became more involved in Libyan politics seeking to grow its influence in the region. Field Marshall Khalifa Haftar has grown close to Moscow in recent years and has been invited to hold talks with Russia’s foreign and interior ministries a number of times over the last year in seeking better funding and backing for his authority in the east of the country.

As well as vying for a political solution, the migrant crisis has come to the forefront, pressing Libya to deal with its internal and external issues. According to the European Union and African Union at least 3,100 migrants stranded in Libya have been returned to their home countries in the last two weeks.


Eastern Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar, whose forces control parts of the country, said on Sunday he would listen to the “will of free Libyan people”, in the strongest indication so far that he might run in elections expected next year.

East Libyan commander Haftar says will listen to ‘will of free Libyan people’
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20171217-east-libyan-commander-haftar-says-will-listen-to-will-of-free-libyan-people/

Haftar styles himself as a strongman capable of ending the chaos that has gripped Libya since the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

His comments, made at a military graduation ceremony, recall those of Egypt’s General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi when he was testing the ground before becoming presidential candidate. Sisi was eventually elected in 2014.

Just as Sisi built up wide support after toppling Egypt’s president Mohamed Morsi in 2013, supporters of Haftar speak of a similar situation developing in Libya, with rallies held in some eastern cities calling on him to run.

Haftar said in a speech: We declare clearly and unequivocally our full compliance with the orders of the free Libyan people, which is its own guardian and the master of its land.

He spoke in the eastern city of Benghazi, from where his forces managed to expel Islamist militants during a three-year battle.

Haftar, a general from the Gaddafi era, also dismissed a series of UN-led talks to bridge differences between Libya’s two rival administrations, one linked to him in the east and one backed by the United Nations in the capital Tripoli.

“All the dialogues starting from Ghadames and ending in Tunis and going through Geneva and Skhirat (in Morocco) were just ink on paper,” he said, listing host cities of UN talks.


Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, is preparing a comeback in Libyan politics after spending six years in prison, the Guardian reported on Wednesday. He claims to be leading a military campaign against terrorist groups around Tripoli.

Gaddafi’s son aims for comeback in Libya
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20171207-gaddafis-son-aims-for-comeback-in-libya/

According to a spokesman for Gaddafi, he is inside Libya. “Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi is committed to his word, which he gave to all Libyans in 2011, when he said that he will remain in Libya to defend its territory or die a martyr for it,” he explained in a written statement supplied through a US contact. “The forces who fought in Sabratha against [Daesh], the gangs of illegal immigrants and the oil-smuggling mafias were mainly members of the tribes who support Saif Al-Islam, and those who were part of the former Libyan army, also loyal to Saif Gaddafi.”

Gaddafi, who studied in the London School of Economics, is known as a moderniser, said the Guardian. He is currently accused of ordering the killing of protesters during the 2011 revolution, which ousted his father. However, it is unclear whether Gaddafi himself has actually fought against terror groups because most of the latest battles were carried out among tribal militants who fought to control smuggling routes.

Monitors of the situation in Libya are not sure whether he would be able to mobilise enough supporters to be a real threat to Tripoli.


The UN envoy to Libya, Ghassan Salame, has said that Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the late dictator, could stand as a candidate in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections in the North African state. Salame told France 24 on Friday that supporters and loyalists of the former regime can participate in the political process, including Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi.

UN envoy says Gaddafi’s son can stand as election candidate
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20170925-un-envoy-says-gaddafis-son-can-stand-as-election-candidate/

“Elections must be open to all,” the envoy insisted. “I do not want the political agreement to be the private property of one side or the other. It could include [Muammar Gaddafi’s son] and supporters of the former regime whom I openly welcome in my office.”

Asked if that includes Islamists, Salame explained that they are a major part of the current struggle and so will be part of the political process. “However,” he pointed out, “groups which advocate violence are not interested in the democratic process.”

Salame, who took office in July, presented a roadmap for Libya last week that includes several steps before a general election, which he expects to be held next summer. “We must create the conditions for these elections, and we should know how to elect a president and what authority we will give him,” he explained.

The UN official warned against any unannounced initiatives by foreign states, and said that any moves should be made under the UN umbrella.

Libyan circles received Salame’s remarks with some shock. According to Abu Qasim Qazit MP, the envoy must assess the situation and correct what he had said before he loses his credibility. “We welcome the ex-regime supporters and loyalists but Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi is wanted for international crimes, and by the Libyan courts as well,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.
 
I think, it's a good sign for the Libyan people that Saif Gaddafi wants to get into Politics and help his Country recover from the intrusion of U.S./U.N./NATO
interference, but on the other hand, I question if he has the experience (at this point in time) to hold the Presidency? It would definitely help "unify" the Country.

As for Libyan National Army Commander Gen. Khalifa Haftar, he was a close confident of Muammar Gaddafi’s and from the information I have studied, stepped in to block U.S./U.N./NATO from a complete take over of Libya. Since then, Haftar has worked closely with Russia in trying to hold Libya together. I see Haftar, as the better Presidential Candidate, for he has already been involved in the Political process to over throw the Coup and bring stability to the Country? It would take Haftar's background experience, with working with Muammar Gaddafi, to help pave the ground work for Saif Gaddafi to eventually take on the reins as President? Just my opinion.

There were earlier reports that Saif Gaddafi, the son of the late Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi, has been plotting a comeback to Libyan politics following six years in jail.

Family Confirms Gaddafi’s Son’s Decision to Run for Libyan Presidency
https://sputniknews.com/world/201712181060098921-libya-president-gaddafi-jail-election/

It has now come to light that he is going to run a presidential campaign in the upcoming year, according to sources close to the family, Egypt Today reported. Basem al-Hashimi al-Soul, the spokesman of the Gaddafi family, has confirmed the report in an interview to RIA Novosti: "Saif al-Islam will announce his running for presidency in the near future – this is an already decided issue, it’s no longer being discussed. He will announce his decision from television screens and in mass media. He will fix the concrete date one of these days," al-Soul said.

"Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the former Libyan president, enjoys the support of major tribes in Libya so he can run for the upcoming presidential elections due in 2018," al-Soul remarked.

He went to say that Saif is planning to engage in an effective dialogue between all the Libyan factions and step up the country’s defense "to impose more security and stability in accordance with the Libyan geography."

The news hasn’t come unnoticed on social media, with some still doubting its authenticity, while others see the move as revenge:

Others are pinning their hopes on Muammar Gaddafi’s son to ultimately unite the nation and end the ongoing anarchy:

Observers say Gaddafi could still make a political comeback if elections are held next year and he is allowed to stand them, since the situation is complicated by his 2011 indictment from the International Criminal Court (ICC) for alleged crimes against humanity. The document stated he had presumably ordered the killing of protesters in order to defend his family. He was also sentenced to death by a Tripoli court in 2015, though that trial was performed in absentia and was widely criticized by international human rights organizations.

Saif Gaddafi was released from prison six months ago under state-initiated amnesty, having served his six-year term after the NATO-backed uprising ousted his father. The country has been fragmented since then, its western and eastern parts currently governed by a number of militia groups.


Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA) lost its legitimacy as the Libyan Political Agreement reached in December 2015 in Skhirat has expired, Libyan National Army Commander Gen. Khalifa Haftar said on Sunday.

Libyan National Army Commander: Government of National Accord Lost Legitimacy
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201712171060083637-libya-national-accord-government/

The Libyan Political Agreement reached in December 2015 in Skhirat outlined the creation of the GNA as the interim Libyan government. The United Nations praised the accord, recognized GNA as the only legitimate Libyan government, and called on its member states to seize support to and official contacts with parallel institutions. However, the deal’s provisions have not been fully implemented so far due to existing contradictions.

“With the onset of December 17, 2017, the so-called political agreement ends, and all bodies formed according to it automatically lose their legitimacy, which is controversial from the first day of their work,” Libyan National Army Commander Gen. Khalifa Haftar said on the occasion of the second-year anniversary of the Skhirat accord.

The commander noted that the army has been engaged in the talks with various international actors on the settlement of the crisis in Libya and urged holding of elections, but its efforts fell short due to the “UN weakness and local stubbornness.”

The Libyan national army was threatened with international measures if it decides to act outside of the UN efforts, even though the army only obeys the will of the “free Libyan people,” according to Haftar.

We strongly reject the method of threats and intimidation and promise to the Libyan people that we vow to protect them and their capabilities and institutions to the last soldier in our ranks, and also declare our refusal to submit… to any party, whatever source of its legitimacy, if it was not elected by the Libyan people," Haftar stressed.


The UN-backed Libyan Political Agreement (LPA) between the parties of the Libyan crisis, which was signed in Skhirat in Morocco in 2015, has expired, Libya’s national army commander, Khalifa Haftar, announced today.

Haftar announces end of Libyan Political Agreement
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20171218-haftar-announces-end-of-libyan-political-agreement/

Haftar said that starting 17 December, he does not recognise any decisions issued by the political bodies linked to the LPA.

“All bodies resulting from this agreement automatically lose their legitimacy, which has been contested from the first day they took office,” he said, adding that “the military institution will not submit to any party unless it has gained its legitimacy from the Libyan people.”

We are fully obedient to the commands of the free Libyan people as they are the source of authority and the (real) decision makers, the commander stressed.

Addressing the Libyans, Haftar said: “The country is at a historical crossroads,” the military commander noted, adding: “We feel that your patience has run out and that the stability you have long waited for is now out of reach. Your hopes and dreams seem to be shattering now that you are disappointed and frustrated by all national institutions.”

“Libya is entering a dangerous phase,” he pointed out, stressing that it would negatively impact local affairs and extend to regional areas and slammed the National Accord Government saying its like “non-existent.”


Responding to Haftar’s declaration, the UN special envoy to Libya, Ghassan Salame, called on all te Libyan parties to “refrain from any actions that could undermine the political process.”

Salame stressed on the UN’s keenness to provide the necessary technical support to the Supreme National Electoral Commission, which will monitor the elections which is scheduled for the end of 2018.

In mid-2014, after the LPA had been enforced, a fierce war broke out in Tripoli between the anti-Haftar forces of Fajr Libya, the Zintan forces loyal to the House of Representatives, and another war between Hafar’s forces and the Benghazi Shura Council in Benghazi.
 
I was unaware of it but came across a report that the late President Muammar Qaddafi’s third Son, Al-Saadi Qaddafi was being held in a prison in Tripoli?

Al-Saadi Qaddafi is still in prison, claims Libyan prosecutor Saturday 23 December 2017
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1213536/middle-east

The Libyan prosecutor general’s office has allayed the fears of late President Muammar Qaddafi’s family that his son Al-Saadi Qaddafi has “disappeared” from prison in Tripoli, Asharq Al-Awsat reported.

The office said: “He is present, has not left the prison and will be put on trial.”

The Qaddafi family announced last week that they had “lost contact with Al-Saadi some time ago and could not find out where he was, or what his circumstances were.”

The family added: “All we know is that he is being held hostage in a prison run by the militias in the capital.”

However, the head of the investigations department at the Libyan prosecutor general’s office said: “The defendant Al-Saadi Al-Qaddafi is currently being tried for the charges against him according to Libyan law.”

Al-Saadi is Qaddafi’s third son and was a former deputy commander of security units in the old regime. The current authorities accuse him of involvement in suppressing the revolution that overthrew his father’s rule.

Al-Saadi escaped to Niger in 2011 but he was later handed over to the Libyan authorities in 2014.

He has been held in a prison in Tripoli since then whilst his trial has been postponed several times.
 
Refugees directly flown from Libya to Italy in ‘historic’ first Sunday 24 December 2017
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1213736/middle-east

“For the first time a humanitarian corridor has been opened from Libya to Europe. It’s a start,” Minniti said.

Those evacuated came from Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia and Yemen. They comprised families, single mothers, unaccompanied children and handicapped people, who were flown on a military jet.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) estimates about 18,000 people are being held in detention centers for immigrants that are controlled by the Tripoli government and it aims to evacuate as many as 10,000 next year.

Vincent Cochetel, the special envoy of UNHCR for the central Mediterranean, said: “For the first time, we have been able to evacuate extremely vulnerable refugees from Libya directly to Italy.

“Many of those evacuated spoke of great suffering and were kept prisoners by traffickers in inhuman conditions.”

Libya has long been a transit hub for migrants seeking a better life in Europe, but people smugglers have stepped up their lucrative business in the chaos since the 2011 revolution.

Libyan authorities have come under fire over migrant abuses since the airing last month of CNN footage of a slave market in the country.

The UN has urgently appealed for countries to take in 1,300 “extremely vulnerable” refugees stranded in Libya.

Italy’s Catholic Church will house many of the new arrivals in shelters across the country, Church charity Caritas said.


The UN plans to move up to 10,000 illegal migrants from Libya next year, a senior UN official said on Tuesday, in a bid to relieve the plight of thousands stranded in deteriorating conditions in detention centers there.

UN to move 10,000 migrants from Libya in 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1211571/middle-east

Libya is the main departure point for migrants fleeing poverty or war to reach Europe by boat as smugglers exploit turmoil gripping the country since the 2011 overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi.

Illegal migrant arrivals in Italy have fallen by two-thirds since July from the same period last year since the UN-backed government in Tripoli, Italy’s partner, cut back human smuggling at one major hub. Italy also helps in the Libyan coast guard’s operations. But activists say the push has led to worsening of conditions in detention centers, where Human Rights Watch and other groups say migrants face overcrowding, abuse, lack of medical facilities and a shortage of food.

The UN is repatriating migrants to African countries willing to take them back but it was also in talks with European countries and Canada to take in some refugees, Roberto Mignone, chief mission of the UN refugee agency, said.

“This week we are going to send out of Libya 350 refugees, until the end of January we will send out at least 1000,” he told Reuters in an interview.

“In 2018 we are planning to send out of Libya between 5,000 to 10,000 refugees. We give priority to women, children, elderly, disabled, persons who suffered very seriously.”

A total of 44,306 had been registered as refugees and asylum seekers in Libya, he said.

Libyan officials deny abuses and say they are simply overwhelmed by a surge in arrivals amid little funds to accommodate them as public finances have been hit by a loss of oil revenues.

The issue of repatriations has got higher attention abroad since CNN published a video showing what it said was an auction of men offered to Libyan buyers as farmhands and sold for $400.

In November, Libya’s UN-backed government said it was investigating the report and promised to bring the perpetrators to justice. But it has struggled to make an impact as the country is effect controlled by armed factions.
 
The Tuareg factor in North Africa and after Gaddafi December 29, 2017
http://www.fort-russ.com/2017/12/the-tuareg-factor-in-north-africa-and.html

If we think of the main participants in power games on the geopolitical boards of the Middle East and North Africa region, almost everyone will go to the same list of usual suspects: United States, Al Qaeda, Iran, Russia, Islamic State or Saudi Arabia to name a few; but despite its importance, with only these actors it is not possible to explain the situation on the ground.

The local actors are often left aside, as mere pieces for the great powers, in spite of not being completely forgotten; but although it is common to see them aligned with some of the great powers, this does not prevent them from having and applying their own agendas.

The Tuaregs, a people of nomadic tradition, whose name is intrinsically connected to the Sahara desert, is undoubtedly one of the most important local actors in the Maghreb and the Sahel region.

Who are they? - The Tuaregs are a Berber people whose population is approximately 2.5 million, It mainly extends to five African countries: Niger (36%), Mali (30%), Libya (4.8%), Algeria (3.6%) and Burkina Faso (1.8%), the rest is dispersed throughout Nigeria , Chad, Tunisia and Morocco.

They have different languages, the most used being the tamashek, (followed by tamahaq, tamajak and teserret) with a common script, tifinagh, also used in other Berber languages.

With the reduction of caravan traffic through the Sahara due to the emergence of new and modern methods of transport in the twentieth century, many of the Tuareg populations began to settle in the territories formerly populated by the tribes. This coincided in part with the process of colonial liberation of Africa, which introduced borders where they did not exist before, thus dividing the Tuareg territory between different countries.

The Tuaregs in the Libya of Gaddafi - Libya is a country with more than 140 tribes, which makes it one of the nations in which these have a greater political weight of the entire Arab world. The Tuaregs along with the Toubou, their ancestral neighbors, with whom they have a complex relationship, are the tribes that control a more territory, being mostly in the desert south. Specifically the Tuareg of Libya are located in the Southwest and belong to the Kel Ajjar confederation also predominant in the Southeast of Algeria.

Gaddafi's relationship with the Tuaregs has been, at least, complex. With his arrival in power in 1969, there was a change in the internal structures of the country. The new ruler considered that the tribes could be a factor of disunity and during the first years of his government, most of them were marginalized and culturally repressed in addition to forced urban exodus in order to replace the tribal loyalties for loyalty to the new Libya.

The situation improved slightly during the following years, but it would worsen again after the failed coup attempt in 1977, thus suffering swings marked by the regional and global situation. This exclusion would result in greater job insecurity in relation to other ethnic groups in the country and in the growth of illegal activities, mainly related to smuggling.

In the area of ​​international politics, Gaddafi's position was different, and it is there that Gaddafi is the only ally of the Tuareg people (despite internal exclusion) in a region that offered them nothing but repression.

Among the highlights, we find the use of Tuaregs troops in the Islamic Legion, a paramilitary group articulated by Gaddafi in 1972. Many of these Tuaregs were not native to Libya, but young people from the tribes of Mali and Niger, which had left towards Libya, fruit of the severe droughts that hit the region since 1968. There they would be recruited for the Legion, receiving in the process a strong ideologization that sought to undermine tribal ties to turn them against the governments of the area, which maintained the Tuaregs in exclusion.

After the dissolution of the armed group, fruit of the defeats in 1987 during the Libyan-Chadian conflict known as the 'Toyota War', they returned to their countries to play an important role in the Tuareg rebellions of the 90s, which would be supported by supplying weapons and supplies to the rebels and Gaddafi acting as a mediator at peace conferences.

From 2004 and 2008 and after the Tuareg uprisings, Gaddafi changed his relationship with them and invited every Tuareg refugee to go to Libya with the promise of granting nationality, stating that this people was indispensable for the fight against terrorism that germinated in the world after the attacks of September 11. In those moments he made important concessions such as the control of the goods routes in the south.

At the outbreak of the Civil War against Gaddafi most of these tribes were loyal and fought the rebels of Misrata. Once he was killed, they reached an agreement to end the hostilities in exchange for maintaining control of the Southwest routes and managing the region. For their part, the Tebu received support from the Government of Tobruk, achieving superiority and rooting a war between tribes for the control of contraband routes and oil fields. In recent years the chaotic situation degenerated in which part of the Tuareg population allied with the Islamic State (even with some groups swearing allegiance) seeking to tip the balance in their favor in the war against the Tebu.

The Tuareg revolts in the 20th and 21st centuries - It is usually considered that there have been four Tuareg rebellions in the last century centered

mainly in the north of Mali and Niger. The first of these rebellions, known as the Alfellaga occurred shortly after Mali's independence in 1960, since it was expected that the creation of a Tuareg state would come with colonial liberation; a fact that did not occur, which, together with the discontent existing with the new government, led to an uprising in 1963. At the time of greatest outreach there were 1,500 combatants, and it was quickly crushed by the government troops who brutally occupied the regions of Kidal, Gao and Timbuktu, causing great resentment in the local population and a wave of refugees towards Algeria.

The second rebellion occurred both in Niger and in Mali between 1990 and 1995. The great droughts of the previous decades had caused a great famine that, together with the marginalization on the part of the local governments, led to the flight of the Tuaregs from the region to refugee camps in Libya and Algeria.

In 1990 the lack of aid promised by the government of Niger to the refugee camps in Algeria led to the assault on a police station in Tchintabaraden, capital of the district of the same name in the Tahoua region, which ended with the death of 31 people. After this, the Nigerian army intervened, arresting, torturing and killing dozens of Tuareg civilians in what would be known as the Tchin-Tabaradene massacre. These events led to the creation of various armed groups that would fight against the army of Niger in the mountains of Aïr, with a timely ceasefire in 1994 that led to the creation of two umbrella organizations: the Organization of the Armed Resistance (ORA) and the Coordinated Armed Resistance (CRA).

In April 1995, the ORA signed a peace agreement, which was initially rejected by the CRA, whose leader would die shortly thereafter in a strange plane crash. After this, peace was finally signed on April 15, in the so-called 'Ouagadougou Agreements'. The next decade was one of relative peace, although with some sporadic attacks by minority groups, until in 2007 relations between the ex-combatants and the government broke down, marking the beginning of the third Tuareg rebellion.

Meanwhile the situation in Mali was equally serious; In 1990, Tuareg separatists stormed several government buildings in Gao, and the repression unleashed by the army provoked a widespread insurrection. One of the main leaders of this rebellion was Iyad Ag Ghaly, who would later be known to found the Tuareg jihadist group Ansar Dine, which would become important in the conflict of Azawad (2012).

The clashes ceased briefly after the formation of a new government in 1992, but the truce only lasted until 1994, when armed groups, supposedly trained and armed in Libya, attacked again Gao renewing the conflict until the signing of a peace agreement in 1996, with a symbolic burning of weapons in Timbuktu.

This agreement promised the repatriation and resettlement of the Tuaregs in the country, in addition to their participation in political life in Bamako, but was not viewed favorably by groups in the more remote regions of northern Mali who continued armed and engaged in smuggling activities on the border, carrying out attacks in a timely manner.

The third Tuareg rebellion, which began in 2007, broke out in Niger as a result of the government's accusation of non-compliance with the agreements of 1995 and extended to Mali by forming an alliance between the groups on both sides of the border. These events coincide with the appearance of a new regional actor of relevance, AlQaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, whose influence would resonate especially after the kidnapping of two Canadian diplomats and four European tourists at the end of 2008, facts that would attract international attention on the conflict. The fighting continued until 2009 when both African nations signed peace agreements with the rebels, again under the auspices of Gaddafi, which would lead to the integration of the armed groups into the security forces, without actually resolving the problems that initially unleashed the conflict. , and leaving the land for a future reappearance of it.

The Tuaregs after the Arab Spring - After this review, we finally reached our decade, where the relevance of the Tuaregs is again highlighted with the arrival of the Arab Spring, especially, of course, due to the Libyan civil war.

With the arrival of the conflict, Gaddafi would again go to the Tuaregs, seeking their support in a war that was promised hard. Although the response was not far from widespread, up to 10,000 fighters would join the ranks of those loyal to the government. This support would take their toll after the fall of the regime, since after accepting the new government on the death of Gaddafi, who helped hide in their last days, both the loyal remnant and the rebels considered them a threat, causing widespread persecution .

This persecution pushed them to return to their traditional territories where they would become strong, after participating in the looting of the army's arsenals, helping in the dispersal of these through smuggling, thus fueling the conflicts in the region.

The weapons of Gaddafi and the Tuaregs soon led a new uprising in Mali, demanding the independence of the Azawad region, which comprises the northern half of the country. This would be led by the group National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), focused on ethnic Tuareg nationalism. Later, the Islamist groups Ansar Dine appeared, seeking not the independence of Azawad but the creation of a state governed by sharia throughout Mali, and the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa (MUJWA), a split AlQaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

The revolt, which began in January 2012, was initially a success, putting pressure on the government and the army to the point that the latter, overwhelmed, staged a coup in March, headed by Captain Amadou Sanogo. What did nothing but weaken the country, since it isolated him from the international community and from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which threatened the closing of borders and economic sanctions against the coup leaders, which brought more victories to the rebels, who came to surround and then capture Timbuktu. This last defeat of the military caused that in view of a possible intervention of ECOWAS troops to the country, they decided to return power to civilian hands.

On 6 April, the MLNA, declaring that it controlled all the territories of the new state of Azawad, proclaimed its independence from Mali, a declaration that was rejected by the international community. When the conflict was already advanced, Ansar Dine and the MUJWA began to confront the MLNA for the control of the territories, since the Islamists sought to impose their vision once the government had been weakened.

The tables were tilted in favor of the Islamists, who sought support in other ethnic groups of Azawad, such as the Fulani, to defeat the MLNA. The result was decided at the Battle of Gao, in which MLNA Secretary General Bilal Ag Acherif was wounded. A short time later, in mid-July, the Islamists had seized control of all the major cities in the territory from the MLNA.

This situation, would cause that France, country with big economic interests in the territories of its old colonial empire, requested before the UN the authorization for an armed intervention on the part of the countries of the ECOWAS with French support. This intervention had to be prepared and it was not expected to start until late 2013, but the Islamist advance - remember that these groups aspired not only to control Azawad, but to conquer all of Mali - over the city of Konna, in the center of the country, forced the direct intervention of France, in what is known as Operation Serval on June 11, 2013.

After months of fighting, the Islamists were expelled from the main cities, provoking the evolution of the conflict to a guerrilla war, to which France requested the establishment of the mission of peacekeeping forces of the UN later known as MINUSMA.

The defeated MLNA, faced with the new situation, sought peace with the government, requesting the autonomy of Azawad in exchange for the cessation of hostilities and support in the fight against the Islamists, after which it would sign an agreement on June 18, 2013. This peace agreement would only last until September of that same year, at which point after an incident in which government forces opened fire on unarmed demonstrators, the MLNA returned to arms.

The conflict continues today and Operation Serval was replaced in 2014 by Operation Barkhane, of higher rank, which aims to fight against Islamist groups in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger. This is especially relevant after the recent merger of AlQaeda in the Islamic Maghreb with Al Morabitum, Ansar Dine and Katiba Macina to create Jama'a Nusrat ul-Islam al-Muslimin.

Mali is not the only current conflict in which the Tuaregs are involved, a war unnoticed within the great national conflict is fought in southern Libya, around the oasis of Ubari and its valuable smuggling routes, where a peace of more than One hundred years with the neighboring Tebu tribe has been broken. The conflict began at the local level, with members of both tribes discussing who had the right to control the passage of drugs through the region. This dispute grew, spilling blood and dragging both tribes to war for control of the land rich in oil and minerals. Both sides accuse the other of using mercenaries and extremists from neighboring countries, also fighting a propaganda war in search of external sources of support for their claims to the land.

Conclusion - To finish and once exposed the situation so far, I will make some additional notes regarding the Tuareg aspirations, since I believe that they will soon look for the reflection of those of a more organized (and known) people like the Kurds in the Middle East . A Tuareg state is something distant, unlikely and perhaps more problematic if one can be Kurdish, not so much because of the repercussions for the Tuaregs themselves, but because starting the construction of ethnic-based states in Africa could lead to the combustion of a continent. in itself devastated by ethnic-tribal conflicts. On the contrary, a possible more viable and probable solution, especially for Libya, where the current conflict is likely to end long before the regional neighbors, could be the constitution of autonomous regions with self-government similar to that of the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan that allow to maintain the Tuareg customs.

The Sahel is a region ravaged by armed conflicts, transnational criminal groups and jihadist terrorism, as well as by desertification, droughts and famines, which if it trusts one day to achieve peace and stability must seek ways to deal with the great non-national actors and meet their demands; since, without them, just as their history can not be understood, neither can their future be built.
 
Eastern Libyan forces have retaken from Islamist fighters the last district of Benghazi, the country’s second largest city, military officials said.

Eastern Libyan forces say they fully control Benghazi
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1215786/middle-east

The battle for Benghazi, waged between forces led by General Khalifa Haftar and an array of Islamist militants and other fighters, has been part of a broader conflict since Libya slipped into turmoil following the 2011 fall of strongman Muammar Qaddafi.

Haftar had declared victory in July but fighting continued in one area, Khreibish. Commander Wanis Bukhamada, head of army special forces, said the eastern forces now fully controlled the district.

“We declare in this moment the liberation of Benghazi from terrorists,” he told Reuters.

Haftar launched his “Operation Dignity” campaign in May 2014, slowly gaining the upper hand against Islamist militants and former rebels who fought Qaddafi in the 2011 uprising.


Libya’s self-styled national army in the east welcomes holding presidential and parliamentary elections in the country as soon as possible, the spokesman said, urging the east-based Parliament to make haste with issuing elections laws.

Libyan Army welcomes elections ‘as soon as possible’
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1215696/middle-east

Brig. Gen. Ahmed Al-Mosmari said in a press conference late Wednesday that elections, planned for 2018, should be monitored by international observers to ensure integrity. He also said the army will secure polling stations across the country.

“We should give the Libyan people the freedom to express themselves through ballot boxes,” Al-Mosmari said. He stressed that the army is supportive of an “elected civilian leadership.”


Authorities in eastern Libya have announced a conference in March to drum up support to rebuild the country’s second-largest city Benghazi heavily damaged during three years of fighting between military forces and extremist fighters.

Eastern Libya to stage conference in March to rebuild Benghazi
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1214931/middle-east

The announcement signals a desire to demonstrate a return to normality in the port, where top military commander Khalifa Haftar declared the end of a campaign to oust militants in July.

Clashes have sporadically continued in some isolated areas, while life has returned in the rest of the city, though some districts were almost completely destroyed by shelling and airstrikes.

A forum titled “International Conference and Exhibition for rebuilding Benghazi city” will be held from March 19-21, the organizers said in an invitation posted online, adding that a six-day exhibition would be held the same month.

Haftar is aligned with a government and Parliament in eastern Libya, which was listed as the conference’s sponsor.

He has rejected a UN-backed government based in the capital, Tripoli, as he has gradually strengthened his position on the ground.

The UN has sought to bridge differences between the two sides, part of a conflict since Muammar Qaddafi was toppled in 2011. Talks were suspended in October.
 
Fierce clashes broke out in the Libyan capital Tripoli on Monday, killing at least 20 people, shutting the airport, and damaging planes.

Death Toll from Tripoli Airport Clash Rises to 20
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13961026000400

The number of people, who died as a result of an attack of armed people on the international airport in the Libyan capital, has increased up to 20,
local media reported.

The Libyan Express news outlet reported on Monday citing the statement of the Libyan Health Ministry that the death toll grew up to 20, while the number of injured people increased to 60. The media outlet added that the attack had already been repelled.

Libya has been in turmoil since the 2011 civil war that resulted in the overturn of country’s dictator Muammar Gaddafi. Libya currently has two governments, one based in the capital, Tripoli, and the other based in the Eastern city of Tobruk. Libyan military commander General Khalifa Haftar in Tobruk does not recognize the authority of the Tripoli-based GNA, which is recognized by the UN.


Fierce fighting forced the closure of the Libyan capital’s only civilian airport on Monday, officials said, after a militia in charge of security there said it had been attacked.

Clashes Force Closure of Tripoli Airport in Libya
http://english.almanar.com.lb/425841

The Facebook page of Mitiga International Airport, in eastern Tripoli, said “flights have been suspended because of fighting that broke out this morning”.

Al-Radaa, a force loyal to the UN-backed Libyan government and tasked with keeping the facility secure, said in a statement it had come under attack.

An armed group “has attacked Mitiga international airport… which is home to a prison where more than 2,500 people are detained for various” reasons, Al-Radaa said on Facebook.


All work at the Mitiga International Airport in Tripoli has been temporarily halted due to fighting between two rival militant groups, say local media.

Militants Attack International Airport in Tripoli – Reports
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201801151060757958-militants-attack-airport-tripoli/

According to local resource Libya's Channel, the skirmish, starting Monday morning between two groups of militants armed with a variety of light and heavy weaponry including mortars, has led to the suspension of all domestic and international flights into and out of the airport, with flights diverted to nearby Misrata Airport, about 175 km to the east of Tripoli.

The fighting is reportedly taking place between the Special Deterrence Force, one of the most powerful militant groups in Tripoli, and a brigade of militants from Brigade 33 from Tajoura, a suburb of the city. Both groups are reportedly aligned with the UN-supported Government of National Accord.

Observers reported heavy gunfire and shelling from the vicinity of the airport beginning at about 7:30 am local time. Smoke was reported billowing from the airport. According to local media, at least 3 people, including one civilian, have been killed and six others wounded in the clashes.

A Libya's Channel correspondent said that civilians were safely evacuated from the airport's passenger lounge. Schools and government offices in the area have also been closed, and people told to evacuate.

Similar skirmishes have reportedly taken place on and off over the course of several weeks. On December 13, the same groups exchanged fire on Al-Shat Road, a central thoroughfare along Tripoli's Mediterranean coast. That skirmish was stopped thanks to mediation.

According to English language Libya news resource Libya Observer, while the exact reasons for the clashes have yet to be confirmed, sources have indicated that tensions have been rising between the two groups over the detention of several persons by the Special Deterrence Force, which acts as an anti-crime and anti-terrorism unit.

The interim Government of National Accord, based in Tripoli, is one of several rival factions seeking control over the country since it was thrown into chaos following an uprising and NATO intervention in 2011. The GNA has failed to come to a settlement with its main rival, the eastern Libyan Tobruk-led House of Representatives, supported by the Libyan National Army. Late last month, LNA commander Gen. Khalifa Haftar said that the GNA has lost its legitimacy and that the Libyan Political Agreement reached in 2015 in Skhirat had expired.

With the Libyan National Army loyal to the Tobruk government, the GNA has been forced to turn to various local armed formations for support.
 
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