Violence broke out in Lebanon as thousands of supporters of acting PM Saad Hariri gathered in Tripoli for what they had called a peaceful “day of rage” protest. Demonstrators attacked a truck belonging to the Al Jazeera news channel and set it on fire. Protesters also burned pictures of former prime minister Najib Mikati, a Hezbollah-backed candidate who is set to be nominated Tuesday to replace Mr. Hariri.
Posts Tagged ‘Tripoli’
“Serbia Lybia’s major partner in region”
Libyan PM Baghdadi al-Mahmudi met on Thursday in Tripoli with visiting Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Å utanovac. According to a MoD statement issued in Belgrade, Mahmudi said that Serbia was his country’s major partner in Southeastern Europe and the Serbian companies will work on infrastructure projects in Libya, such as railway, electricity distribution, airport and road construction.
Plane crash in Libya kills more than 100
A passenger plane has crashed in Libya, killing more than 100 people on board, officials in the capital Tripoli say.
The Airbus 330 crashed on landing at Tripoli airport after a flight from Johannesburg, Afriqiyah Airways said.
Plane crash in Libya kills over 100
Tripoli/Cairo, May 12 (DPA) More than 100 people died when a Libyan aircraft on its way from South Africa crashed in Tripoli Wednesday, officials said.
A nine-year-old Dutch boy was the only survivor of the crash.
The Airbus 330 belonging to the state-owned Afriqiyah Airways was on a regular flight from Johannesburg when it crashed on its [...]
Tadić send condolences to Libya
Serbian President Boris Tadić has sent a telegram of condolences to Lybian leader Muammar Gaddafi and the Lybian people. This gesture came in the wake of an airplane crash that killed 103 people near Tripoli on Wednesday morning.
UK denies putting Libya first in IRA victims row
The UK’s relations with Libya are back in the spotlight with Gordon Brown denying he shied away from pressing Tripoli to compensate families of IRA victims. The British Prime Minister now insists he will back compensation claims.
Lockerbie questions dog UK premier
Gordon Brown is facing further questions over the UK government’s role in the Lockerbie bomber’s release after new details about discussions emerged.
Former Foreign Office minister Bill Rammell has confirmed he told Libya Mr Brown did not want to see Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi’s die in prison.
However, he denied having discussed this with the prime minister himself.
Mr Brown has so far declined to comment on the release but the Tories say he needs to be "straight" with the public.
Conservative leader David Cameron said the UK government now stood accused of "double dealing" and called for an inquiry.
He said: "The British prime minister has got to be straight with the British people.
"For weeks he’s been refusing to say publicly what he wanted to happen to Megrahi, yet we now learn apparently privately the message was being given to the Libyans that he should be released."
‘Scottish decision’
Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill allowed Megrahi, who is terminally ill with cancer, to be freed from Greenock Prison on 20 August on compassionate grounds after rejecting his return to Libya under a prisoner transfer agreement.
Mr Brown and UK ministers have declined to say whether they supported freeing Megrahi, stressing it was a decision for the Scottish Government.
Mr MacAskill is due to defend his decision again in a Scottish Parliamentary debate later, during which the opposition parties are expected to unite to defeat the minority SNP government.
Among the documents released on Tuesday was a Libyan version of an exchange with Mr Rammell in February during which, it is claimed, he said Mr Brown and the foreign secretary did not want the Lockerbie bomber to die in a Scottish prison.
Mr Rammell, now armed forces minister, later insisted he made it clear to the Libyans during a visit to Tripoli that any decision on Megrahi had to come from Scottish ministers.
"I am unjustly convicted of a most heinous crime"
Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi
Your views on the controversy Bomber was ‘exemplary’ prisoner Read the Lockerbie filesRecords of a meeting between Libyan Europe minister Abdulati Alobidi and Scottish officials on 12 March said: "Mr Alobidi spoke of Mr Bill Rammell’s visit to Tripoli in February and that they had discussed the matter of the prisoner transfer agreement.
"Mr Alobidi confirmed that he had reiterated to Mr Rammell that the death of Mr Megrahi in a Scottish prison would have catastrophic effects for the relationship between Libya and the UK.
"Mr Alobidi went on to say that Mr Rammell had stated that neither the prime minister not the foreign secretary would want Mr Megrahi to pass away in prison but the decision on transfer lies in the hands of the Scottish ministers."
‘Important partner’
When asked by the BBC if Mr Brown had told him that he did not want Megrahi to die in a Scottish prison, Mr Rammell replied: "No, I’ve not discussed this with the prime minister either before the event or after.
"I was responding to a specific concern that the Libyans put to me that they didn’t wish Al Megrahi to die in prison.
"In response to that in a conversation with my counterpart, I made clear that we were not actively seeking his death in prison but we emphatically, and this is what I said to him at the time, we emphatically would not intervene and it was a matter for Scottish ministers."
Other letters public by the UK and Scottish governments on Tuesday reveal UK Justice Secretary Jack Straw changed his mind about excluding the Lockerbie bomber from a proposed prisoner transfer agreement with Libya.
In a letter to Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, on 11 February 2008, Mr Straw said Libya had become an "important partner in the fight against terrorism" and was helping to counter illegal immigration.
Megrahi was released eight years into a life sentence imposed for his part in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie in December 1988, killing 270 people.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Taking liberties?

By Paul Wood
BBC News, Tripoli
It is a rule of thumb in any Middle Eastern country that the more pictures of the leader you see, the less political freedom there is.
In Tripoli, Colonel Gaddafi is everywhere. He stares down from every traffic roundabout and every official building.
Ever flamboyant, sometimes he is in colourful African robes, sometimes in Bedouin head-dress (and usually with his own idiosyncratic interpretation of these styles).

Occasionally he sports the large mirrored sun-glasses favoured by comic-strip dictators and 1970s porn stars.
Here and there, you catch a glimpse of a much younger Muammar Gaddafi, a reminder that he came to power 40 years ago in a military coup aged just 27, when his rank was a mere captain.
He promoted himself to colonel. Others might have given themselves the rank of field marshal, or at least general.
But Col Gaddafi said Libya was a true people’s democracy. Even today, he has no official government position but is referred to as "Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution".
Rare dissent
Libya is, though, not a democracy as that term is understood in Europe or America.
One measure of that is how difficult it was to find anyone inside the country prepared to make even the slightest criticism of the regime.
"It is disaster for Libya to have this regime for 40 years, the UK, France, Italy, I don’t know why they support this dictatorship "
Jamal al-Haggi
Libyan dissident
With the help of the international monitoring group Human Rights Watch, one dissident was prepared to say what many Libyans may be thinking but are too fearful to express.
Thanks to Western pressure, Jamal al-Haggi was freed earlier this year after serving two years of a 12-year sentence. He was only too well aware that meeting foreign journalists was extremely risky.
A small, neat man and an accountant by profession, Mr Haggi said he had been unable to work since leaving prison.
He said he was prepared to go to jail again, but did not want to get anyone else into trouble.
So we conducted the interview in the back of a car driving around Tripoli, rather than go to his home or someone’s office.
Embarrassing questions
"Yes it is dangerous, I am not safe," he said, acknowledging that "insulting public officials" or "opposing the ideology of the revolution" are criminal offences that could result in a 25-year jail sentence.

But he went on: "I am not afraid. There is nothing else to lose."
A brave statement, but one in defiance of the facts in a country where the death penalty remains on the books for joining or forming any independent political party opposed to the Libyan revolution.
"People didn’t vote for it [the Gadaffi regime], it came by force," he said.
"So this is not a celebration for everyone; just for a few people who are doing well out of the system."
He added: "It is disaster for Libya to have this regime for 40 years. There is no freedom here; there is no democracy. The UK, France, Italy, I don’t know why they support this dictatorship – but we will never forget."
Western leaders did not attend Col Gaddafi’s big party in Tripoli.
British ministerial attendance would only have raised embarrassing Lockerbie questions, of course.
The West may be desperate to win lucrative trade deals from the Libyan leader, but governments are still wary of his regime.
While Libya’s relations with the West have been transformed, internal reform is slow and small.
That may not change as long as Col Gadaffi remains – and four decades on, his grip on power seems as sure and as strong as ever.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Libya marks Gaddafi anniversary

Libya is beginning a week of celebrations to mark 40 years since the coup that brought Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to power.
Many African leaders are already in Libya for an African Union summit that was held on Monday.
They will attend a big military parade and festivities to mark the occasion.
But most Western leaders are staying away, amid a political storm over the release and return to Libya of the only man jailed for the Lockerbie bombing.
Scottish authorities freed Abdel Ali Mohammed al-Megrahi on 20 August after he had served eight years of a life sentence for the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103, in which 270 people died.
His subsequent hero’s welcome in Tripoli generated anger in the US and UK. The British government has also been forced to deny reports that his release was linked to an oil deal.
As Libya marks its anniversary, British authorities say they will publish all correspondence with Scottish ministers over his release.
Celebrations
Huge crowds are expected in Tripoli’s Green Park as the country marks Revolution Day.
Profile: Muammar Gaddafi Libyans contemplate celebrations Country profile: Libya
Hundreds of dancers and musicians will take part in a show charting 12,000 years of the land’s history.
After the show comes a fireworks display, with pyrotechnics launched from ships off the coast of Tripoli. Celebrations will last for a total of six days.
Among the dignitaries at the anniversary celebrations will be several African heads of state who were attending Monday’s African Union summit in Tripoli.
The one-day meeting focused on the continent’s main trouble spots, including Sudan’s Darfur and Somalia.
But it ended without any concrete proposals on the conflicts, with the leaders merely adopting a "Tripoli Declaration" and plan of action "to find urgent solutions to crises and conflicts" in Africa.
World leaders attending include Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, but Western leaders will be largely absent.
Col Gaddafi took power on 1 September 1969 after a bloodless coup against the king.
A small group of military officers led by the then unknown 27-year-old army officer staged a coup against King Idris, who was exiled to Egypt.
The new regime, headed by the Revolutionary Command Council, subsequently banned political parties.
For years, Libya was ostracised by Western democracies who accused it of fostering terrorism abroad and displaying nuclear ambitions.
But relations improved after Col Gaddafi renounced his pursuit of nuclear weapons in 2003.
Libya also paid hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation to victims of the Lockerbie bombing.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
President holds ‘hawks’ back
ISLAMABAD – Following the waving of olive branch from Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) during its meeting held at Raiwind, Pakistan PeopleÂ’s Party leadership after a brief meeting at Awan-e-Sadr Tuesday night also decided to observe restraint and stay away from indulging in blame-game.
Though there was no official word about the meeting of PPP leaders held at Awan-e-Sadr, the sources in the party disclosed that partyÂ’s Secretary General Jahangir Badr, Federal Minister for Information Qamar Zaman Qaira, MNA Farahnaz Isphahani and some other senior party leaders were called by President Asif Ali Zardari to discuss the controversy triggered by some former secret agencies operators implicating the mainstream politicians in dirty power game in the past.
Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar denied occurrence of such meeting but the sources in the party insisted that the senior party leaders were summoned by President Zardari to discuss the controversy.
The sources further said that it was on the directives of the President that Premier Gilani had contacted Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif on telephone from Libya and requested him to stop his party men from issuing provocative statements and assured him that PPP leaders would also avoid commenting on these thorny issues of the past.
The sources said that Jahangir Badr and Federal Minister for Information Qamar Zaman Qaira were strongly against indulging in the blame game and said that it would cause irreparable loss to democracy and democratic institutions in the country.
They said that instead of trading harsh statements with PML-N, with which they were also sitting in the coalition government in Punjab, the people behind the whole drama should be exposed.
They further said that the people behind all this could not be democratic or patriotic to the country as the whole exercise was aimed at destabilizing the incumbent political dispensation.
The sources further disclosed that it was decided in the meeting that all the party MPs and office-bearers would be barred from giving statements on the issue and only the party spokespersons and Federal Minister for Information would issue partyÂ’s point of view if and when required on the subject.
APP adds: Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani on Tuesday called the Chief Minister Punjab and President PML-N Shahbaz Sharif from Tripoli (Libya) to express his serious concern over the exchange of accusations between some of the leasers of PML (N) and PPP and urged for restraint from giving provocative statements.
He said that democratic forces should not fall prey to the conspiracy of those elements whose even intentions are to derail this system. Welcoming the call from PML (N) Quaid Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif to stop vilification campaign against each other, he said that we should join hands to foil attempts of destabilisation of political environment for the sake of democracy.
The Chief Minister also apprised the Prime Minister about the current status of availability of sugar and atta. The Prime Minister directed the Chief Minister to make all possible efforts for ensuring the availability of sugar, atta and other essential food items at affordable prices.
The Prime Minister accepted the Chief MinisterÂ’s proposal to hold a meeting of all the Chief Ministers to discus the issues of national importance.
Tadić, Šutanovac travel to Tripoli
Serbia is honored to have been invited to attend the 40th anniversary celebrations of the Libyan revolution, says President Boris Tadić. Tadić said that he would be meeting with Libyan President Moammar Gadaffi during his stay in Tripoli, as well as with other heads of state and government attending the celebrations in the Libyan capital.
President, defense chief travel to Libya
President Boris Tadić and Defense Minister Dragan Å utanovac will travel to Tripoli for Tuesday’s celebrations of the 40th anniversary of Libyan revolution. Their trip comes on Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi’s invitation.
Questions follow Lockerbie bomber to hospital
Terminally-ill convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdel Basset al-Megrahi was rushed to a Tripoli hospital on Sunday. He was accompanied by a British journalist wanting to know if his release was linked to a trade deal.
Anger at Lockerbie bomber welcome
Relatives of those who died in the bombing of a US plane over Lockerbie voiced anger as the man convicted of the attack was welcomed home in Libya. Crowds in Tripoli greeted Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, after he was freed from prison on compassionate grounds.
Gaddafi demands Lockerbie bomber’s return
Prime minister tells Libyan leader at G8 summit that Megrahi case is matter for the Scottish courts
In his first face to face meeting with Gordon Brown, Muammar Gaddafi today demanded the return of the convicted Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi.
The Libyan leader was told by the prime minister that it was a matter for the Scottish courts.
Gaddafi, wearing a flowing black and white silken robe and protected by female bodyguards, is at the G8 summit in Italy as the rotating president of the African Union.
He has pitched a bedouin-style tent outside the G8 barracks in which world leaders are staying during the three-day summit.
In a 40-minute meeting between the two leaders, conducted in Arabic and English, Brown insisted he could not intervene in the Megrahi case.
Scottish judges this week delayed completing an appeal into Megrahi’s conviction until at least September, even though he has prostate cancer and faces a risk of dying in prison.
The bombing of flight Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie in 1988 killed 270 people on the aircraft and the ground.
Gaddafi’s demand for the return of Megrahi was countered by Brown urging him to do more to cooperate with the Metropolitan police investigation into the shooting of WPC Yvonne Fletcher in 1984.
Her murder led to the severing of diplomatic ties between the two countries for a decade, but Gaddafi subsequently worked to improve relations with the west, so much so that Tony Blair went to Tripoli to meet him in 2004.
The Libyans have admitted responsibility for Fletcher’s killing by embassy staff and have paid compensation, but Britain is complaining that Libya is not producing witnesses, meaning the inquiry has stalled for more than a year.
Brown also called on Gaddafi to help bring about the return of six-year-old Nadia Fawzi, who was abducted by her Libyan father in 2007.
Her English mother, Sarah Taylor, wants her daughter returned, and Gaddafi promised Brown that the Libyan courts were on course to reunite the two shortly.
More broadly, Brown – who was accompanied by three UK officials – also urged Gaddafi to use his influence to persuade Middle Eastern countries to renounce nuclear weapons.
It is not clear whether Gaddafi has any influence over the Iranian regime.
The 67-year-old leader, wearing dark glasses for much of the day and sporting long dark hair, resembled an ageing rock legend and was generally seen as the star of today’s meetings.
Brown praised him for abandoning his chemical weapons programme unilaterally in 2003, a move intended to bring about a normalisation of relations with the west.
The two leaders also agreed to work together to bring stability to the oil market, with Brown promising to use his influence to improve African representation on the boards of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
British officials admitted the meeting had started formally, but gradually warmed up as discussions continued.
Libya’s struggles
Travelling to the Libyan town of Sirte to report on the African Union summit, Christian Fraser considers whether Libya is ready for an era of mass tourism.

It is midnight at Tripoli airport, across the road from the arrivals hall. Beyond high mesh fences and the white glare of towering floodlights, a Chinese workforce is labouring through the night on a new terminal.
The air is hot and heavy. The face of Muammar Gaddafi stares out from a nearby billboard, as if micromanaging his country’s construction boom.
En route to the African Union summit, I had just emerged from the old arrivals hall – dour, disorganised and full of government spooks. I was delayed for an inordinate amount of time while they checked, then rechecked, that rarest of Libyan commodities, a journalist’s visa.
The two faces of Libya, a perfect illustration of where the country has come from, and where it is going.
Once the international pariah, now a state in full-speed transition.
Embracing capitalism
In the past year, Muammar Gaddafi has travelled the world signing profitable oil and gas deals that will help transform Tripoli into the new Mediterranean destination – or so they hope – for an influx of adventurous tourists.
There is still some way to go, but the beachfront is awash with five-star developments the government is building with its millions of petrodollars. No more sanctions, no more socialism.
"Twenty-five thousand new flats," beamed Ahmed, my government minder, as we sped into town past another busy building site – $200,000 (£125,000) each," he marvelled.
I could tell he was an enthusiastic proponent of the new Libyan capitalism. And a loyal subject – a Gaddafi key-ring was hanging from his trouser pocket.
Tourist restrictions
There is much to see and enjoy in Libya.

Spectacular Greek and Roman remains, the open-air galleries of prehistoric rock art and glorious largely uninhabited sandy beaches.
Plus, of course, that frisson that is always associated with visiting a country previously off-limit to Westerners.
And therein lies the rub. As much as Libya may like the idea of tourists, and the hard currency they bring, it has yet to embrace the reality.
Tourists must still travel in organised groups with a government-approved guide.
There is no opportunity to wander unfettered around the well-preserved Roman city of Leptis Magna or the magnificent theatre at Sabratha.
Accommodation shortage
Pity the poor tourist who runs into the Libyan control freakery I experienced last week on the way to this African Union summit.

It was held in Sirte, an undistinguished coastal town just along the way from Tripoli.
The flight to Sirte is a short one. A journey across a long stretch of barren coastline.
Beneath us those remote beaches from which hundreds of illegal African migrants escape to Europe every year. These are the people currently flooding into Tripoli.
I could see why stopping their advance proves such an enormous challenge. Aside from sporadic roadblocks, there is very little between the vast expanse of Sahara and the shoreline from where they set sail in their makeshift rafts and boats.
The building frenzy of Tripoli is yet to reach the distant outpost of Sirte.
"Mr Gaddafi cruised around his manor in one of those ostentatiously large buses favoured by touring rock stars"
Tourists might find a hotel room, but such was the shortage of accommodation during the summit, that journalists and dignitaries would be sleeping on a clapped-out, Panamanian-registered, car ferry brought in specially for the event.
No five-star facilities, these.
We paid top dollar for a cabin cloaked in the faintest whiff of diesel. Mine was already occupied by a cockroach and each day he raced me for the shower attached to the sink.
When Mr Gaddafi travels abroad he takes a Bedouin tent with him. I should have followed suit.
Closely watched
So why would you drag hundreds of summit delegates, 12 African leaders, diplomats, politicians and journalists to a one-horse town in the middle of nowhere

Simple really. It is the ancestral home of Libya’s egocentric leader, who for 39 years has fostered this one-man personality cult.
Throughout the week, he cruised around his manor in one of those ostentatiously large buses favoured by touring rock stars.
For his opening speech, he wore the golden robes of a king. One invited dignitary was so overcome in his presence, she fell to her knees at his feet.
Not satisfied with this all-encompassing power in Libya, the Colonel is even pushing a bold ambition for a unified continent, a United States of Africa modelled on the European Union.
EU ideals Tell that not just to the journalists, but also the VIPs at this summit who were herded from one location to another, closely observed at all times – and whose contact with the outside world was sorely limited by the electronic equipment used by state security, whenever the Colonel was in town.
Is Mr Gaddafi and his "new Libya" really prepared for all that comes with mass tourism The evidence of this African Union summit suggests not yet.
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