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Showing posts with label gaddafi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gaddafi. Show all posts

October 20, 2011

Col. GADDAFI... barks no more.


Following a last UN-CNT assault, this morning, Sirte
is freed
and another dictator's career came to an end.

In Benghazi and Tripoli, crowds gathered in the streets to start celebrating
the death
of Colonel Gaddafi.



[Photo: Philippe Desmazes]
NTC fighters celebrate in the coastal city of Sirte on October 20, 2011 after the final bastion of
resistance by forces loyal strongman Muammar Gaddafi fell to fighters of the new regime.
Gaddafi was killed on October 20, when new regime forces launched a final assault in his hometown.


euronews breaking news today:
- Gaddafi captured close to Sirte
- The last moments of Mouammar Gaddafi
- Gaddafi's death rises problems and questions
- Jubilant Libyan fighters parade Gaddafi's body
- What has become of Gaddafi's missing sons

Al Jazeera takes a look back at Gaddafi's reign, in pictures... HERE.


Col. Gaddafi's 42-year career :
- September 1st 1969, access to power...
- Oct. 20th 2011, dead of a Mad Dog.




BBC: Gaddafi reported final movements.
___
More PPG posts on Gaddafi...

August 22, 2011

Breaking: Can You Hear Last Gaddafi's Barkings?

But... where is he barking from?

"Amid celebrations in Tripoli and the rebel capital of Benghazi, Col Gaddafi maintained
a defiant posture until the end. In an audio message on state TV, he called on all Muslims
and Libyan tribes to march on the city to prevent themselves becoming servants to
imperialists and traitors."

[FT]

Is he hiding somewhere under the ground, like a rat? Now fearing for his own life - or worse,
being captured - he pushes his followers to death, he pushes them to kill their brothers to
avenge the insult done to him, by daring to deny him, and the more he's afraid, the more
he barks, far from home, from human compassion, far from youth.




Click on image to check the interactive Ap map.










*
Previous PPG's posts tagged
'GADDAFI'.

___

March 29, 2011

Muammar Gaddafi as a Clinical Case.

I assume I'm not alone in finding absurd and
unacceptable
that a man mentally ill could
access
to official charges and full power at
the head
of a state.

I
've been searching in vain the net for a serious clinical study on Gaddafi's case.

All I could find for the moment, about the Libyan leader, appeared yesterday in
this Ben Carey's article on
the New York Times
['C.I.A. Profiling Delves Into the Minds of Global Leaders': Diplomats, military strategists and even presidents
draw on psychological assessments of hostile
leaders prepared by analysts at the C.I.A. and the Department
of Defense].

Carey points out an interesting link to *Dr. Jerrold Post's
article, "Qaddafi Under Siege, A political psychologist
assesses Libya's mercurial leader"
, on
the Foreign Policy
magazine.
*[Dr. Jerrold Post, is a psychiatrist who directs the political psychology program at George Washington
University and founded the C.I.A. branch that does behavioral analysis].

Ben Carey kindly confirmed me this is currently the only profile available to the public
on the
net.

...
"While this is not a definitive clinical diagnosis, Qaddafi can best be characterized as having
a borderline personality. The "borderline" often swings from intense anger to euphoria.
Under his often "normal" facade, he is quite insecure and sensitive to slight.
His reality testing is episodically faulty. While most of the time Qaddafi is "above the border"
and in touch with reality, when under stress he can dip below it and his perceptions can be
distorted and his judgment faulty. And right now, he is under the most stress he has been
under since taking over the leadership of Libya. Thus, the quotes elaborated above probably
accurately reflect his true beliefs. He does sincerely cling to the idea that his people all love
him.

Qaddafi's strong anti-authority bent and his tendency to identify with the underdog can be
traced back to his childhood. He was born in a tent in the desert to a Bedouin family in 1942.
When Qaddafi was 10 years old, Gamal Abdel Nasser took over the reins of Egypt at the
head of the Free Officers Movement, which made a deep and lasting impression on the
young Qaddafi. He initially attended a Muslim school, where he was recognized as being
very bright, and was sent to Tripoli to continue his education, but was teased by the children
of the cosmopolitan elite for his coarse manners, leaving him with a bitter resentment of the
establishment."

[read ALL]
_______
How could we prevent, from now on and in any country,
a madman to access official charges and full powers?

Qaddafi's bloated ego makes me fear the worst.

He says himself he isn't a 'normal person', that's for sure:
mythomaniacs are not ordinary persons indeed.

His arrogance toward the forces opposing to his will
dictates his conduct since the beginning of the revolt until
the current paroxysm,
punctuated with lies, unfair means and a total lack of scruples.
I'm afraid he will never surrender and that
his victims won't have a revenge because
they are not going to see him one day before any judge.
Then what?

- Suicide? Considered from our point of view, this would be an 'honourable' way out
(and a good one to get rid of him),
but a man with such a high opinion of himself does
not commit suicide.
Besides, this would be too great a loss to his supporters and for
Libya
..!
- Death? Perhaps - if he fails his latest challenge, his final showdown... but then a
glorious death
, a martyrdom, according to a scenario carefully staged by his sick brain.
By the way, the 72 houri are already awaiting him!


So, what's next?
. . .
More on the personality and mischief of this 'monsieur' [UPDATES]
- Portrait of the young Gaddafi [DailyMail]
- Shocking pictures of Gaddafi's brutality against his own people [DailyMail]
- Gaddafi paid millions to polish his global image [CNN]
. . .

February 27, 2011

Gaddafi's, another silly speech announcing the collapse of a regime.

If the legitimate claims that leed to revolt in North Africa and Middle East
countries are
the same, the course of events shows that it is easier to
overthrow
a crook (Tunisia) or a traditional dictator (Egypt) than a sick
man
like Colonel Gaddafi.


[TelLieVision - 1 of 3]

The revolt of the Libyan people is probably felt by the Colonet as clumsiness and lack
of gratitude
from his subjects, which only exasperates the need for recognition of his
hypertrophied ego.
The problem is that he now feels driven to martyrdom, but not before having wiped
out
those who oppose his will.
Mentally ill or devil's henchman, the treatment Gaddafi
reserved
to protesters since the beginning of riots has seriously violated the international
humanitarian law and therefore...
"The UN Security Council voted unanimously Saturday night to impose military and
financial sanctions against Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi and his inner circle and to

refer his
regime's crackdown on protesters to a war crimes tribunal for an investigation
of possible crimes against humanity.
[The Washington Post]

Speaking about Human Rights, why isn't there a way yet to stop mad people BEFORE they
perpetrate genocide and crimes against humanity? It usually takes too long a time before
they come to an end 'spontaneously'... haven't we learned but nothing from the past?

The official seat of the International Criminal Court is in
The Hague, but its proceedings
may take place anywhere
so we're [I am] expecting to see Gaddafi respond for his crimes
before a Libyan court.


___
***Avaaz is working urgently to "blackout-proof" the protests - with secure satellite modems
and phones, tiny video cameras, and portable radio transmitters, plus expert support teams on
the ground -- to enable activists to
broadcast live video feeds even during internet and phone
blackouts
and ensure the oxygen of international attention fuels their courageous movements
for change.





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