former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else

كتب الكاتب الفاتح جبرا المتوفرة بمعرض الدوحة
مرحبا Guest
اخر زيارك لك: 05-09-2024, 08:09 PM الصفحة الرئيسية

منتديات سودانيزاونلاين    مكتبة الفساد    ابحث    اخبار و بيانات    مواضيع توثيقية    منبر الشعبية    اراء حرة و مقالات    مدخل أرشيف اراء حرة و مقالات   
News and Press Releases    اتصل بنا    Articles and Views    English Forum    ناس الزقازيق   
مدخل أرشيف الربع الثالث للعام 2011م
نسخة قابلة للطباعة من الموضوع   ارسل الموضوع لصديق   اقرا المشاركات فى شكل سلسلة « | »
اقرا احدث مداخلة فى هذا الموضوع »
09-08-2011, 08:23 AM

البحيراوي
<aالبحيراوي
تاريخ التسجيل: 08-17-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 5763

للتواصل معنا

FaceBook
تويتر Twitter
YouTube

20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else

    In a New Libya, Ex-Loyalists Race to Shed Ties to Qaddafi

    Moises Saman for The New York Times


    Close DiggMySpaceRedditTumblrPermalink TRIPOLI, Libya — Khalid Saad worked for years as a loyal cog in Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s propaganda machine, arranging transportation to ferry foreign journalists to staged rallies, ensuring that they never left their hotels without official escorts and raising his own voice to cheer the Libyan leader.

    Multimedia 1 of 5NEXTPREV Photos: Battle for LibyaSeven months of images from the fighting between rebels and forces loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi.

    Related
    Whereabouts of Qaddafi Are Clouded in Confusion (September 8, 2011)
    Heat-Seeking Missiles Are Missing From Libyan Arms Stockpile (September 8, 2011)
    The Lede Blog: Qaddafi Family Video Shows Despot as Doting Grandfather (September 7, 2011) The day that rebels took Tripoli, Mr. Saad immediately switched sides.

    Now he works for the rebels’ provisional government, coordinating transportation for its officials and insisting that his previous support for Colonel Qaddafi was just business. “My uncle and my son were soldiers for the revolution,” he said in an interview. “Everyone will be happy now. Everything is changed now. Everyone is free.”

    As the curtain falls on Colonel Qaddafi’s Tripoli, many of its supporting actors are rushing to pick up new roles with the rebels, the very same people they were obliged not long ago to refer to as “the rats.” Many Libyans say the ease with which former Qaddafi supporters have switched sides is a testament to the pervasive cynicism of the Qaddafi era, when dissent meant jail or death, job opportunities depended on political connections, and almost everyone learned to wear two faces to survive within the system.

    That cynicism may now prove to be Tripoli’s saving grace. After months of a brutal crackdown and a bitter civil war, in a country with little history of unity where autonomous brigades of fighters still roam the capital, citizens have been unexpectedly willing to set aside their grievances against functionaries of the Qaddafi government. Everyone knows that almost everyone who stayed out of jail during four decades of Colonel Qaddafi’s rule was to some extent complicit.

    Indeed, the thin veneer of support helps explain why the loyalist forces who had terrorized the city crumbled so swiftly when it became clear that the end was near, averting the expected blood bath. Though loyalists still hold out in pockets around the country, and there have been episodes of retaliatory violence and #####ng, Tripoli, the capital, changed hands and returned to peace in a matter of days.

    “The way the system worked, everyone had to be part of it — all of us,” said Adel Sennosi, a former official of Colonel Qaddafi’s Foreign Ministry who is now working for the provisional government’s Foreign Ministry. “If we say, ‘Get rid of whoever was part of the system,’ we would have to get rid of the whole population,” he said.

    Now, he said, many of those former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else!”

    Rebel officials have said for months that they would try to avoid the mistakes made in Iraq after Saddam Hussein was overthrown, when United States officials disbanded the military and barred all former members of the ruling Baath Party — many of Iraq’s most experienced professionals — from working in any public-sector job.

    Instead, the Libyan rebels said, they will seek retribution, in a courtroom, against only the most notorious Qaddafi government officials, those who oversaw torture or killings, egregiously enriched themselves or, in the case of the captured television host Hala Misrati, led the propaganda war on state television.

    The rebel leaders pledged to welcome back most of the bureaucrats and other midlevel functionaries, and so far, former senior officials of Colonel Qaddafi’s government say the provisional government appears to be keeping its word. To underscore that point, the rebel leadership held a ceremony on Tuesday to hand control of a major natural gas plant to the same manager who was responsible for its security under Colonel Qaddafi.

    “There are very few instances of revenge,” said Abdulmajeed el-Dursi, the former chief of the Qaddafi-era foreign media operation, sipping coffee at a cafe full of rebels and talking about opening a media services company.

    “It is legitimate, all these things they are doing — freedom of the press, the rule of law,” Mr. Dursi added. “We always thought it was the right thing to do.”

    Officials at the rebels’ detention centers around the city say they have sent scores of Colonel Qaddafi’s former soldiers and supporters back to their homes after they have turned in their weapons, and even some of the former soldiers now insist that they are revolutionaries at heart.

    الليبين هل لديهم شبه مع ثوراتنا التي يشعلها الطلاب وناس الشارع ثم يقطفها السياسيون ويتمتع بها العسكريين

    بحيراوي
                  

09-08-2011, 08:46 AM

احمد التجانى احمد
<aاحمد التجانى احمد
تاريخ التسجيل: 11-11-2006
مجموع المشاركات: 3155

للتواصل معنا

FaceBook
تويتر Twitter
YouTube

20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else (Re: البحيراوي)

    Quote: former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else


    د. خليل ابراهيم ومجموعته مثالا فى تجربة الثورة الدارفورية على رفقاء الامس
    تحياتى البحيراوى
                  

09-08-2011, 09:07 AM

البحيراوي
<aالبحيراوي
تاريخ التسجيل: 08-17-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 5763

للتواصل معنا

FaceBook
تويتر Twitter
YouTube

20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else (Re: احمد التجانى احمد)

    Quote: د. خليل ابراهيم ومجموعته مثالا فى تجربة الثورة الدارفورية على رفقاء الامس
    تحياتى البحيراوى


    الأخ أحمد تجاني

    تحياتي - يا زول دكتور خليل دا كسر جره وقابل شره وجاهم دغري في أم درمان
    علا الجماعة ديل إنتظروا لمن الثوار دخلوا طرابلس حتى قالوا نحن ثوار أكثر منكم


    بحيراوي
                  


[رد على الموضوع] صفحة 1 „‰ 1:   <<  1  >>




احدث عناوين سودانيز اون لاين الان
اراء حرة و مقالات
Latest Posts in English Forum
Articles and Views
اخر المواضيع فى المنبر العام
News and Press Releases
اخبار و بيانات



فيس بوك تويتر انستقرام يوتيوب بنتيريست
الرسائل والمقالات و الآراء المنشورة في المنتدى بأسماء أصحابها أو بأسماء مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة
About Us
Contact Us
About Sudanese Online
اخبار و بيانات
اراء حرة و مقالات
صور سودانيزاونلاين
فيديوهات سودانيزاونلاين
ويكيبيديا سودانيز اون لاين
منتديات سودانيزاونلاين
News and Press Releases
Articles and Views
SudaneseOnline Images
Sudanese Online Videos
Sudanese Online Wikipedia
Sudanese Online Forums
If you're looking to submit News,Video,a Press Release or or Article please feel free to send it to [email protected]

© 2014 SudaneseOnline.com

Software Version 1.3.0 © 2N-com.de