Families demand Libyan probe into 1992 crash

January 13th, 2012 by Oman Views




Families demand Libyan probe into 1992 crash

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Families of the victims of a Libyan Airlines plane that collided with a combat jet 19 years ago demanded the new Libyan government reinvestigate the crash that killed 157 people on December 22, 1992.

Muammar Gaddafi’s government said at the time the mid air collision, which took place when a Libyan MiG warplane rammed into flight LN1103 as it approached Tripoli, was an accident. The pilots of the combat plane ejected, but none of the airliner’s passengers and crew survived.

The families said they grew suspicious when the security forces immediately intervened and buried the bodies in a mass grave in a cemetery close to the crash site.

Felicity Prazak, the widow of Victor Charles Prazak, an oil worker who was aboard the Benghazi-Tripoli flight, believes the collision was not an accident.

“It was like a cover up, they buried them so quickly, they didn’t want us to know what happened on this flight,” said Prazak as she stood last week near the mass grave site in Sedi al-Saieh, south of Tripoli, along with her son Theo, 23, and daughter Tallena, 22.

“I was not allowed to come to the funeral … and I struggled for 19 years to find out (what happened),” she said.

The family flew from London to commemorate the crash’s 19th anniversary, but they were not alone.

Nearly 200 Libyans surrounded the mass grave which was fenced with metal railings and covered with a cement slab. The names of the victims were engraved on two marble panels at one side of the grave.

Some held framed pictures of the victims, gazing vacantly at the grave site, soaked in rain, as they wept.

“I have been to the grave but it has been on my own 10 years ago with my children,” Prazak said. “Now I am here with the unity of the Libyan people and we are fighting to expose what Gaddafi did.”

Gaddafi’s 42-year dictatorship was brought to an end after a nine-month civil war supported by NATO air strikes. Libyans can now speak openly about Gaddafi’s repressive actions.

It was the first time the families of the flight victims were allowed to gather at the site in such numbers and conduct a wreath-laying ceremony.

Most of the victims were Libyans along with 21 Egyptians and 19 from other mostly unspecified nationalities.

Fathia al-Hamali, a Libyan who lost her mother, sister, brother-in-law and niece in the crash, flew with her daughter from Benghazi for the event.

“We want to open this file,” she said. “What was the reason? why did they kill innocent people?”

By Taha Zargoun | Reuters | Reporting by Taha Zargoun; Writing by Mahmoud Habboush

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Libya rebels try to reach capital to aid revolt; advance on Tripoli

August 21st, 2011 by Oman Views




Codeword: Iftar

Libya rebels try to reach capital to aid revolt

JADDAIM, Libya (Reuters) – Libyan rebels battled their way toward Tripoli Sunday to help fighters inside the city who rose up overnight declaring a final showdown with Muammar Gaddafi.

The Libyan leader dismissed the rebels, fighting since February to topple him, as “rats” and said he would not yield.

In a coordinated revolt that rebel cells had been secretly preparing for months, shooting started Saturday night across Tripoli moments after Muslim clerics, using the loudspeakers on mosque minarets, called people on to the streets.

The fighting inside Tripoli, combined with rebel advances to the outskirts of the city, appeared to signal the decisive phase in a six month conflict that has become the bloodiest of the “Arab Spring” uprisings and embroiled NATO powers.

But Gaddafi’s fall is far from certain. His security forces did not buckle, the rebels appeared to control only a few neighborhoods of Tripoli and the city is much bigger than anything the mostly amateur anti-Gaddafi fighters, with their scavenged weapons and mismatched uniforms, have ever tackled.

If the Libyan leader is forced from power, there are question marks over whether the opposition can restore stability in this oil exporting country. The rebels’ own ranks have been wracked by disputes and rivalry.

Rebels said that after a night of heavy fighting, they controlled a handful of city neighborhoods. But whether they hold on could depend on the speed with which the rebels elsewhere reach Tripoli.

“The rebels may have risen too early in Tripoli and the result could be a lot of messy fighting,” said Oliver Miles, a former British ambassador to Libya. “The regime may not have collapsed in the city to quite the extent they think it has.”

ADVANCE ON TRIPOLI

The closest front line was to the west of the capital, along a highway that traces the edge of the Mediterranean Sea.

Rebel fighters returning from the front line said they had taken the town of Jaddaim and that they were now about 20 km from Tripoli and approaching the city’s outlying western suburb of Janzour.

A Reuters reporter near the front said he could hear shells landing, and could see columns of smoke. Ambulances rushed back from the front to a hospital in the nearby town of Zawiyah.

In Jaddaim, fighters were celebrating the advance, shouting “Allahu Akbar!” or “God is greatest!.”

In Benghazi, the eastern Libyan city where the anti-Gaddafi revolt started and where the rebels have their main stronghold, a senior official said everything was going according to plan.

“Our revolutionaries are controlling several neighborhoods and others are coming in from outside the city to join their brothers at this time,” Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, vice-chairman of the rebel National Transition Council, told Reuters.

MESSAGE OF DEFIANCE

In an audio recording broadcast late Saturday, Gaddafi – whose location has been kept a secret since NATO warplanes started bombing government buildings – made clear he had no intention of giving in to the rebels.

“Those rats … were attacked by the masses tonight and we eliminated them,” Gaddafi said. “I know that there are air bombardments but the fireworks were louder than the sound of the bombs thrown by the aircraft.”

A spokesman for Gaddafi, in a briefing for foreign reporters, underlined the message of defiance.

The armed units defending Tripoli from the rebels “wholeheartedly believe that if this city is captured the blood will run everywhere so they may as well fight to the end,” said the spokesman, Moussa Ibrahim.

“We hold Mr Obama, Mr Cameron and Mr Sarkozy morally responsible for every single unnecessary death that takes place in this country,” he said, referring to the leaders of the United States, Britain and France.

SNIPERS ON ROOFTOPS

A diplomatic source in Paris, where the government has closely backed the rebels, said underground rebel cells in the capital had been following detailed plans drawn up months ago and had been waiting for a signal to act.

That signal was “iftar” – the moment when Muslims observing the holy months of Ramadan break their daily fast. It was at this moment that imams started broadcasting their message from the mosques, residents said.

But the overnight fighting inside the city, while fierce, was not decisive. Rebels said they controlled all or parts of the Tajourah, Fashloom and Souk al-Jumaa neighborhoods but there was no city-wide rebellion.

In Tripoli Sunday , the two sides appeared to be jockeying for control of rooftop terraces where they could place firing positions, possibly in preparation for a new burst of fighting after nightfall.

A rebel activist in the city said pro-Gaddafi forces had put snipers on the rooftops of buildings around Bab al-Aziziyah, Gaddafi’s compound, and on the top of a nearby water tower.

As he spoke, single gunshots could be heard in the background, at intervals of a few seconds.

“Gaddafi’s forces are getting reinforcements to comb the capital,” said the activist, who spoke to a Reuters reporter outside Libya.

“Residents are crying, seeking help. One resident was martyred, many were wounded,” he said. It was not immediately possible to verify his account independently.

State television flashed up a message on the screen urging residents not to allow rebel gunmen to hide out on their rooftops.

“Agents and al Qaeda members are trying to destabilize and sabotage the city. You should prevent them from exploiting your houses and buildings, confront them and cooperate with counter-terrorism units, to capture them,” it said.

PRESSURE

Western governments were cautious about predicting Gaddafi’s imminent fall, but they said he was under unprecedented pressure.

“It’s been clear that Gaddafi has not had a firm grip on reality – as we heard from his comments last night – and has not been interested personally in leaving or negotiating,” said Alastair Burt, a foreign office minister.

“But those around him have continued to defect … That pressure indicates that those around Gaddafi know what’s going on. One can only hope that they’re getting messages through to him,” Burt told the BBC.

Ashour Shamis, a UK-based opposition editor and activist, said the Libyan leader’s options were dwindling.

“Gaddafi’s chances for a safe exit are diminishing by the hour. The more he stays the narrower his base, and the easier it will be for him to be caught or killed,” Ashour “I think he’s not being told the whole picture. (His son) Saif al-Islam is the one who is leading the fight for him.”

By Ulf Laessing | Reuters. Additional reporting by Missy Ryan in Tripoli, Robert Birsel in Benghazi, Libya, William Maclean in London, Hamid Ould Ahmed in Algiers; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Ralph Boulton

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Gaddafi’s wife, daughter in Tunisia

May 25th, 2011 by Oman Views




TUNIS (Reuters) – The wife and daughter of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi crossed over the border into Tunisia several days ago, a Tunisian security source said on Wednesday.

Gaddafi’s wife Safia and his daughter Aisha came to Tunisia with a Libyan delegation on May 14 and are on the island of Djerba in the south, the source told Reuters.

“It was expected that they would leave yesterday but they are still at Djerba,” the source added.

It did not appear that the two women had been traveling with Shokri Ghanem, Libya’s top oil official, who is believed to have also crossed into Tunisia and appears to have defected.

Libyan officials in Tripoli were not immediately available for comment.
Since the revolt began in February against Gaddafi’s rule, Aisha Gaddafi has made several public appearances backing her father and attacking the rebels and Western powers trying to overthrow him.

A month ago she appeared at her father’s Bab al-Aziziyah compound in Tripoli and addressed cheering crowds of supporters in an event broadcast live on Libyan state television.

“Talk about Gaddafi stepping down is an insult to all Libyans because Gaddafi is not in Libya, but in the hearts of all Libyans,” she said.

A lawyer by training, Gaddafi’s daughter runs a charitable foundation and in 2004 joined a team of lawyers defending former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

By Tarek Amara. Additional reporting by Christian Lowe, Writing by Sylvia Westall; Editing by Maria Golovnina

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