Gaddafi's son killed in NATO strike: Libya rebels

Libya's rebel forces today said an overnight night NATO strike on an operations centre in the western town of Zliten has killed Muammar Gaddafi's son Khamis, and more than 30 others.

Citing spies operating among Gaddafi's ranks, Mohammed Zawawi, a spokesperson for revolutionary militia groups, told AFP that Khamis was confirmed to be among the dead.

“Overnight there was a aircraft attack by NATO on the Gaddafi operations room in Zliten and there are around 32 Gaddafi troops killed. One of them is Khamis,” said Zawawi, a spokesperson for the United Revolutionary Forces.

Khamis, who has long led pro-government militia fighters, was said to be commanding the battle for Zliten — a Gaddafi bastion that has halted the rebel advance on Tripoli.

The stri

ke appears to have come just hours after Tripoli took journalists on an escorted tour of the centre of Zliten, an effort to rubbish rebel claims the town was under attack.

Fighters from the rebel enclave of Misrata, 60 kilometres to the east, announced this week they had made progress in Zliten, a strategic coastal town on the road to Tripoli.

But authorities in Tripoli quickly denied that claim, saying they controlled the entire town.

On Thursday an AFP journalist saw the town centre was in the hands of regime forces, although intensive artillery fire was heard in the distance.

Residents said the frontline is located at a distance of 10 to 15 kilometres east of the city centre while rebel official said they control three neighbourhoods in the town's east.

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Central Tripoli rocked by five explosions

TRIPOLI: The Libyan capital was rocked by a series of explosions, thought to be the result of Nato airstrikes, early on Saturday, a

Reuters witness said.

Four blasts rocked the hotel were international media were based and a fifth was heard slightly further off.

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U.N. refugee body says hopes resume work in Libya

GENEVA, June 9 (Reuters) – The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said on Wednesday it wants to talk with Libya about resuming work in the country after the authorities last week told the agency it must cease operations.

The Libyan Foreign Ministry late on Tuesday said the presence of an UNHCR office in the capital Tripoli was illegal and accused the agency of unlawful activities.

“We are seeking open, constructive dialogue with Libya to dispel any misunderstandings which we hope would lead to consensus to resume our work,” spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.

The Geneva-based agency, headed by High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres, would be making no further comment at this stage, she added.

Reporting the Libyan expulsion order, not yet enforced, on Tuesday, Fleming said it had special gravity because of Italy’s policy of sending people fleeing North Africa and the Middle East by sea out of Italian into Libyan waters.

Libya has not signed the 1951 convention on refugees and does not have a domestic asylum system so the UNHCR has been helping the authorities determine whether people arriving are refugees or other migrants, she told a briefing. There are estimated to be more than 12,000 refugees and asylum seekers.

“This will leave a huge vacuum for the thousands of refugees and asylum seekers who are there already and of course those who continue to arrive steadily on boats every week,” Fleming told a Tuesday news briefing.

The UNHCR says Libya has given it no deadline or reason for the closure decision.

In its Tuesday statement, the Libyan Foreign Ministry said it had repeatedly told U.N. representatives that Tripoli saw the U.N. refugee office presence as illegal since it is not bound by a convention with the United Nations.

Libya has been opening up to the United States and Europe, but the move against the UNHCR is a sign of the unpredictability of Muammar Gaddafi’s government, diplomats in Geneva said.

The UNHCR says it has registered about 9,000 refugees in Libya, and that there are 3,700 asylum seekers. The largest group of refugees are Palestinians, with people from Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea, Liberia and Ethiopia making up the rest. The biggest group of asylum seekers are from Eritrea.

The UNCHR provides healthcare, shelter, education and training to refugees as well as legal advice on how to move from Libya to a country where they can settle permanently.

The agency has been working in the North African country since 1991 and has 26 staff there, mostly local.

European countries argue that many of the people involved are economic migrants rather than political refugees. (Reporting by Robert Evans; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Reuters Summit – Iran will overcome sanctions – Libya

(For other news from the Reuters Global Energy Summit, click http://www.reuters.com/summit/GlobalEnergy10?pid=500)

Fresh sanctions on Iran will create difficulties but the Islamic Republic will be able to live with them, Libya’s top oil official told the Reuters Global Energy Summit on Wednesday.

The United States has said Russia and China, Iran’s allies, had agreed to a draft resolution that would expand U.N. sanctions on Iran for refusing to halt nuclear enrichment. Tehran has said its nuclear work is peaceful.

“It will create difficulties but it is not going to kill them,” Shokri Ghanem, the chairman of Libya’s National Oil Corporation, said. “We had sanctions for 20 years. What did it do to us? Not very much.”

Sanctions on Libya were lifted in 2004 after Tripoli renounced banned weapons programmes and agreed to pay compensation to the families of those killed in the 1988 bombing of a U.S. airliner over the Scottish town of Lockerbie.

The draft sanctions on Iran, which have also been backed by Britain, France and Germany, will hit Iran’s banking and other industries. They include international inspection of vessels suspected of carrying cargo related to Iran’s nuclear or missile programmes.

“I don’t think this is a prudent policy,” he said, urging diplomacy. “Countries can live through difficulties,” he added.

Ghanem said he did not believe Iran, a fellow OPEC member, would be subject to sanctions on its oil exports.

“If you embargo oil exports from Iran you are taking 3 million or 3.7 million barrels a day from the market. That will lead to an immense increase in the price of oil,” he said. “They are cutting their own noses.”

Iran has been storing more crude oil on tankers at sea in recent weeks which trade sources said was related to lower sales of the country’s sour crude. There has been speculation that fear of sanctions was having an impact on buyers.

Ghanem said he did not see an increase in demand “on other crude” which would indicate “any pulling out” on Iranian crude.

Iran is the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter and oil exports are the country’s key revenue earner. Other exports include commodities such as pistachio nuts.

“They are going to sanction pistachios first because they need more oil than pistachios,” Ghanem joked.

For a Reuters Insider interview with Ghanem, click http://link.reuters.com/qef56k

Nine-year-old plane crash survivor has been told his family is no more

London, May 15 (ANI): The lone survivor of the Libyan plane crash that left 103 people dead, nine-year-old Dutch boy Ruben van Assouw has been informed that he is the only surviving member of his family.

The boy is reportedly coping well under the adverse circumstances.

“We have explained to Ruben exactly what happened,” said a statement from the boy”s aunt and uncle read out to media in Tripoli. “He knows that his parents and his brother are dead.”

“The time ahead will be a difficult period for us,” the statement said. “We hope that the media will respect our privacy,” The Telegraph reports.

There has been an outpouring of support for the little boy who has lost his parents and brother in the crash. The Libyan Organization for Children is going out of its way to ensure that the boy is able to recover from the trauma. He is being treated at the Tripoli Hospital and is recuperating after surgery was performed on his smashed legs.

Earlier Ruben told a Dutch newspaper he was “fine” but could remember nothing of the crash.

“My name is Ruben and I am from Holland,” he told the Telegraaf newspaper in a telephone conversation.

“I am fine, but my legs hurt a lot,” the boy said.

“I am in a hospital,” Ruben said. “I don”t know how I got here, I don”t know anything more. I really want to go home,”

The boy and his family were returning to Tripoli from a South African safari holiday, when they boarded the ill-fated Afriqiyah Airways flight that disintegrated upon landing on Wednesday. (ANI)

Lockerbie bomber unable to speak due to ‘deteriorating’ health

London, Sep. 13 (ANI): The Lockerbie bomber’s brother has said that Abdel Basset al-Megrahi’s health condition has deteriorated rapidly in the last 24 hours, and he is now unable to speak.

“He is at a special ward at Tripoli Medical Centre. His condition has deteriorated rapidly since yesterday. He is unable to speak to anyone. His situation is worrying. His temperature is at 39.5 degrees,” Sky News quoted his brother Abdenasser Megrahi, as saying.

Doctors treating Megrahi confirmed this.

“We are expecting the result of lab exams from Germany to arrive here before a special committee of doctors release a statement on his health circumstances,” a doctor said.

A reporter who was allowed inside Megrahi’s room said that the Lockerbie bomber was unable to speak.

“He could not utter words. He cannot speak. I was due to interview him from his hospital bed but he cannot speak to me because of the apparent sudden deterioration of his health,” he said.

Last month, Abdel Basset al-Megrahi was freed to his home country Libya after Scotland decided to release him on the grounds that he has prostate cancer and does not have long to live.

Megrahi was sentenced to life in prison in 2001 for his part in blowing up Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland in December 1988, killing 270 people.

The British Government has been accused of backing Megrahi’s release in order to benefit from North African state’s oil and gas reserves.

However, the Gordon Brown Government has rejected such allegations. (ANI)

Lockerbie bomber once again declares his innocence

Tripoli (Libya), Aug.22 (ANI): Abdul Baset Ali al-Megrahi, the man accused of perpetrating the bombing of a Pan Am Flight 103 that claimed 270 lives in 1988 in Lockerbie, southern Scotland, has once again proclaimed his innocence.

In an interview to The Times at his house, in the Dimachk area of Tripoli, al-Megrahi who was released by the Scottish authorities earlier this week on grounds of ill health, said: ” I always believed I would come back if justice prevailed.”

He did not come across as bitter or angry but continued to insist on his innocence, as he has done from the day of his conviction. He abandoned his appeal, he said, not because he was guilty but to give himself the best possible chance of going home before he died.

He had applied to be freed on compassionate grounds and also to be transferred to a Libyan prison under the terms of an agreement Britain and Libya signed in April.

One of the conditions of the latter was that all legal proceedings had to be finished.

He denied reports that he had been pressured to drop the appeal by a Scottish or British government terrified that such a hearing would expose a grave miscarriage of justice, but he added: “If there is justice in the UK I would be acquitted or the verdict would be quashed because it was unsafe. There was a miscarriage of justice.”

Al-Megrahi promised that before he died he would present new evidence through his Scottish lawyers that would exonerate him.

“My message to the British and Scottish communities is that I will put out the evidence and ask them to be the jury,” he said. He refused to elaborate.

Asked who, then, was responsible for the deaths of 270 people who died in the Lockerbie bombing, al-Megrahi smiled. “It’s a very good question but I’m not the right person to ask.”

He insisted that it was not Libya and would not be drawn on suggestions that it was Syria, Iran or the Palestinians.

He said that he understood why many of the victims’ relatives were angry at his release.

“They have hatred for me. It’s natural to behave like this,” he said, although he pointedly added that others had written to him in prison to say that they forgave him whether he was guilty or innocent.

“They believe I’m guilty which in reality I’m not. One day the truth won’t be hiding as it is now. We have an Arab saying: ‘The truth never dies’.”

Meanwhile, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s son, Saif, has claimed that al Megrahi’s release was linked to trade deals between Britain and Libya.

Saif al Islam Gaddafi said that Megrahi’s return was a “victory” for all Libyans.

According to The Telegraph, he made the claims in a television interview for Libyan television recorded as he accompanied Megrahi on the flight back from Scotland to Libya on Thursday.

The UK government has vehemently denied the claims.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: “There is no deal. All decisions relating to Megrahi’s case have been exclusively for Scottish ministers, the Crown Office in Scotland and the Scottish judicial authorities.” (ANI)

It was raining gifts for Bush and his gang during foreign visits!

Washington, Jun 25 (ANI): A report submitted by the US State Department has revealed that the Bush administration received very generous gifts during their foreign visits.

When the administration decided to restore diplomatic relations with Libya, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made a visit to Tripoli last year, the first time in more than 50 years, and Libyan strongman Muammar Qadhafi showered her with costly gifts, reports Politico.com.

According to the report submitted on June 24, Rice received a diamond ring, a locket with the Libyan leader’s photo in it, and other items amounting to 212,225 dollars.

Rice’s spokesman, Sean McCormack, got an 800-dollar Men’s RADO watch “with small likeness of Qadhafi’s face on watch face”.

But Qadhafi’s generosity was outdone by the Saudis, who lavished more than 750,000 dollars in gifts on Rice, President George W. Bush and other officials during their trips last year.

In January 2008, Saudi King Abdullah gave Rice a “gold, diamond and sapphire set with necklace, ring, bracelet and earrings”, along with a robe and scarf. The whole gift pack was worth 230,145 dollars said the State Department.

During the same January visit, the Saudis gave State Department Chief of Protocol Nancy Brinker 65,000 dollars in gifts, including an emerald and diamond bracelet.

Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East, David Welch, and the U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Ford Fraker, each got 45,000 dollars worth of watches and other items.

Top White House staffers, including Stephen Hadley, Josh Bolten, Ed Gillespie, Dana Perino, William McGurn and Elliott Abrams each got jewellery and robes pegged at about 15,000 dollars a set.

During a March visit to Saudi Arabia, Vice President Cheney’s daughter, Elizabeth, got diamond and ruby jewellery with an estimated value of 85,000 dollars, while her mom, Lynne Cheney, got a 65,000-dollar set.

In 2007, Rice received two gifts of jewellery from the Saudis, with a total value of more than 310,000 dollars.

In February 2008 King Abdullah of Jordan gave the U.S. Ambassador to Jordan, David Hale, “one Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Jumbo watch” valued by the State Department at 12,500 dollars.

Bush, who is an avid biker, received a black Mercedes mountain bike in 2008 from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa presented him with a “full carbon Black Gold XTR mountain bike”.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert gave the U.S. leader “a hydration system cycling backpack” and bib shorts marked with Bush’s name and Israeli flags.

By law, federal officials are required to turn such gifts over to the government, which either sells them or stores them at the National Archives.

A few items are retained for display at government offices or purchased by the recipient, but items such as food, liquor, cigars, were “handled pursuant to U.S. Secret Service policy”, which may be a diplomatic way of saying they were disposed of for security reasons.

The State Department revealed in the report to be published on June 25 in the Federal Register. (ANI)

Hate cleric Bakri on strict diet to breed more ‘jihadi’ recruits

London, May 24 (ANI): Infamous Islamic hate cleric Mullah Omar Bakri Mohammed has been following a strict diet so that he can breed more ‘jihadi’ recruits.

The 50 year old cleric shunned his former wife, and married Lebanese beauty Ruba almost half of his age, and is now planning to start another family with her.

“Inshallah (God willing), I will have more children. My wife is still young and we would like to start a family together,” The Daily Star quoted Mohammad, as saying.

One of Mohammad’s friend said: “His dream is to produce more children, all committed to following his jihadi cause.”

In his bid to improve his chances of becoming a dad again for the seventh time, Mohammad, with his control eating habits, has slimmed down from 20st to 13st.

He has now moved into his new apartment in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli with 26 year old Ruba and his 10 year old son, and is planning a ‘summer of loving’ with his second wife.

Mohammad ignited fury when he was in Britain by praising 9/11 perpetrators.

The Lebanese-born cleric, also blamed the British Government and the public for the 7/7 serial blasts in London in which 52 people were killed. (ANI)

Hate Islamist preacher Bakri used British taxpayers money to live in luxury

London, Apr 26 (ANI): Hate radical Islamist preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed has boasted that he used thousands of pounds of British cash to set himself up in a luxury Lebanese apartment.

The Muslim cleric, who lived in the UK for 20 years before being banned for preaching hate, used backdated incapacity benefits to buy his plush flat in Beirut.

Speaking to the Daily Star at his latest Lebanon home in Tripoli, Bakri insists that he and fellow radicals including Anjem Choudary are justified in taking our state handouts because Britain has “plundered” and “colonised” Muslim countries around the world.

Bakri, 49, bragged: “They used to condemn me in the UK for claiming benefits but you take what is available like everyone else. The UK made me a bogeyman so I could not work.”

“One day I was at the doctor’s and he said, ‘You are disabled because of your leg. You should be claiming incapacity benefit. Why are you not claiming?’ I did not even know this was the case. Then, when I got to the benefits office, they told me I was owed arrears since the 1990s so they backdated the payments for me,” he said.

“They did not give me the cash but they told me to choose a car so I could get around. So I chose the best one, a Renault Espace.

“Then, when I came to the Lebanon in 2005, I sold the car and used the money to buy an apartment.”

Bakri laughed: “The exchange rate was so good then – about two dollars to the pound. I got around $55,000 (£28,000 in 2005) from selling the car.”

Unrepentant Bakri has now moved into a second flat in the northern city of Tripoli – because he says Beirut is not Islamic enough for him. He shares the apartment with his second wife, Ruba, 30. (ANI)

Up to 300 boat migrants land on Sicily

Rome – Up to 300 illegal immigrants have landed on the Italian island of Sicily on Saturday, local media reported.

Italian coast guard authorities guided the migrants’ vessel into the harbour of Pozzallo, in the south of the island. Among the immigrants are thought to be more than 30 women and children.

The new arrival adds to the 340 migrants that landed on the Italian islet of Lampedusa, south of Sicily, on Thursday.

In Naples on Saturday, a demonstration of several thousand African immigrants took place, in protest at alleged racism and discrimination directed against them in Italy.

According to Italian government figures, a total of 36,900 would- be immigrants arrived in Italy by sea in 2008, a 75-per-cent increase over the previous year. Of these some 31,000 landed on Lampedusa.

Italian officials say they hope to see a decrease in such hazardous sea-journeys in May when an agreement between Rome and Tripoli involving stepped up patrols of Libya’s coastline, comes into effect.

Earlier in April, over 230 would-be immigrants are feared to have drowned in a shipwreck off the coast of Libya. (dpa)

Over 300 would-be migrants arrive on Italian islet

Lampedusa, Italy – More than 300 would-be migrants landed Thursday on the Italian islet of Lampedusa when three vessels carrying them were escorted to shore by authorities.

The first and largest group – 239 people including 45 women and two children – arrived at dawn after their vessel was intercepted by a Italian coastguard patrol, officials said.

Authorities are planning to transfer the migrants to a reception centre in Porto Empedocle in Sicily.

According to Italian government figures, a total of 36,900 would- be immigrants arrived in Italy by sea in 2008, a 75-per-cent increase over the previous year. Of these some
31,000 landed on Lampedusa, an islet situated south of Sicily.

Italian officials say they hope to see a decrease in such hazardous sea-journeys in May when an agreement between Rome and Tripoli involving stepped up patrols of Libya’s coastline, comes into effect.

Earlier in April, over 230 would-be immigrants are feared to have drowned in a shipwreck off the coast of Libya.(dpa)

Libya names new chief of key intelligence body

TRIPOLI, April 12 (Reuters) – Libya has picked a successor to Moussa Koussa as head of the Foreign Intelligence Service, six weeks after Koussa took over as foreign minister.

Libya experts had wondered whether Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi would let Koussa keep his position as spymaster alongside his job as foreign minister, or would trim his influence by distancing him from the intelligence agencies.

The new spy chief is Abu Zaid Omar Dourdaa, a former deputy prime minister and a staunch Gaddafi supporter, officials said.

The Foreign Intelligence Service has been one of Gaddafi’s main tools for spreading his influence in Africa and beyond. It was prominent in combating dissidents based abroad and in a confrontation with the West that lasted almost three decades.

But it was also instrumental in helping Libya out of isolation and back into mainstream international politics. It worked on British and U.S. intelligence to convince London and Washington that Tripoli wanted normal relations.

Dourdaa, 65, is widely known in Tripoli as an intellectual and is credited with good management skills.

He was successively a provincial governor, a culture minister, deputy foreign minister, economy and farming minister, a deputy speaker of parliament and deputy prime minister.

He was also Libya’s envoy to the United Nations in New York before becoming the country’s railway company head and then managing director of the government’s largest housing projects.

Libya’s Foreign Intelligence Service cooperates closely with U.S. and other Western spying bodies to fight al Qaeda in North and Sub Sahara Africa, where Libya enjoys some influence. (Writing by Lamine Ghanmi; Editing by Jonathan Wright)

Singapore and Libya sign investment and tax pacts

Singapore – Singapore said Thursday that it signed investment and tax agreements with Libya.

The investment pact was aimed at promoting bilateral investment flows by protecting investors and their investments, Singapore’s Trade and Industry Ministry said in a statement.

It guarantees non-discriminatory treatment of investors, compensation in the event of expropriation or nationalization of their investments, free transfer of capital and returns from investment, and access to international arbitration for settlement of investment-related disputes.

The tax pact facilitates flows of trade, investment, technical knowhow and expertise between Singapore and Libya, the ministry said.

The pacts were signed Wednesday during a visit to Tripoli by Singapore Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry S Iswaran. (dpa)

Qadhafi files civil lawsuit against Geneva: report

Geneva – Libya has filed a civil lawsuit against the Canton of Geneva for arresting last year the son and daughter-in-law of the Libyan leader Muammar al-Qadhafi, the Swiss TSR channel reported Wednesday.

The lawsuit, for over 500,000 francs (437,000 dollars), alleges the manner of the arrest was disproportionate and violated international regulations related to diplomacy.

In July last year, employees at a Geneva hotel called the police to complain about the abuse of two servants at the hands of their foreign bosses, Hannibal al-Qadhafi and his wife.

The couple were held for two days and released back to Libya on a bond of 500,000 dollars.

A Swiss report concluded that the police had not violated any laws, but could have acted more “sensitively” when carrying out the arrest.

Earlier this month, Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey insisted again that the Geneva police had committed no wrongs and the country would not pay compensation. Also, the Swiss ambassador to Tripoli left his post last week.

The incident has spread a dark cloud over the relations between Tripoli and Bern, with Libya threatening retaliation for the arrest. So far, flights between the countries have been canceled and two Swiss businessmen were arrested in Libya.

In addition to compensation, Libya has also demanded a formal governmental apology.

Swiss media have termed the row a “diplomatic crisis.”

In 1997, another row ensued when the Swiss did not grant a study visa to another son of the Libyan leader, but the argument was solved about a year later. (dpa)

In three African countries, it’s Gaddafi to the rescue

In three African countries, it's Gaddafi to the rescue Tripoli – Dressed in a traditional Libyan brown cap and cloak punctuated by a broach in the shape of the African continent, Moamer Gaddafi looked completely in his element rushing from one conflict-beset African country to the next last week.

On Friday, Libya’s 66-year-old “Brother Leader” triumphantly returned to the Niger capital, Niamey, with six hostages whose release he had just secured from the rebel Movement of the Niger People for Justice.

Niger’s President Mamdou Tandja had asked Gaddafi to intercede to break a stalemate that had dragged on since the hostages were captured in June 2007.

It was a dramatic ending to Gaddafi’s lightning tour of three African countries in five days in his capacity as temporary head of the African Union (AU).

Gaddafi had traveled to Niger via the West African country of Guinea-Bissau, where soldiers on March 2 had assassinated the president, Joao Bernardo Vieira, in his palace after an explosion killed the head of the armed forces and Vieira’s chief political rival, General Batista Tagme Na Waie.

During his short visit, Gaddafi said that polls to elect a successor to the assassinated president may need to be delayed.

“Perhaps the 60-day timescale specified under the constitution will not be sufficient to organise presidential elections,” Gaddafi said at the airport at the end of a two-hour visit to the capital, Bissau.

The AU and the Community of Sahel-Saharan States would send election observers and would launch their own inquiries into the twin killings that shook the small West African country at the beginning of the month, Gaddafi added.

In Mauritania, where he was greeted by cheering crowds holding placards bearing his likeness, he announced that presidential elections would take place as planned on June 6.

AU sanctions on the military junta that deposed the country’s first democratically elected president, Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, last August would not be implemented so long as the elections take place as scheduled.

“The problem is over,” Gaddafi said. “The case is closed.”

The AU imposed sanctions on Mauritania in February, including a travel ban and a freeze of bank assets on the members of the junta, and called for “an immediate return to constitutional order.”

Gaddafi was elected head of the AU last month, a position long sought by the man who has tried to get the AU to come together in a “United States of Africa.”

The Libyan leader has increasingly turned south in frustration with his peers in the Arab League.

Last year, Gaddafi criticized his fellow Arab leaders at the annual summit of the Arab League for doing nothing in 2003 when the US invaded Iraq, and for not getting behind his plan to unite Israelis and Palestinians in a new, democratic country he has suggested could be called “Isratine.”

“We hate each other, we wish ill for each other, and our intelligence services conspire against each other,” Gaddafi told presidents of 22 Arabic-speaking countries last year. “We are our own enemy.”

“Your turn is next,” he warned delegates, who had perhaps grown used to his annual excoriations.

“Our blood and our language may be one, but there is nothing that can unite us,” Gaddafi said.

Arab leaders could not be immediately reached for comment on whether they would allow Gaddafi to settle the Middle East’s problems single-handedly after seeing his success in Africa. (dpa)

Libya releases two political prisoners

Tripoli – Libyan authorities on Tuesday released two men imprisoned since February 2007 for planning a protest in Tripoli. They were the last of their group to be freed, human rights groups said.

Libya’s State Security court sentenced Jamal al-Haji and Faraj Humaid to 12 and 15 years in prison, respectively, in February 2007 for planning to attend a protest in Tripoli’s Martyr Square to commemorate a the anniversary of a 2006 clash between protesters and police that left 11 people dead.

“The release of Jamal al-Haji and Faraj Humaid is a particularly welcome step in light of the Libyan authorities’ stated initiative of breaking with the past,” Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at the New York-based pressure group Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.

Libyan authorities released the protest’s organiser, Idris Boufayed, in October so he could seek medical treatment for lung cancer.

The rest of the 12 people arrested for planning to participate in the protest were released between June and February 2009, Human Rights Watch said.

Western governments and human rights organizations had repeatedly appealed to the Libyan government to release the men, who became known collectively as the “Boufayed group.” (dpa)