Libya 2011 Demonstrations (19 Viewers)

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ReBeL

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Jan 14, 2005
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    Libya: Spending oil money across the globe

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- In the span of a few years, Libya's financial tendrils have reached across oceans, across borders and across continents.

    The United States, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and the European Union recently moved to freeze billions of dollars of assets belonging to Libya's government and its leader Moammar Gadhafi and his family, as the violence and chaos spread across the country.

    Libya shares little about its financial dealings, but there are some things we do know about the types of assets that were frozen and where Libya has invested its oil-rich wealth.

    Through various financial institutions, Libya has spread its wealth across at least 35 nations on four continents. The country owns a bizarre mix of investments, ranging from luxury real estate and publishing companies in Britain, to hotels in the Middle East, to a small stake in Italy's Juventus football franchise.

    Libya has also invested hundreds of millions of dollars in poor and, in some cases, unstable African nations. The Libyan Foreign Bank even owns a stake in the Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe.

    All of that comes on top of the billions of dollars that Libya has socked away in the United States' largest and most influential investment banks.

    "Libya is just getting used to the fact they have a lot of cash on hand to invest," said Ashby Monk, a research with Oxford University who specializes in sovereign wealth.

    Libya has always had large amounts of cash to throw around because of its massive reserves of high-quality crude oil.

    But when the United Nations lifted its economic sanctions in 2003, Libya created its own $60 billion sovereign wealth fund. Today, the Libyan Investment Authority ranks among the world's largest sovereign wealth funds.

    The country also uses the Libyan Central Bank and the Libyan Foreign Bank as channels to invest as well, primarily focusing on domestic and African investments.

    Here's what CNNMoney was able to glean through public documents, sources familiar with Libya's investments and documents made public by WikiLeaks.

    North America: The Libyan Investment Authority used the U.S. financial system to take stakes in mostly low-risk, short-term securities and cash equivalents.

    Mohamed Layas, the head of the LIA, told U.S. authorities in January 2010 that the country had "about $32 billion in liquidity" stored in U.S. banks at the time, according to a WikiLeaks cable. That's roughly equivalent to the amount the U.S. Treasury Department had frozen earlier this week.

    Also in January 2010, Layas said, Libya divvied up that $32 billion into chunks of $300 million to $500 million, currently managed by dozens of banks across the United States.

    Libya even invested more than $300 million into the now defunct investment bank Lehman Brothers, according to U.S. bankruptcy court filings. The country is fighting in the courts to recover those losses.

    In Canada, Libya made one of its first private-equity deals by purchasing Verenex Energy for about $320 million in 2009. The deal was notable because Verenex was one of the first publicly-traded companies to drill for oil in Libya after the U.N. sanctions were lifted.

    Europe and the U.K.: Libya put the bulk of its cash to work in Europe and the United Kingdom, partly because of its geographic proximity. The executive director of the Libyan Investment Authority also said it has a preference for investing in the U.K. because of its "uncomplicated tax system," according to a WikiLeaks cable.

    In Italy, Libya's former colonial master, the LIA has stakes in Italian corporate names like oil giant Eni, defense contractor Finmeccanica and UniCredit, Italy's largest bank. The LIA also has a 7.5% stake in Juventus.

    In Britain, the LIA owns a 3.3% stake in Pearson, the owner of the Financial Times and Penguin Publishing. The fund also has stakes in several U.K. commercial real estate properties.

    Libya also owns a portfolio of oil-related assets in Europe through the LIA, consisting of three oil refineries and approximately 3,000 gas stations across the continent, according to a 2008 speech given by Layas in London.

    Since the violence broke out in Libya, Pearson froze Libya's stake and dividend until further notice and Juventus said it was monitoring developments in the North African nation.

    Africa: Through dozens of small investment banks scattered across Africa, Libya has taken stakes in dozens of small African telecom and infrastructure companies, some located in unstable nations such as Uganda and Zimbabwe.

    The investments in Africa play two roles, analysts said. Because Africa has struggled for years to get investors, Libya has become a key source of capital on the continent. Secondly, the investments in Africa have helped support Gadhafi's long-time image of being the "father" of Africa.

    "Gadhafi is providing support where there is none," said Michael Maduell president of the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute.

    http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/02/news/international/Libya_investment_reach/index.htm
     

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    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
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    Just for info: Qaddhafi was born in a village called Jahannam (The Arabic word for Hell). Hence, the pretty character he has, it seems. He had a novel called: "Running to Jahannam!"
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    The stupid son, Saif was interviewed and his interview has appeared in a close-to-Saudi-regime newspaper today. Briefly, he said:

    If elections take place now in Libya, his father will win with more than 80%.
    Except two cities, all the other cities are under control. 90% of the country are fine.
    We want go to Jeddah or Sharm Al-Shaikh (He hints at the exiles of both Tunisian and Egyptian dictators)
    If you find money for us abroad, you can take it.
    The idea of having money in Switzerland is absolutely a joke.
    Anybody who will try to play with the red lines, I will hit him and hit his father with my shoes.
    The journalist asks him: Why do you carry a weapon? He replied: Do you want me to carry a violin or guitar?
    Aljazeera and Alarabia say that there is an attack on Mezda PORT. What port? Mezda in the middle of the desert.
    The journalist asks him: What is your job? Why do you interfer in the regime? He replied: Journalists are calling me like you. Do you want me to ignore them?
    Nilesat jammed the Libyan state channel.
    طز في الجزيرة :shocked:
    The journalist asks him why his voice is tired? He denied that and replied that if it satisfies the journalist, he will tell him he is close to collapsing.
    The journalist asks him why he keeps laughing as if there is nothing wrong. He replied: Do you want me to cry or shout? What do you want me to say?
    The jouranlist asks him can you arrange an interview for us with your father? He replied: If this one was published accurately, I promise you.
    The journalist ends the interview by telling the idiot that he is not convinced with what he said, but he will publish it accurately.

    Here is the full interview in Arabic:
    http://aawsat.com/details.asp?section=4&issueno=11783&article=610757&feature=
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    Aljazeera: Qaddhafi and Amr Mousa (Secretary of the Arab league) approved the idea of Chavez initiative for peace.

    Both of them should be given nice bullets in the head IMO.
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    Now, this is something...

    ---------------

    From the Associated Press:

    A Defense Ministry spokesman says three Dutch marines are being held by authorities in Libya after they were captured by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi while trying to rescue Dutch workers.

    Ministry spokesman Otte Beeksma tells The Associated Press the three were captured Sunday after landing in Sirte in a Lynx helicopter that was on board the navy ship HMS Tromp, which is anchored off the Libyan coast to help evacuations from the conflict torn country.

    Beeksma said Thursday "intensive negotiations" are under way with Gadhafi's government to secure the marines' release.
     

    Bisco

    Senior Member
    Nov 21, 2005
    14,418
    When will this guy run out of cash? It's the only way to bring him down.
    bro u r such a kind person :) habibi libya has oil so 30 billion is just fakaaa ( change in his pockets :D) if mubarak with no oil had 70 billion on his own apart from suzy, jimmy, and alaa then i'm afriad by the time ghafaddi finishes his money we might be watching juve from heaven :D

    :lol2: If the Tunisian dictator had piles of cash in his palace, do you think this idiot will have less?
    true :tup:
    Now, this is something...

    ---------------

    From the Associated Press:

    A Defense Ministry spokesman says three Dutch marines are being held by authorities in Libya after they were captured by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi while trying to rescue Dutch workers.

    Ministry spokesman Otte Beeksma tells The Associated Press the three were captured Sunday after landing in Sirte in a Lynx helicopter that was on board the navy ship HMS Tromp, which is anchored off the Libyan coast to help evacuations from the conflict torn country.

    Beeksma said Thursday "intensive negotiations" are under way with Gadhafi's government to secure the marines' release.

    sth tells me this is might be a reason to intervene and he just served it on a plate of gold.
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    Breaking from Aljazeera: Airstrikes resumed on Bregga airport and Ajdabia city.
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    From the Guardian:

    Rebels in Ajdabiyah, about 75km from Brega, are bolstering their defences after yesterday's air attacks on both towns. Reuters reports that men are armed with rocket launchers, anti-tank aircraft guns and tanks:

    Some rebel soldiers showed more enthusiasm than experience at handling arms, struggling under the weight of the rounds or working out how to use more advanced weapons, determined to hold their ground in Ajdabiyah, home to a military arms dump...

    At one entrance to Ajdabiyah, rebels worked through the night to consolidate defences, adding rocket launchers, anti-tank weapons and anti-aircraft guns. Rebels also manned three tanks.

    "Praise God we have weapons," said rebel fighter Drees Abdulwahid, 42, smiling and raising both hands to the sky.

    Another rebel fighter said he had four days training in how to use an anti-aircraft gun. Others struggled to load the belts of 10-inch long bullets into the weapon. One young man staggered under the weight of the belt.
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    From the Associated Press:

    There was no sign of any pro-Gaddafi forces around Brega and aside from the airstrike, the area was calm. No casualties from the airstrike were reported, but a few rebel fighters were rushed to the hospital with wounds after a mortar they were handling exploded.
    "In the last 24 hours, we had a bit of a panic here," oil company employee Osman Rajab told the AP. "Now they (the rebel army) are trying to control the industrial areas," he said, referring to the oil complex.
    At the edge of Brega's massive oil facility, the rebel army set up a line of defense, with soldiers, four pickup trucks mounted with machine guns and one truck towing a rocket launcher.
     
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    ReBeL

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    Father from Manchester 'shot dead in Libya'

    Reports that a father-of-seven from Manchester has been killed in Libya are being investigated by the Foreign Office, a spokesman has said.

    Friends of Khaled Att-ardi, from Whalley Range, believe he was shot dead in the oil port of Brega on Wednesday.

    He had travelled to Libya last week to help relatives caught up in the unrest.

    A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We are aware of reports and urgently investigating."

    Nadia Handi, a close family friend, told the BBC: "I am shocked.

    "All the children are crying. Nobody believes it. Everything is not fair, it is horrible."

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/mobile/uk-england-manchester-12633189
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
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    Mariah Carey's had a slight pr problem recently. She and other acts like Beyonce and Usher have performed in St. Barts over the last few years at New Year’s Eve parties thrown by the sons of vicious, crazy dictator Muammar Ghaddafi. At the time, Libya was not in the news. The shows were booked by a name promoter who probably was not forthcoming about the true nature of the underwriters. Now it’s become an issue in hindsight, which is sort of ridiculous.

    Anyway, Mariah is not happy about what occurred and is stepping up to the plate. First, she tells me that a song she will record for her album, called “Save the Day,” will only generate funds to be donated for human rights issues. She may even set up her own foundation. She’s done this before. All the money ever made from the song “Hero” has gone to charity–millions. She’s also donated millions from DVDs and from the song “One Sweet Day,” which she recorded with Boyz II Men.

    Carey has always been very philanthropic. She still runs her annual Camp Mariah through the Fresh Air Fund; she supports it financially. She’s even given her image to PETA to sell, although considering the weather today she might want it back!

    Mariah’s official statement about the birthday event: “I was naïve and unaware of who I was booked to perform for. I feel horrible and embarrassed to have participated in this mess. Going forward, this is a lesson for all artists to learn from. We need to be more aware and take more responsibility regardless of who books our shows. Ultimately we as artists are to be held accountable.”

    http://mariahcarey.com/news
     
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    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
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    Saif al-Islam Gaddafi has thanked Venezuela for their offer to mediate between his father's regime and the rebels, but said they were more than capable of solving their own issues!!

    In another interview with Sky, he confirmed they are using airstrikes to frighten people.

     
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    ReBeL

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    Reuters: There has been an airstrike on the eastern town of Ajdabiya this morning, rebel fighters said. They said it missed the military base that was its target.
     
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    ReBeL

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    Fear haunts Libyan capital as protest planned

    TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The mourning tent was set up in Tripoli's Fashloum neighborhood Thursday to receive grieving friends and neighbors of a 56-year-old man shot to death by Moammar Gadhafi's militiamen a week ago. No one dared show up. Paying condolences to a slain protester is dangerous in the Libyan capital.

    A wave of arrests, killings and disappearances has terrorized Tripoli in a deadly crackdown by Gadhafi's regime as his opponents try to organize new protests Friday.

    Bodies of people who vanished have been dumped in the street. Gunmen in SUVs have descended on homes in the night to drag away suspected protesters, identified by video footage of protests that militiamen have pored through to spot faces. Other militiamen have searched hospitals for wounded to take away.

    Residents say they are under the watchful eyes of a variety of Gadhafi militias prowling the streets. They go under numerous names — Internal Security, the Central Support Force, the People's Force, the People's Guards and the Brigade of Mohammed al-Magarif, the head of Gadhafi's personal guard — and they are all searching for suspected protesters.

    "While you are speaking to me now, there are spies everywhere and people watching me and you," one man said, cutting short a conversation with an Associated Press reporter visiting the Tripoli district of Zawiyat al-Dahman on Thursday.

    Residents said calls for new protests to be held Friday after weekly Muslim prayers were being passed by word of mouth in several districts of the capital.

    Whether crowds turn out will depend on the depth of fear among Gadhafi opponents. Friday could prove a test of the extent of Gadhafi's control. The capital is crucial to the Libyan leader, his strongest remaining bastion after the uprising that began on Feb. 15 broke the entire eastern half of Libya out of his control and even swept over some cities in the west near Tripoli.

    The clampdown in Tripoli has left some yearning for outside help. One 21-year-old in Zawiyat al-Dahman said residents were hoping for manpower to come from the opposition-held east. A Libyan writer in his 70s said he rejects "foreign intervention" in Libya's upheaval — but wouldn't mind a "a powerful strike" on Gadhafi's headquarters to stop further bloodshed.

    "There must be some sort of action as soon as possible. Time is running and Libyans can't wait any longer," the writer said.

    He, like other residents, spoke on condition of anonymity for fear they too would be hunted down.

    Last Friday, the residents of Fashloum, Tajoura and Souq al-Jomaa witnessed the price anti-Gadhafi protesters pay, when militiamen opened fire on demonstrators.

    In Fashloum, worshippers emerged from the Al-Baz mosque and young men in the crowd began to march and chant, "Freedom to Libya." Within moments, the barrage of gunfire from militiamen erupted, said a brother of the slain 56-year-old protester.

    "My brother was hit with a bullet right in the heart. In minutes he lost all his blood," he said, showing a mobile phone video clip of his brother's body, with a hole in the chest.

    While rushing to Tripoli's central hospital, he found militia stationed in front of the building.

    "Doctors at the hospital told me that they are taking the injured to underground rooms inside the hospital away from the militia," said the brother, who is a doctor himself.

    "During the burial, the militia was also there watching us," he added.

    The number of deaths across Tripoli last Friday is not confirmed. The brother gave the names of six people from Fashloum who were killed. He said other bodies of slain protesters that day were seen being loaded into cars by militiamen and have not been seen since. He said he knows families who are still searching for bodies of their loved ones.

    Others were arrested later on. The brother said he knows a 37-year-old man who disappeared for several days afterward. Then his body was dumped in a street in Tripoli's Abu Selim district.

    In nearby Zawiyat al-Dahman, a similar protest came last Friday came under a shower of bullets. One man on Thursday pointed to a building where he said a young woman was shot dead while standing on her balcony.

    "All people hate Gadhafi. This is a fact. But if anyone steps out, he is dead," he said.

    In an upper-class street of the same neighborhood, a cafe owners said Tripoli residents are torn — they want change but also want safety.

    "What I know for sure is that it is getting worse. What we are in right now is worse than what we had before. I don't know what will the future look like," he said. "The price people pay for change is very dear."

    In the embattled neighborhood of Tajoura, a 31-year old protester showed the AP the houses of his two brothers, who were rounded up in a 3 a.m. raid on Wednesday.

    He was on the roof of a nearby building, counting the militia vehicles: 15 white pickup trucks with People's Guards license plates and two 4x4 Toyotas screeched up to the adjacent houses in a narrow, unpaved alley. They cordoned off the buildings, militiamen leaped over the buildings' fences, froze the door locks off with a compressed substance in cans and broke in. They drove off with his 32- and 35-year-old brothers, whose whereabouts remains unknown, the protester said.

    They were among 20 protesters rounded up in Tajoura at that same time, according to various residents.

    "They call Tajoura 'the terrorist neighborhood' because we dared to call for ousting Gadhafi," the protester said.

    In the home of one of the arrested men, clothes were left scattered around the living room, drawers were open and the TV was still on. The door was intact, but its lock was knocked out. In the bedroom, the mattress was overturned. The protester said money, jewelry and four mobile phones were also taken. Other young men from the family had already been arrested days earlier, he said.

    Except for the barking dogs, the house was empty and still.

    "We moved their families away from here. There is no way they can stay after what happened," he said, adding that he and his fellow activists had also decided not to spend the night in their homes.

    "This is the message to all Libyans: if you say you don't want Gadhafi, this is what will happen to you," he said.

    Associated Press
     

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