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Savannahmann

(3,891 posts)
Wed Sep 4, 2013, 09:51 AM Sep 2013

Those who say that Syrian will be more like Libya than Iraq?

Perhaps you might want to change that to Somalia.


A little under two years ago, Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, urged British businessmen to begin “packing their suitcases” and to fly to Libya to share in the reconstruction of the country and exploit an anticipated boom in natural resources.


Yet now Libya has almost entirely stopped producing oil as the government loses control of much of the country to militia fighters.

Mutinying security men have taken over oil ports on the Mediterranean and are seeking to sell crude oil on the black market. Ali Zeidan, Libya’s Prime Minister, has threatened to “bomb from the air and the sea” any oil tanker trying to pick up the illicit oil from the oil terminal guards, who are mostly former rebels who overthrew Muammar Gaddafi and have been on strike over low pay and alleged government corruption since July.


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/special-report-we-all-thought-libya-had-moved-on--it-has-but-into-lawlessness-and-ruin-8797041.html

So the success story of Libya is one where the Prime Minister is threatening to bomb his own ports because the Security forces have become a warlord like militia. Seriously? This is the success story of the ages?

Guys, come on, all you warmongering types out there. Admit it, there are no success stories in the region.

It gets even worse.
Rule by local militias is also spreading anarchy around the capital. Ethnic Berbers, whose militia led the assault on Tripoli in 2011, temporarily took over the parliament building in Tripoli. The New York-based Human Rights Watch has called for an independent investigation into the violent crushing of a prison mutiny in Tripoli on 26 August in which 500 prisoners had been on hunger strike. The hunger strikers were demanding that they be taken before a prosecutor or formally charged since many had been held without charge for two years.


Libya, the new Somalia to be. Will we add Syria to that growing list of lawless countries by our haphazard bombing campaigns? Tell me again how things are improving thanks to us in Libya.
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