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Warning: This site contains images and graphic descriptions of extreme violence and/or its effects. It's not as bad as it could be, but is meant to be shocking. Readers should be 18+ or a mature 17 or so. There is also some foul language occasionally, and potential for general upsetting of comforting conventional wisdom. Please view with discretion.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

From the "Terrorism Against the Libyan People" Building, With Love?

?September 24, 2011

The Pittsburgh Tribune reported on September 18 a development in Free Libya that would, on its surface, seem just another delightful turn in the fortunes of this brutalized nation.

A friendly Fathi Sherif greets visitors to Libya's once-feared Internal Security Agency. "This is [was?] the 'Terrorism Against the Libyan People' building," he announces. The tables have turned, however. Moammar Gadhafi's past victims now hunt for him and his regime's key figures.

Not all of the new Transitional National Council has relocated here from Benghazi, the rebellion's initial stronghold; much of the new government is being created from scratch.

Into this political void stepped Sherif, 49, and his Gadhafi-hunters."We are catching rats," he says, acting on tips from the capital and beyond. "We have our eyes everywhere."

Theirs is an ad-hoc operation. Rebels bring Gadhafi loyalists, captured in six months of fighting, to prisons around the country.Many of Sherif's 15 volunteers were imprisoned or tortured under Gadhafi. "We work for free," he says, puffing on a cigarette. "We even pay for the prisoners' food."

The prisoners are treated well, he insists, because "(we) want them to know the difference between us and them."

The main difference is unlike Gaddafi's people, these guys seem intent on privatizing things, opening the oil spigots up to foreign control, and so stand a good chance of being demonizedfarless, and even the opposite, by their Western benefactors.

A few regime figures have been captured already, he says. These included "the 'Secretary of the Jamahiriya's Secrets' [...] and the dictator's 'money guy.'" The former, "Ahmed Ramadan, Gadhafi's private secretary of two decades" was arrested after being shot in the head. He shot himself, they swear, and I suppose it's quite likely. He didn't die, and so if he recovers consciousness before Gaddafi's death or capture (or even after), he may be in for some telling or torture.

A Human Rights Watch researcher, the Tribune added, "has visited the prisoners and found them well-treated. "What they do complain about it the utter lack of judicial procedures," he says." And I suspect that's just beginning. I predict over-dramatic, unverifiable, illogical, and venom-filled testimony will be used, with no defense evidence allowed, to hang as many of these problem people as possible.

Besides those captured, some have surrendered, says Mr. Sherif, to avoid the vengeance of the mob, where "people would kill them and cut them into pieces."

Sadly for some people of Libya worried about street justice and not quite detained, the rat-hunters' "eyes everywhere" fact-finding capabilities aren't so great. To be fair, I'm not sure the same people were responsible for the following bold operation, but it could be. The suspects involved were apparently considered possible members of the ruler's own extended family. A Yahoo story explains it so:
A woman and her family were shot by Libyan rebel fighters in a deadly attack because their last name was Gaddafi, it has been reported.

Mother-of-three Afaf Gaddafi was attempting to flee the war-torn country with her children and other family members over fears that their surname would land them in trouble.

Mistaken for Gaddafi loyalists, rebel fighters opened fire at them near an airport - killing the couple’s two daughters Yam, 20 months, and Aden, three weeks, as well as Afaf’s mother and sister.
Now if they had actually been Gaddafi loyalists, would it have been okay? This question is left unanswered. But even those mistaken for them - parties with babies and especially the babies - are being shot dead. This case isn't as clear-cut as I aft first thought, in that the victims were in a car, which raises the prospect of some fault of their own - refusing orders to halt, mainly. But why were they even singled out to be detained?

Afaf's husband, Essam Arara, lives in London, a graduate of the London School of Economics. He's obviously devastated, and now lobbying to have his wife (minus her right eye) and surviving 3-year old son join him in safety, away from the dangerous liberation this family (among others) has been maimed by. To the London Evening Standard, Mr.Arara spoke to the factors behind their misfortune:
"None of them are even related to Muammar Gaddafi - it is just a surname given to many thousands of members of his tribe. But my wife and all our relatives were afraid that they could immediately be subjected to revenge attacks just because of their names. So they decided to flee to a safer place. If their names had not been Gaddafi they would have stayed at home and all be alive today."
[...]
His family were driving near the airport to escape the violence when a group of rebels spotted the cars [on the lookout for them?]. Everyone but Mr Arara's wife and three-year-old son Ahmed were killed.

"They thought the cars might be carrying Gaddafi loyalists, because there had apparently been some shooting not long before from roughly the same direction," said Mr Arara.
And what luck the cars they spotted in that direction contained people actually named Gaddafi? Had they been tipped off by some overzealous idiot that those weird, nervous Gaddafis across the street were fleeing suspiciously in such and such cars? Ironically, in trying to flee from imagined harm that would seem unlikely to most of us over here, she may have provoked just the violence feared, proving it was there, wriggling stupidly and venomously beneath the surface.

Is this what's now emanating from the "Terrorism Against the Libyan People" building?

The lesson here for anyone in recently liberated cities named Gaddafi, Sennoussi, etc. (you'll know the list far better than I) is this: you should not attempt to run in fear. Do not "run like rats." Sit quietly in fear instead, and your chances of being massacred by the nation's new rat hunters/exterminators will be slightly reduced. Just remain calm - you have nothing to fear unless you start acting nervous, or move your hands at all, or are interviewed after one of the far-too-armed beardy kids has had his eighth cup of coffee.

1 comment:

  1. Mitiga - The Sherif story appears differently in
    Libya: Inside the Hunt for Gaddafi's Key Men
    , 13 September 2011, by Abigail Hauslohner for TimeWorld. Here he is Fathi Sherrif, a 49 year old businessman, who was liberated from Ain Zara prison "two weeks ago"

    In just two weeks on the job, Sherrif estimates that his unit has captured some 35 high-value detainees, including several ministers and Gaddafi aides. "God wants us to catch them alive," he says coolly. One of his captives was Ahmed Ramadan, a top Gaddafi aide tagged by other senior regime officials as the man responsible for relaying all of the dictator's orders until the fall of Tripoli. Sherrif's men found Ramadan on a farm in Seraj, on Tripoli's outskirts. And when they burst into the house where he had been hiding, they say Ramadan pointed a gun at his head and tried to kill himself. He pulled the trigger but somehow survived and was taken to Tripoli's central hospital. When he stabilized, they moved him to Matega, a military base that rebels have turned into their Tripoli command center and central prison facility.

    Another prisoner at Matega, they say, is Bashir Saleh, accused of being a regime bagman and fixer who allegedly met with France's President Nicolas Sarkozy on Gaddafi's behalf last month. But the process of bringing former regime officials to justice is hardly an orderly affair. Sherrif's men were never officially designated as a regime-hunting unit. But then again, there isn't one. "I think it's really a disorganized process," says Fred Abrahams of Human Rights Watch. "I don't have a sense that it's a coordinated process or there's a special unit in charge."



    Like other self-appointed hunting squads, Sherrif's undertakes its own interrogations before transferring its captives to Matega. On a recent weekday, two of their newest captures are women charged with organizing and paying "lady volunteers" to support the regime during the uprising, Sherrif says. One headed Gaddafi's Ministry of Women's Affairs. They are currently under interrogation "because when they talk, they give names, and names are very important," he adds.

    But his biggest prizes, Hadi al-Berej and Mohamed Abdo, are sitting in a ground-floor bedroom...


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