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[社会] [电报新闻 2011.11.05]利比亚:目无法纪的行为扩散,反队派“好人”变坏?

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发表于 2011-11-8 00:02 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
本帖最后由 Jigong 于 2011-11-8 00:08 编辑

        Libya dispatch: as lawlessness spreads, are the rebel 'good guys' turning bad?

Once welcomed as liberators, Libya's rebel fighters are beginning to outstay   their welcome in Tripoli.
libya_2047200c.jpg
Libya's rebel fighters are beginning to outstay their welcome in Tripoli

                                                        By Nick Meo, Tripoli
                                                                                                
1:44PM GMT 05 Nov 2011

Abdul Mojan's moment of realisation came when the good guys threw him into the   boot of their car, slammed it shut and drove off with him a prisoner inside.

When they finally stopped and hauled him out, he asked them: "What are   you doing? I'm a revolutionary just like you! I've never supported Gaddafi.'"

But the former rebels didn't care. They had taken a liking to the new office   block in western Tripoli that Mr Mojan managed and they wanted the keys and   ownership documents. He tried to reason with them, pointing out that there   were plenty of government buildings standing empty.

To no avail, however. "We have sacrificed for this revolution and you   haven't, and now we will take what we want," he was told by a cocky   18-year-old. "You can have the building back when the revolution is   over."

A week later Mr Mojan was still incredulous as he recounted his tale to The   Sunday Telegraph, admitting that he felt lucky to escape without a   beating although there was nothing he could do about the 5,000 dinar   (£2,550) they stole from his car.

Many of Tripoli's residents have had a similar moment of grim awakening in   recent weeks. Their liberators, still swaggering around the city in Che   Guevara-style berets and armed to the teeth, have not gone back to their   home towns as they promised. Nor have they started handing in the guns they   used to fight against Gaddafi, as they said they would.

"When they said Libya   Free, they meant the cars, the refrigerators and the flat-screen television   sets," runs one joke doing the rounds in Tripoli's cafes. Stories of   gunmen taking expensive cars at checkpoints, giving receipts saying they   will be returned after the revolution, are nervously swapped over cups of   tea.

More alarming than the looting have been the armed clashes between militias.   There have been three big fights in the capital alone in the past week;   shoot-outs at a hospital, Martyr's Square, and the military airport, which   have left several dead and dozens wounded.

Then there are the detentions. With the fighting over, the revolutionaries   have not been idle. They have kept busy rounding up hundreds of suspected   Gaddafi supporters in a wide-scale witch-hunt, often on the basis of little   more than rumour and accusation.

One man, a supporter of the revolution who was full of hope a month ago,   described how his brother-in-law, Omar, had been grabbed by gunmen from   Misurata. They were acting for a wealthy businessman from the city, with   whom Omar had a dispute several years ago.

"They came to his house and Omar went with them because he believed in   the revolution and thought it was a misunderstanding that would soon be   sorted out," the man said.

"But when they arrived in Misurata they threw him in their private prison   and said they would beat the soles of his feet until he confessed. It is an   old Turkish torture called the falakha. He was really scared, and he   managed to escape by persuading one of them who felt uneasy about this to   let him go.

"Next day they turned up at his house, and threatened his wife and   children. Can you believe this? We have hundreds of little Gaddafis now.

"There is no one to stop them, and they are convinced that because they   suffered in the war, they should be able to do what they like now. If it   carries on like this I really fear for our revolution."

Libya's problems would not look so dangerous if there was a proper government   in place to deal with them. Instead, more than two months since Gaddafi was   driven from his capital, there is still a power vacuum. No government has   been formed because former rebels cannot agree on how to share out power.   The new prime minister, appointed last week, is a professor of electrical   engineering originally from Tripoli who spent most of the last three decades   at universities in Alabama and North Carolina - and was chosen because he   offends nobody.
Abdul-Raheem al-Keeb has yet to prove that he isn't more suited to running a   university department than a former dictatorship awash with guns and riven   with tribal and regional rivalries.

With expectations sky-high, his inbox is daunting: he has to get the economy   going, head off separatists in the east who are talking about setting up   their own oil rich mini-state, disarm the increasingly arrogant militias,   and organise Libya's first real elections.

He has been promised help from the West in building a democracy, yet so far   there is little evidence of any. The United Nations presence has been kept   deliberately small, at the request of the National Transitional Council.   Only a trickle of aid workers have turned up, and experts in nation building   with experience of Afghanistan and Iraq are notable by their absence.

"There is a deliberate effort to avoid the mistakes of Afghanistan and   Iraq and not try to get foreigners in to micromanage everything," said   one European Union diplomat last week. "And the Libyans are proud   people, they don't want to look like a Third World nation needing a big   foreign presence in here."

A handful of enterprising foreign businessmen have arrived looking for   opportunities, drawn by the prospect of lucrative reconstruction contracts. "We've   come way too early, there is no one to talk to yet," said a frustrated   American who spent last week trying to set up meetings with representatives   of a Libyan government which does not yet exist. "I will come back in   the spring."

Many Libyans remain hopeful about the future of their revolution. Omar   Khalifa, of the charity Libya Hurra, was arranging the distribution of sheep   and money to 2,500 needy families for the festival of Eid this weekend.
"Of course people have suffered a lot in the past year," he said. "But   the Libyans know they have to be patient, and that it will take a while to   get back to normal."

Getting the militias out of the capital would help, but the leader of one   notorious brigade told The Sunday Telegraph his men will stay for the   time being.

"We are here to help build democracy and protect the revolution",   said Mohammed al-Madhni, a commander in his fifties with a roguish grin.

His   men, from the impoverished town of Zintan in the mountains south of Tripoli,   were some of the most ferocious anti-Gaddafi fighters, but since the   end of the war they have acquired a less savoury reputation for looting and   starting fights.

The most colourful story told about them, not denied by Commander Madhni, is   that Zintanis stole an elephant from Tripoli zoo as a trophy of war, taking   the unfortunate beast back to their town in a truck.

They have taken up residence in the suburb of Regatta, a delightful district   of palm trees and neat bungalows facing on to the blue Mediterranean. It was   home to British and American oil workers and their families until they fled   in February, as the revolution broke out.

Now the suburb has an eerie, deserted feeling. Doors and windows have been   smashed so looters can get in, and the militias have spray-painted graffiti   over walls. Only a few luxury cars are left, the ones with complicated   security codes that make them difficult to steal and drive away. Several of   those have had their wheels stolen.

"You could see them driving round in their pick-up trucks with big   machine-guns going round the bungalows, picking up freezers and flat-screen   televisions," said one of the witnesses to the Zintan fighters' looting   spree.
People in Tripoli try to laugh about the mountain men – they are particularly   amused that the Zintanis took jet-skis and fast boats back to their homes   deep in the desert.

But there is also a fear that now the gunmen have a taste for power, and   nobody to stop them, the post-Gaddafi future may be much more difficult than   Libyans had hoped.

One formerly enthusiastic revolutionary, watching a group of young gunmen at a   checkpoint, couldn't help being gloomy.

"You have to wonder, is this how failed states start out?" he said.




        

 楼主| 发表于 2011-11-8 00:07 | 显示全部楼层
Libya dispatch_The_Telegraph_2011_Nov_05_01.jpg
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发表于 2011-11-8 00:12 | 显示全部楼层
good guys ?
bullsh*t !
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-11-8 00:24 | 显示全部楼层
插队在德国 发表于 2011-11-8 00:12
good guys ?
bullsh*t !

西霉当然说他们是“good guys“!
西方列强帮这些“good guys“推翻了“独裁,不人道的政权”!
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