Libya
Gaddafi's fall unlikely to alarm Arab leaders
The Guardian, 22 Aug 2011
Assad, Saleh and others will not lose any sleep and are unlikely to draw lessons from the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya
After Gaddafi, let's hope for the best in Libya
Comment Is Free, 22 Aug 2011
Yes, Gaddafi's fall will expose factional rivalries, but Libya is unlikely to turn into another Iraq, let alone Afghanistan
No stalemate in Libya – the writing is on the wall for Gaddafi
Comment Is Free, 15 Aug 2011
A quick exit for the colonel is less important than a well-managed transition, setting the country on course for representative government
Could Gaddafi stay in Libya?
Comment Is Free, 4 Jul 2011
The opposition's offer to the Libyan dictator of internal exile may be pragmatic but it raises some tricky issues
Is France right to arm Libyan rebels?
Comment Is Free, 30 Jun 2011
Live discussion: France has been arming Libyans for their 'self-defence'. Debate the rights and wrongs of this
The liberal-left are at odds on Libya
Comment Is Free, 5 May 2011
Significant voices outspoken in their opposition to war in Iraq are more equivocal on military intervention in Libya
Libya: is negotiation the answer?
Comment Is Free, 28 Mar 2011
As the fighting continues, Nabila Ramdani and Brian Whitaker debate Nato's next move
The difference with Libya
Comment Is Free, 23 Mar 2011
Unlike Bahrain or Yemen, the scale and nature of the Gaddafi regime's actions have impelled the UN's 'responsibility to protect'
Saif Gaddafi and the democracy project – audio
Comment Is Free, 18 Mar 2011
In a 2004 interview, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi says democracy in Libya is a personal project – it doesn't sound like the man urging a fight 'to the last bullet'
Muammar
Gaddafi: method in his 'madness'
Comment Is Free, 23 Feb 2011
Gaddafi has lost touch with his people, but though his actions may seem bizarre, there is a kind of logic to his behaviour
Anger as
Libyan retrial hands death sentence to medics
Guardian, Wednesday December 20 2006
Five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor accused of deliberately
infecting hundreds of children with HIV were sentenced to death for a second
time by a court in Libya yesterday, drawing widespread international
condemnation.
All
Libyan pupils to get laptop and web access
Guardian, Thursday October 12 2006
Libya could become the first
country to provide every school-age child with a
laptop computer and internet connection under a scheme
supported by the UN Development Programme.
Anyone
for Mecca?
Comment Is Free, April 13, 2006
In a rare bout of perspicacity, Colonel
Gadafy suggests Jews and Christians - even George Bush - should be permitted
to visit the Kaaba.
Disgrace in the desert
The Guardian, February 28, 2006
Libyan rape victims face arranged marriages or staying locked up in 'rehabilitation'
centres.
Watchdog
hails Libya's human rights progress
The Guardian, January 26 2006
Libya won praise yesterday for
taking "important steps" to improve human
rights but was warned it will have to do more to meet
international standards.
US
tests the air in reformed Libya
The Guardian, January 26 2004
With the words "United States
Navy" emblazoned on its side, a plane touched
down in Tripoli yesterday carrying six US congressmen
on a goodwill mission: the first such visit since
Colonel Muammar Gadafy came to power in 1969.
e-mail
The Guardian,
January 26 2004
It was the sort of mini-break they never
advertise in the travel supplements: a long weekend in Tripoli courtesy of Saif
al-Islam Gadafy, son of the Leader of the Revolution.
New statesman: Gadafy turns reformer
The Guardian,
December 22 2003
Receiving an interviewer from al-Jazeera
television one day in his desert tent, Colonel Muammar Gadafy talked of world
affairs and Libyan politics, then suddenly gestured towards a figure in the
distance.
How Gadafy came in from the cold
The Guardian,
December 20 2003
About the time that United States and Britain
went to war to remove the alleged threat from weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq, they secretly embarked on another project to achieve the same goal in
Libya, but by a very different route - that of quiet dip...
Gadafy goes bananas for bananas
The Guardian,
September 11 2001
Colonel Muammar Gadafy, the unpredictable Libyan
leader, has offered to buy all the bananas grown in the Caribbean, according to
officials who visited Tripoli recently.
Bush is Mr Nice Guy, says Gadafy
The Guardian,
January 06 2001
George W Bush is a nice man. That's the word on
the US president-elect from Libya.
Footballing son is latest Gadafy to drop in on London
September 26 2000
Britain has granted an entry visa to the
26-year-old son of Muammar Gadafy, in a move that shows how much relations have
thawed with Libya since sanctions were suspended last year. Next week a British
trade mission heads there looking for business.
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