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DEMOCRACY
Europe steps up pressure on Libya

Libyan colonels flee to Malta in fighter jets
Valletta (AFP) Feb 21, 2011 - The pilots of two Libyan fighter jets who landed in Malta on Monday said they had defected after they were ordered to attack protesters in Benghazi, Maltese military and official sources told AFP. The two men told Maltese military officers on the ground that they were senior colonels in the Libyan air force and one of them requested asylum, as they were getting out of their single-seater Mirage F1 jets. "One of the pilots requested political asylum," a government spokesman said. They said they had been forced to flee their air base in Benghazi after it was taken over by protesters, the sources said. "The two pilots are being held by police for further investigations," the Maltese government said in a statement.

Malta is the closest European state to Libya, located just 340 kilometres (211 miles) north of Libyan shores. Two French-registered Super Puma civilian helicopters also landed on the Mediterranean island around the same time, carrying seven passengers who said they were French nationals working on oil rigs near Benghazi. The markings on the two helicopters were for Heli Union -- a company specialising in air transport for oil and gas companies. The helicopters were given permission to land in Malta but had not been given clearance to leave Libya, indicating they had escaped, the sources said. The people from the two helicopters are also being held pending an inquiry.

NATO calls on Libya to halt violence against civilians
Brussels (AFP) Feb 21, 2011 - NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen called on Libyan authorities on Monday to stop a deadly crackdown on unarmed protesters. "I am shocked by the indiscriminate use of violence against peaceful protesters in Libya," he said in a statement. "I call on the Libyan authorities to stop the repression on unarmed civilians." "The people of Libya, like many others in the wider Middle East, have expressed a strong desire for democratic change. Their legitimate aspirations must be addressed," the former Danish prime minister said. He said Libyan authorities could not deny the rights to freedom of expression and assembly. "As the Secretary General of an alliance of democracies, I strongly believe that democracy is the only solid basis for long-lasting stability," he said. "In the long run, no society can ignore the will of the people, because the desire for freedom resides in every human being."
by Stefan Nicola
Berlin (UPI) Feb 21, 2011
Worried about a civil war in Libya that could unleash a wave of refugees, Europe is slowly stepping up pressure on the dictatorial regime of Moammar Gadhafi after mass demonstrations continued to rock the country Monday.

Following days of deadly clashes between anti-government protesters and Libyan security forces, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on Sunday condemned "the repression against peaceful demonstrators and deplore the violence and the death of civilians."

She called on Libyan authorities to stop blocking the Internet and the mobile phone network, as well as to allow the international media to report on the demonstrations.

Most European nations have issued travel warnings for Libya and are preparing to evacuate their citizens as the North African country tumbles on the brink of what could turn into a civil war. The European Union's 27 foreign ministers met Monday in Brussels to discuss the crisis.

Mostly unconfirmed reports have suggested that more than 200 protesters were killed in clashes in Tripoli and Benghazi in eastern Libya. The unrest comes on the heels of regime changes in Tunisia and Egypt and demonstrations in Bahrain and Iran but the determination of the Libyan regime to violently quell protests has shocked observers.

One of Gadhafi's sons, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, in remarks on state television said the regime would fight against the uprising to "the last man standing."

His father has been ruling Libya for the past four decades and is infamous for a brutal reign, his support of terrorism in the 1980s and a determination to travel everywhere with his personal tent.

Geneva human rights group UN Watch cites witness reports claiming that special commandos and regime loyalists have attacked demonstrators with knives, assault rifles and heavy-caliber weapons.

"Snipers are shooting peaceful protesters. Artillery and helicopter gunships have been used against crowds of demonstrators," UN Watch said in a statement Monday.

The group is one of 24 non-governmental organizations that have sent a letter to U.S., EU and U.N. authorities, urging a bolder stance against the violence in Libya.

Just as during the demonstrations in Egypt, initial European reactions to the unrest in Libya have been careful.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who fosters close ties with Gadhafi, over the weekend said he didn't want to "disturb" his North African ally by meddling in his affairs. This has sparked an angry outcry from the Italian left-wing opposition, which has long criticized Berlusconi for ignoring Gadhafi's human rights abuses for the sake of bilateral business deals.

Michael Emerson, a senior foreign policy expert at the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels, lauded Ashton's statement but said more steps, including sanctions, could be put on the table if the situation worsens.

"The mass killings in Libya certainly belong in a different category than what happened in Egypt and Tunisia," Emerson said Monday in a telephone interview with United Press International Monday.

An important energy supplier to Europe, Libya has strong business ties with Italy.

The Libyan regime is also playing a role in preventing African fugitives from reaching European shores. A deal between Rome and Tripoli to stop migrants from crossing the Mediterranean has been criticized by human rights groups.

In light of the most recent unrest, European officials are worried that Libya could descend into civil war and unleash a wave of refugees that could reach European shores.

Writing on his Internet blog Monday, Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said a "total breakdown in Libya isn't at all unthinkable."

"In the Mediterranean countries, concern for what it may mean is great," he wrote. "A massive flood of refugees, is, at the moment, a very real possibility and will place demands on European solidarity."

Well aware of the European concerns, Libya over the weekend threatened to suspend cooperation on illegal migration if the EU continues to encourage pro-democracy protests in the country, the Hungarian EU presidency said Sunday.

Libya has more than 1,200 miles of coastline and shares land borders with six African countries. Italy has been aching under the influx of thousands of migrants from Tunisia following unrest there. Around 5,000 migrants have reached the small Italian island of Lampedusa over the past days and Rome has asked Tripoli to prevent further mass emigrations.

earlier related report
Belgium probes arms sales to Kadhafi regime
Brussels (AFP) Feb 21, 2011 - Belgium's regional government of Wallonia came under fire on Monday for authorising the sale of weapons to Libya in 2009, prompting a probe into whether the arms were used against protesters.

The governments of the French-speaking region asked the Belgian ambassador in Tripoli to ask Libyan authorities how the weapons have been used, said Christopher Barzal, spokesman for Wallonia's regional leader Rudy Demotte.

Wallonia gave an export license to Liege-based FN Herstal for the sale of 367 F2000 assault rifles, 367 P90 submachine guns, 367 Five-Seven handguns, 20 Minimi light machine guns, 22,000 rifle grenades and 1.134 million rounds of ammunition for these weapons, for a total value of 6.9 million euros.

The license also authorised the sale of 2,000 FN 303, a compressed-air gun that fires projectiles which, according to the firm's website, can be used to stop a "hostile but unarmed individual or group" among other things.

The sale of these so-called "less-lethal" weapons was valued at 5.3 million euros.

The final use certificate states that the weapons are for the exclusive use of the Libyan army's 32nd elite forces battalion for a mission to protect "humanitarian aid convoys to Darfur", Barzal said.

The Belgian Human Rights League expressed fears that the weapons could have been used by the regime of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi to repress anti-government protests, but it admitted it had no proof.

"The probability is very low, but we have asked the ambassador to verify urgently," Barzal said.

The European Union lifted an arms embargo on Libya in 2004.

In Belgium's decentralised political system, the regions are responsible for approving licenses for arm exports.



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DEMOCRACY
Libya Facing Civil War
Tripoli (AFP) Feb 21, 2011
Libyan leader Moamer Gadhafi's son warned Monday that the country faces a bloody civil war if protesters refuse to accept reform offers, in a speech broadcast as gunfire rang out in the capital. Saif al-Islam Gadhafi condemned the unprecedented uprising against his father's 41-year rule as a foreign plot, but admitted mistakes were made in a brutal crackdown and urged citizens to build a " ... read more







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