2011年4月29日星期五

A girl of Gaddafi, an overview within the Bunker

"To make them ready," she said, "because in times of war you never know when a rocket or a bomb could hit you, and this will be the end."

In a rare interview with her here charitable foundation, Mrs. Kadhafi, 36, a lawyer trained at the Libya who once worked on the team for the legal defence of Saddam Hussein, provided an overview in the fatalistic mindset of the family more and more isolated in the heart of the battle for the Libyathe bloodiest arena in democratic uprising that is sweeping across the region.

She dismissed the rebels as "terrorists" but suggested that some former Qathafi officials who are now on the Board of Directors the opposition still "stay in touch with us." She pleaded for dialogue and spoke of democratic reforms. But she dismissed the rebels as unfit for such negotiations because of their use of violence, discarded personal barbs Obama the President and the Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, and at one point, appeared to denigrate the basic idea of electoral democracy.

After organizing the interview last week, spoke of Ms. Qathafi for more than an hour Sunday afternoon just hours before NATO intensified its air strikes with an attack that has disrupted the State television and another compound of the Libyan leader to Tripoli. Ms. Kadhafi, one of the many informal and sometimes rival Qathafi families power brokers who dominate the political and economic life of the Libya, said that the crisis had fired the family together "" as a hand"."

Ms. Qathafi said that she and her seven brothers "have a dialogue between the United States and the exchange of views" before anyone takes a major step in their common defence. She acknowledged that she had seen news reports that his brothers and sisters had proposed to relieve their father of power in a transition under the direction of his brother Seif el-Islam, but she declined to comment on the details.

Also conspicuously, she declined to answer when asked whether Abdel Fattah Younes, a top rebel military official page who was a Minister of the Interior for a long time, was among the leaders who had kept contact with Qathafi family.

"They tell us that they have their own families, girls, sounds, spouses and they fear for their, and this is why they have taken these positions," she said of these rebel leaders. "There is many members of the Council who have worked with my father for 42 years and was faithful to him." Do you think they would go just like that? ?

Instead of mistrust in anger and vows of retribution by his father and his brother Seif, Ms. Qathafi focused on the manner in which the West would have street chaos it predicts funnel a post-Qathafi Libya. When pressed repeatedly about how his family could stay in power, has said several times, "we have great hope in God."

Ms. Qathafi appeared in public, twice since the bombings began, before the cheers of the crowd to colonel compound, but she rarely speaks in public. In the interview, she wore tight jeans, Gucci shoes, and a light scarf which does not cover her blonde hair long. Sometimes she laughs at his fate, recalling how the Organization of the United Nations, after "begging" be an Envoy for peace in the past, has now returned to the International Criminal Court. His staff presented an illustrated biography titled "Princess of peace".

She said his experience as a volunteer on the defence of Saddam Hussein offered relevant parallel team.

She said "the opposition in Iraq said the West when you come to the Iraq they will welcome you with roses,". "Almost 10 years later they receive the Americans with bullets and believe, the situation in Libya will be much worse.

She taunted President Obama and Mrs. Clinton, saying that Mr. Obama had "achieved nothing for the moment" and that she asked a question to Ms. Clinton laughingly: "why did not leave the White House when you discovered on the cheating of your husband?".

Even if she objected to American leaders, she asked several times for talks. "The world must come together at a round table," she said, "under" the auspices of international organizations.

At the same time, she rejected any form of dialogue with the Libyan rebels who now control half East of the country; its commercial centre, Misurata; and the towns of West mountain of Zintan and Nalut, dismissing the "terrorists" who "are just struggle for the sake of fighting."

Under the informal leadership of his brother Seif, she said, the Libyan Government was about to unveiling of a constitution as a step towards democratic when reform "this tragedy which has passed and spoiled things.".

At the same time, she also turned in derision and perhaps misunderstood the ideas of basic checks and balances and public liability in an electoral democracy. "Let me say something on Western elections they say are a democratic system of decision,"she volunteered, referring to the handwritten notes she had prepared for the interview."." In an election where one candidate won with 50% of the vote and another lost with 48%, she asked, "do you call this democracy?" This voice? "What happened to 48 percent who said 'no'?"

She complained of the "treason" of the Arabs, which his father had supported the causes and the Western allies to which he gave of his weapons of mass destruction. She asked "Is this the reward we get?". "". This would lead all countries that have weapons of mass destruction to keep them or to do more, so they will not meet the same fate as the Libya. ?

Without Colonel Gaddafi, it predicts, illegal immigrants from Africa would pour into Europe, radical Islamists would establish a base on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea and Libyan tribes would turn their weapons on one another.

Citing Libyan intelligence unconfirmed reports, she said that the hungry rebels of weapons had actually sold weapons to Islamist groups, Hamas and Hezbollah. "" When my father was here, see how secure Europe was and how safe Libya? "".She asked.

Ms. Qathafi initially denied reports of a few nights two months ago, when the demonstrators returned to the streets of Tripoli and almost every major city, taking down posters Qathafi and combustion of police stations. Then said that journalists had seen the evidence, it was argued that the destruction proved that they were not the civilian demonstrators but "saboteurs."

It also appears to reject the accounts of the witnesses of the forces of Colonel Gaddafi shooting of the demonstrators. "I am not sure that this happened," she said. "But say that this was the case: he has a limited scope."

As the State of mind of his father, she said with a laugh that he was not worried at all. "It is so high that the world knows him," she said. "It is quite certain that the Libyan people is faithful to him."

His family always hoped, she said, to return to its previous position, what she calls "a return to normal." But, she added, "of course we can accelerate that if NATO will stop bombing us."


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