imposed an ideological regime on his population worthy of soyinka's more
bitter satires. i wonder why people could fall for his liberation
rhetoric and ignore his repressive actions. reminds me of the rhetoric
of idi amin, turned to the same purposes. and if not always as brutal,
equally hypocritical in the case of ahidjo. or mobutu.
this is the time for the spirit of sony labou tansi to awaken, along
with so many others. dennis brutus, tchicaya u tamsi, we need your
voices again. "not a sell out"--no, he was actually worse. a tyrant. so
what if his billions enabled him to stiff the europeans. what did that
have to do with being a dictator, a brutal ruler.
ken
On 2/23/11 1:35 PM, Dompere, Kofi Kissi wrote:
>
> Thank you, Cornelius Hamelberg, for this question.
> LIBYA is a member of the African Union. Libya unlike Egypt has a history of supporting the DECOLONIZATION of the continent. She is the most important contributor to OAU Libration Fund. Colonel al-Gaddafi, unlike other North African heads of states, has also invested heavily in Africa. He also was not a sell out. To be fair to our brothers and sisters in Libya, the history does not justify the bloodsheds going on. The events taking place in North Africa, the information technology that has democratized the information space and the activities of the Wiki Leak are leading to a major global restructuring in terms of power, control and governance, the ending structure and form is unknown to us. What we do know is that global institutional transformation is taking place and is a continual process. What do you think?
> PEACE
> KOFI KISSI DOMPERE.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cornelius Hamelberg
> Sent: Wednesday, February 23, 2011 6:48 AM
> To: USA Africa Dialogue Series
> Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - What says the African Union about Colonel al-Gaddafi and current events in Libya?
>
> The Arab League has taken their stance and it is not as if the African nations care less about the fate of Libya and Libyans.
>
> An important question for us in this forum, and indeed for the rest of Africa and diaspora, is why the gaping silence from the Africa Union, about the lastest antics of the man who has played such a pivotal role in African Union matters, not least of all in his largesse in providing funding for a few projects in Africa and also not least of all his well known ambition to become the first president of the United States of Africa?
>
> http://www.thelocal.se/blogs/corneliushamelberg/2011/02/23/revolutionary-gaddafi-promises-a-bloodbath-shows-his-true-face-to-the-world-and-to-his-own-people/
>
> --
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--
kenneth w. harrow
distinguished professor of english
michigan state university
department of english
east lansing, mi 48824-1036
ph. 517 803 8839
harrow@msu.edu
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