Re- what we were talking about the other day ...I found myself shaking
in fear, in my trousers when the news first came in about the Bomb
explosion in Oslo, after they said that the long hand of Gaddafi was
one of the main suspects.....I was trembling not because of any
possible repercussions – retaliation on Gaddafi but because of the
backlash the Muslims in Europe would suffer if the bomb was proved to
have been Gaddafi's or Militant Islam's handiwork (because Norway is
in Afghanistan and taking part in the NATO operations in Libya....
On Jul 28, 10:50 pm, msjoe2...@aol.com wrote:
> According to the carnage liberation, anyone who does not fight in rebel controlled area would be arrested. I am sure Dave Cameron is inspecting his handwork of democracy in Libya. Where is Ma Clinton? She is busy with debt ceilings to give more money for democratic influence.
>
> =======================================================================================================
>
> Libyan rebels say military commander killedBy RAMI Al-SHAHEIBI - Associated Press | AP – 49 mins ago
>
> In this photo taken Wednesday, July 6, 2011, rebel forces chief commander Abdel Fattah …
>
> A journalist adjusts a microphone during a press conference held by Libyan Deputy …
>
> BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) — The head of the Libyan rebel's armed forces and two of his aides were killed by gunmen Thursday, the head of the rebel leadership said.
> The death of Abdel-Fattah Younis was announced at a press conference in the de facto rebel capital, Benghazi, by the head of the rebels' National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil. He told reporters that rebel security had arrested the head of the group behind the killing.
> Rebel security had arrested Younis and two of his aides early Thursday from their operations room near the rebels' eastern front. Security officials said at the time that Younis was to be questioned about suspicions his family still had ties to Moammar Gadhafi's regime.
> Younis was Gadhafi's interior minister before defecting to the rebels early in the uprising, which began in February.
> Abdel-Jalil said that Younis had been summoned for questioning regarding "a military matter." He said Younis and his two aides were shot before they arrived for questioning.
> Abdel-Jalil called Younis "one of the heroes of the 17th of February revolution," a name marking the date of early protests against Gadhafi's regime.
> While he criticized Gadhafi for seeking to break the unity of rebel forces, he did not say directly that Younis' killers were associated with the regime. Instead, he issued a stiff warning about "armed groups" in rebel-held cities, saying they needed to join the fight against Gadhafi or risk being arrested by security forces.
>
> Follow Yahoo! News on Twitter, become a fan on
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