It is
these acts which only dehumanize the oppressor and his accomplices even further
and lead them to dig a deeper more tormenting grave.
January 7, 2011
Dear friends,
Many of you will have followed my previous blog Lizzie’s
Liberation during the time I spent in Libya over two trips, the first time on a
peace delegation and the second time as a journalist.
I was in fact the only journalist in Tripoli working for a news
station that was allowed to move around the city freely and was not required to
stay in the Rixos Hotel where all other such journalists were obliged to.
This was for a variety of reasons. At the beginning of the
crisis journalists had been allowed such freedom, but as some time went on, it
became clear that their agenda was solely to confirm the NATO narrative that
the Libyan people were being oppressed by a crazy dictator whom they needed protecting
from by so-called “precision bombing” of military installations, in order to
take out the government’s military capabilities.
The fact that this is entirely illegal under international law
did not seem to faze these journalists, neither did the mass rallies in support
of Muammar Gaddafi, the virtually absent police and army presence in the
streets (despite the city being portrayed as a police state where no-one could
breathe a word against Gaddafi), or the fact that far from “precision-bombing”
of military installations, many civilian lives and infrastructure were being
destroyed by the abhorrently named NATO mission to “protect civilians”.
In addition to that, it is well known that the mainstream media
is under oligopoly control by the ruling class and so any pretence to a free
and independent press is a farce. It has been well documented throughout
the history of the west’s imperialist wars how this intimate relationship
between the media and the ruling class allows the latter to use “reporters” as
its eyes and ears on the ground.
In Libya, this was no different and some independent researchers
and journalists on the ground unsurprisingly uncovered evidence that when
“journalists” were taken to visit bombing sites, instead of reporting the
infrastructural damage and loss of civilian life accurately to the global
public, they were merely there to take note of what had not been destroyed. And
one can only conclude that this was to report back to intelligence services so
that the site could be re-bombed (as they more often than not were).
In such circumstances, you could be forgiven for being surprised
that western journalists were at all allowed into the country. But the then
Libyan government came to a compromise and allowed mainstream journalists into
the country provided that they stayed in the Rixos Hotel where they could be
kept an eye on, and were allowed out only from the vicinity with an approved
escort.
I would often myself visit the Rixos mainly for press
conferences and it was under those circumstances that I found myself there the
day that NATO began bombing their rabble of rebels into Tripoli.
There are a few things that I would like to clear up about that
time. Just as the first reports were coming through on Al Jazeera and other
mainstream channels that the rebels had “taken” Tripoli, I was driving through
the capital myself heading eventually to the Rixos.
My friend had received a phone call that a couple of rebels had
popped up in Souq al Juma where sleeper cells were known to be based, but as I
could see for myself around me, the city was very far from “taken”.
I am sure it bemused many that on the first day when the
fighting began in Tripoli I was insisting that everything was fine and then
within five days the Libyan government had been completely forced out. Of
course very quickly, which my reporting also showed, things changed for the
worse.
I must stress three things:
First of all as I have stated, it took five days of resistance almost purely by volunteers (as you will see shortly why) for the battle to be decided on the ground.Secondly (and here is a lesson learnt for me) while I never trusted NATO to have any conscience whatsoever, I did underestimate the lengths that they would go to in order to achieve their goals and in this video here (from 16.48), I describe how the media portrayed “fall” of Tripoli without resistance, was in reality an immense battle whereby thousands of people resisted the onslaught and were ruthlessly massacred by NATO apache helicopters and bombs. As the then government spokesman Dr Moussa Ibrahim frantically warned the world’s press on the first night before he himself was forced to flee: “They are killing anything that moves.”And finally, as is with the nature of betrayals, no-one expected perhaps the most fatal betrayal of all, that of Gaddafi’s own cousin, General Albarrani Shkal. Shkal was in charge of a large army unit in Tripoli and had been working with the rebels for some time. He had manipulated his staff rotas so that thousands of soldiers who would have otherwise have been ready to defend the capital on the day that the assault began, were scheduled to take a holiday or to be in another location. This left the task of defending the capital largely to the thousands of ordinary men and women residents, particularly the heroic people in the city’s poorest district of Abu Salim. To this day despite that their homes and streets have been decimated, they still have not surrendered and rebels can only enter the area with large armed convoys.
Prior to that week, my personal experience of Libya was filled
with highs and lows. The lows were this constant dread which marked everyone’s
faces that what surrounded us was highly likely to be destroyed at any moment,
which the endless bombing would not allow you to forget.
But the first high that struck me, before I got to know the
people, was just the sheer beauty of the country and of Tripoli itself. A
modern, relatively developed well functioning country, where as a woman the
first sights that struck me were the female soldiers and volunteers stationed
on some of the checkpoints on the way to the capital and the many women out
driving with their friends. I have recounted some of these experiences in other
blogs and vlogs.
Of course the greatest high was the honour of being able to
witness the defiance of a people’s spirit under attack by the most powerful
force known to man. This I witnessed at its most potent in Majer, Zlitan, hours
after several houses in the village had been repeatedly bombed by British
planes massacring at least 33 children, 32 women and 20 men. My visit had not
been at the same time as the dozens of other mainstream journalists, and so I
can vouch that some of their despicable allegations that the scenes of emotion
they saw were staged, were pure lies.
After paying our respects at the mass graves where the endless
bodies were being carried in by the village’s men, I with a Libyan camera crew
turned on our cameras and I will never forget how the families of the victims
and the people of the village, young and old flocked in desperation to make the
world listen, that they wanted NATO gone and Muammar Gaddafi to stay. I no
longer have those tapes as since the onslaught on Tripoli I have not heard from
that camera crew and know nothing of their safety.
But these media distortions and lies that I refer to have been
at their most abhorrent when it has come to the coverage, or should I say media
silence, on the systematic persecution of Black Libyans and Black migrants. I
talk about this in the video linked to above and Dan Glazebrook before me goes
into more depth about it. But for anyone to suggest (as it is often suggested)
that this phenomenon is merely an unfortunate and distasteful consequence of
the Libyan conflict, has already deceived themselves so greatly as to the very
nature of the conflict, that you must be lead to seriously question with whom
their loyalties lie in this world, and it certainly is not with truth and
justice.
The rebels attacks against Black people is an unleashing of
their inherent racism that has been kept in check by the pro-African policies
and example of Muammar Gaddafi and is the beginning of the reversal of his
pan-African policies for an independent Africa. Far from being an unfortunate
aspect of the rebels’ character, this is precisely where the rebels’ racist
interests converge with the west’s racist interests. The best analysis on this
has probably been produced by journalist Gerald A. Perreira (this
article is just one example).
The lowest point, as it would have been for many millions of
people around the world, was the martyrdom of Muammar Gaddafi himself. The
brutal nature of his killing and the shamelessness with which it was carried
out by both the rebels and their imperial masters such as Hilary Clinton, epitomized
the whole war on that country.
Just as with every attack on a Libyan town, the killing of
Gaddafi was lead by an American drone, followed by a French airstrike on his
convoy opening the way for the cowardly rebels to finish the job.
That this was a war that so viciously and relentlessly
criminalized the leader of an African nation, even in his killing their plot to
dehumanize him to the greatest extent possible, knew no pause. But as Fanon
would have said, it is these acts which only dehumanize the oppressor and his
accomplices even further and lead them to dig a deeper more tormenting grave.
And for those millions of Libyan people who knew their Leader
well enough that no amount of media fabrication could confuse them, and for
those who have been able to battle through those fabrications and find the real
Muammar Gaddafi, he died a hero.
Always true to his word, and like his national hero Omar
Mukhtar, he died fighting, in his birthplace, refusing to leave his people’s
side. He lives on in the hearts of millions.
There is a lot that I would like to say about individual people
who I met who had a phenomenal impact on me, but even though some of them have
since been killed as a result of this war, I am unable to do so at this time
because such is the hostile nature in Libya to anyone who is remotely
associated with supporting the Jamahiriyah, that to speak about them would be
likely to put them and their families in danger.
But in addition to those people who know who they are, I would
send my warmest greetings of solidarity to the Libyan people who over these
last months became the latest victims of imperialist aggression.
And I would like to say a brief word about the tens of thousands
of political prisoners who have been scattered across the country, their crime
being that they did not support the NATO onslaught or the counter-revolution in
their country.
The fact that the shameful treatment and torture of highly
regarded figures such as Dr Abuzaid Dorda, Imam Khaled Tantoush, sister Hala
Misrati and Dr Ahmed Ibrahim is well known, having been broadcast across the
rebel channels and YouTube, puts to bed any farcical claim that these people or
their western backers have the slightest concern for justice or human life.
On Sunday, I will be traveling to Syria, where as someone said
recently on my facebook, what played out in Libya, is in many ways playing out
in Syria, but much more slowly.
At a time when we have been shown so recently that what is fed
to us in the media is very far from the reality, as a journalist I feel very
lucky to have the opportunity to personally speak to Syrian people to hear
about how they feel about the western and Arab media portrayals of their
country during this conflict.
I hope you will continue follow me during this journey!
Lizzie Phelan
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