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Showing posts with label Gaddafis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaddafis. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Short-Lived 1987 Sitcom Foreshadowed Gaddafi's 2011 Death

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“Second Chance” is getting a second look after its absurdly accurate prediction of Gaddafi's death.

It wasn't given a second chance in 1987, but it's getting a second look more than 24 years later as life seems to have imitated art. The show, which aired for just one season in the late 80s, predicted the death of Col. Muammar Gaddafi would occur in 2011.

(PHOTOS: Gaddafi's Crazy Clothes)

Haven't heard of it? We're not surprised. A crash course: “Second Chance” afforded Matthew Perry one of his first starring roles, as the title character. Perry, stuck in purgatory, is given the chance to go back to his teenage years to live a more virtuous life. We're not giving the plot a second chance, but the show's pilot episode is most certainly worth reprising. It takes place, after all, on July 29, 2011.

The show opens in St. Peter's heavenly office, where he receives the newly dead and guides them toward Heaven or Hell after judging the person's life achievements. After first attending to an overly cheesy beauty queen (who manages to make it to heaven), St. Peter – played by a quite commanding Joseph Maher of Sister Act – finds Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in his presence.

“Dead at last,” St. Peter quips after Gaddafi magically materializes. Gaddafi, in his typical outlandish and autocratic fashion, counters with: “But it's impossible for me to be dead.” In the exchange lasting a mere two minutes, Gaddafi is (quite expectedly) ordered to Hell in a process as arbitrary as the Hogwarts Sorting Hat.

(LIST: Top 15 Toppled Dictators)

But really, who's surprised? St. Peter shuts down the surprised Brother Leader, saying: “Oh, come on, you must have known it was coming. Very few parents these days are naming their kids ‘Muammar'.”

According to the show's producers, the Gaddafi gag was put in the pilot episode after the Libyan ruler was blamed for the 1986 bombing of a discotheque in West Berlin, Germany that killed three people and injured more than 200.  There is nary a mention of Gaddafi on “Second Chance” after the door to Hell closes, but the coincidences are striking. A bullet-riddled Muammar is pronounced dead 24 years in advance, on an arbitrary date just 83 days before his actual death.

Perhaps the show contains other wild predictions that will reveal themselves as reality? Who said there are no second chances for a failed TV show?

Nick Carbone is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @nickcarbone. You can also continue the discussion on TIME's Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.

PHOTOS: Libya Celebrates the Fall of Gaddafi

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Thursday, October 13, 2011

Gaddafi's son captured in Libya's Sirte: NTC

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Libyans celebrate after hearing the capture of Muammar Gaddafi's son Mo'tassim, at Martyrs square in Tripoli October 12, 2011. Three officials representing Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) told Reuters on Wednesday that Mo'tassim was captured in Sirte on Tuesday, trying to escape the town in a car with a family. REUTERS/Suhaib Salem

1 of 18. Libyans celebrate after hearing the capture of Muammar Gaddafi's son Mo'tassim, at Martyrs square in Tripoli October 12, 2011. Three officials representing Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) told Reuters on Wednesday that Mo'tassim was captured in Sirte on Tuesday, trying to escape the town in a car with a family.

Credit: Reuters/Suhaib Salem

By Ahmed Seif and Rania El Gamal

TRIPOLI/SIRTE, Libya | Thu Oct 13, 2011 6:14am EDT

TRIPOLI/SIRTE, Libya (Reuters) - Libyan government fighters have captured Muammar Gaddafi's son Mo'tassim as he tried to escape the battle-torn city of Sirte, National Transitional Council (NTC) officials told Reuters.

The capture of the deposed leader's national security adviser, and the first member of the Gaddafi family, is a big boost to Libya's new rulers whose forces are still battling pro-Gaddafi fighters in his home town of Sirte.

"He was arrested today in Sirte," Colonel Abdullah Naker told Reuters Wednesday. Other NTC sources said Mo'tassim was taken to Benghazi where he was questioned at the Boatneh military camp where he is being held. He was uninjured but exhausted.

Hundreds of NTC fighters took to the streets in several Libyan cities and fired shots in the air in celebration.

Gaddafi loyalists have fought tenaciously for weeks in Sirte, one of just two major towns where they still have footholds, two months after rebels seized the capital Tripoli.

NTC foot soldiers cleaned their weapons and began to move up to the front line in Sirte Thursday while tanks and rocket launchers bombarded the remaining small pockets of resistance.

It was not yet clear whether resistance would crumble from the Gaddafi loyalist side now that Mo'tassim had been captured, or whether his remaining troops would fight on, or whether they were even aware of the news.

Mo'tassim belonged to a conservative camp -- rooted in the military and security forces -- which resisted his brother Saif al-Islam's reform attempts, analysts said.

A senior NTC military official told Reuters that Mo'tassim had cut his usually long hair shorter to disguise himself.

Gaddafi and his most politically prominent son, Saif Al-Islam, have been on the run since the fall of Tripoli in August. Gaddafi himself is believed to be hiding somewhere far to the south in the vast Libyan desert.

His daughter Aisha, her brothers Hannibal and Mohammed, their mother Safi and several other family members fled to Algeria in August and have lived their since. Another son, Saadi, is in Niger.

NTC field commanders say more than 80 percent of Sirte is now under their control. Gaddafi's men are still in parts of the "Number Two" and the 'Dollar' neighborhoods," they say.

Green flags, the symbol of Gaddafi's 42 years in power, still fly above many of the buildings in the neighborhoods.

In the "Number Two" neighborhood, government forces found 25 corpses wrapped in plastic sheets. They accused pro-Gaddafi militias of carrying out execution-style killings.

Five corpses shown to a Reuters team wore civilian clothes and had their hands tied behind their backs and gunshot wounds to the head.

"There are about 25 innocent people with their hands tied. There is no humanity. It's sad," said NTC commander Salem al Fitouri standing besides the corpses, which he said had been there for at least five days.

Medical workers at a hospital outside Sirte said four NTC fighters were killed and 43 others were wounded Wednesday.

The NTC has said it will start the process of rebuilding Libya as a democracy only after the capture of Sirte, a former fishing village transformed by Gaddafi into a showpiece replete with lavish conference halls and hotels.

(Additional reporting by Tim Gaynor in Sirte, and Barry Malone and Joseph Logan in Tripoli; Writing by Jon Hemming; Editing by Giles Elgood)



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Sunday, October 9, 2011

Sniper fire holds up push into Gaddafi's hometown

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Anti-Gaddafi fighters take cover as they cross between buildings during clashes with pro-Gaddafi forces in Sirte, October 6, 2011. REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih

1 of 22. Anti-Gaddafi fighters take cover as they cross between buildings during clashes with pro-Gaddafi forces in Sirte, October 6, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Asmaa Waguih

By Rania El Gamal and Tim Gaynor

SIRTE, Libya | Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:04pm EDT

SIRTE, Libya (Reuters) - Snipers loyal to Muammar Gaddafi held back government forces trying to capture his hometown on Thursday and the deposed leader warned the heads of the developing world who have recognized Libya's new rulers that they would face a similar fate to his own.

Hiding in a mosque and a building that was once Gaddafi's favorite venue for international summits, loyalists blocked the advance of government forces, making forecasts of a quick end to the battle for Sirte look premature.

Thousands of civilians in the town of Sirte are caught up in the fighting. Red Cross workers who were able to reach the town's hospital described patients sheltering from the gunfire in the corridors and a lack of staff to treat them.

Taking Sirte is of huge symbolic importance to Libya's new rulers, and until it is captured they are putting on hold plans to start rebuilding the oil-producing North African state.

Once a sleepy fishing town and Gaddafi's birthplace, Sirte was transformed by the former Libyan leader into the country's second capital.

Libya's parliament often sat in Sirte and summit meetings were staged in a marble-clad conference center in the south of the Mediterranean coastal city, from where fighters loyal to him fired on the attacking forces on Thursday.

Commanders with the National Transitional Council (NTC) have predicted they will have Sirte, which has a population of 75,000, under their full control by the weekend.

They pledged that units on Sirte's outskirts would be brought into the fight on Friday in a coordinated offensive.

An audio recording of Gaddafi obtained by Reuters on Thursday from Syria-based Arrai television was the first sign of life from him since September 20, when the same station last aired a speech by him.

"If the power of (international) fleets give legitimacy, then let the rulers in the Third World be ready," Gaddafi said in an apparent reference to NATO's support for NTC forces.

"To those who recognize this council, be ready for the creation of transitional councils imposed by the power of fleets to replace you one by one from now on," said Gaddafi, who was in power for 42 years.

De facto Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said that Gaddafi was hiding in southern Libya under the protection of tribes, crossing occasionally into Niger, and government forces expected to pinpoint his whereabouts soon.

"Security is the most important thing for him. To specify where he is exactly even for ten hours is very difficult. I hope within the coming days we will be able to confirm where he is located exactly," Jibril said in on a visit to Baghdad where he discussed renewing Libyan diplomatic ties with Iraq.

'HARD-CORE FANATICS'

Gaddafi loyalists who pulled back to Sirte when they lost control of other cities are putting up fierce resistance. They have nowhere else to go.

"A lot of them are veterans, the hard-core fanatics. There's also mercenaries (and) people fiercely loyal to Gaddafi," said Matthew Van Dyke, an American who is fighting with the anti-Gaddafi forces.

"They are not going to give up," said Van Dyke, who said he came to Libya seven months ago to visit friends, was arrested by Gaddafi forces, and joined the fighting on his release.

"It's going to take a while. (Because of) the snipers, we are going to take a lot of casualties."

Anti-Gaddafi fighters on Thursday had advanced just over one kilometer (miles) into Sirte from the luxury hotel on the Mediterranean shore that had earlier marked the front line.

They were hunkered down in a neighborhood of villas and residential blocks from where they were using machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades to try to capture loyalist positions.

They set up firing positions, fortified with sandbags, next to the apartment block windows. But they were drawing heavy fire: buildings were riddled with bullets and their balconies had been partially demolished by heavy-caliber rounds.

Anti-Gaddafi fighters used binoculars to watch for muzzle flashes from loyalist sniper rifles.

They said the snipers were positioned in the minaret of a nearby mosque and in the Ouagadougou conference hall.

That is the building where Gaddafi, often decked out in elaborate traditional dress, would host summits of African and Arab heads of state.

An NTC defense spokesman quoted by Al Jazeera television said one of Muammar Gaddafi's son, Mo'attassem, had left Sirte and fled south.

FRIDAY OFFENSIVE

The street-by-street fighting was taking place on the northeastern corner of Sirte while anti-Gaddafi forces on the western side of the city held back.

Commanders there were bringing up tanks in preparation for what they said would be a coordinated assault on both fronts.

With the NTC focus on Sirte, Libya has been left in a political limbo. It has only a makeshift government and in Tripoli rival armed militias are jockeying for power.

An NTC spokesman said council chairman Mustafa Abdel Jalil would travel to Tripoli on Saturday to handle the "delicate situation" in the capital.

The battle for Sirte has exacted a high cost for civilians. They have been trapped, with dwindling supplies of food and water and no proper medical facilities to treat the wounded.

Many of Sirte's residents are members of Gaddafi's own tribe. The NTC says there will be a place for them in the new Libya, but the fighting has caused hostility that it likely to hamper the new government's efforts to unite the country once the violence is over.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said its team evacuated three wounded from Sirte's Ibn Sina hospital, including a seriously injured nine-year-old girl.

"Today there were only a few doctors left to treat war-wounded people in the Sirte hospital," Cordula Wolfisberg, an ICRC doctor who visited the hospital, said in a statement.

"The hospital is packed with civilians from the neighborhood, including many women and small children."

Hajj Abdullah, in his late 50s, was at a Red Cross post on the edge of Sirte where food was being handed out.

"My 11-year-old died from the NATO rockets ... I buried him where he died" because it was too dangerous to go to the cemetery, he said. "There are random strikes in the city. People are dying in their houses."

He said many civilians were unable to leave. "The ones who stayed behind are the poor and the weak."

(Additional reporting by Emad Omar in Benghazi, Libya, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Ahmed Tolba in Cairo, Lutfi abu Oun and Oliver Holmes in Beirut and Baghdad newsroom; Writing by Christian Lowe and Joseph Nasr; Editing by Mark Heinrich)



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