Migrants Sold in Libya for as Little as $400

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
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Red Deer AB
The Libya regime repeal/place was another mistake. We are great at repeal but its the replace part we just don't have.
We do have the replacement, same as Iran got when from 1953-1979, same as Afghanistan got after Russia was defeated. Those places, as well as Libya, went the direction they were supposed to as that is the way the US (as a puppet) wants the places run. All wealth and power belongs to big corps and the world banks.



Documentary - These Walls Will Talk

In 1957 the CIA helped the Shah of Iran to establish The Organization of Intelligence and National Security. SAVAK as it was known by its Persian acronym was a significant tool in persecution, incarceration and torture of revolutionaries and political prisoners. This continued up until the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Apart from hundreds of safe houses and unknown detention places, the horrific secret police had reserved one especial locale for the toughest of the revolutionaries: The Anti Sabotage Joint Committee building and detention center. This building with all its cells and its numerous torture machines and tools is today turned into a museum; A museum to stand witness to the cruelty of the torturers and the stubborn defiance of the imprisoned revolutionaries who braved intolerable harshness. These Walls Will Talk narrates the accounts of aged men and women who were once within these walls. They are no longer young but the horror inducing memories of this place is forever vivid in their minds. Ex-political inmates and the cells of this prison blend in once more to bring you the story of what has been done within these walls.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
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USA


"We'll see this mission through"


uh huh.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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In the last years of Obama’s presidency, he often referred to the ‘mistakes in Libya’ – in 2015, he bemoaned the ‘leadership vacuum’ created after the overthrow of the Qaddafi regime and in 2016, he said that the aftermath of the NATO war was the ‘worst mistake’ of his presidency. Obama told Chris Wallace last year that while he still thought the NATO war was the ‘right thing to do,’ he felt that ‘failing to plan for the day after’ was the catastrophe. Libya, Obama said, is a ‘mess.’

We could debate whether the NATO war was indeed the right thing to do. After all, the French bombardment of Libya, which began before the US bombardment, came just when a high-level team with authority from the African Union was ready to leave Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) for Tripoli (Libya) to hold a dialogue with Qaddafi and his leadership. This was circumvented. All possible ways to end the conflict were not exhausted. Sarkozy, Cameron and Obama – with the Gulf Arab monarchs – were eager to get into this war. Obama did not, at that time, say anything about planning for the day after.

An Italian doctor who works on the island of Lampedusa (Italy), Pietro Bartolo has written a book – Lacrime di sale (Tears of Salt) – in which he documents the condition of those migrants and refugees who do make it to European shores. They are not only ‘skin and bones,’ but they show ‘signs of torture – gunshots, electric shocks, burns, lashing, skinning – brutal and unacceptable things.’ This torture has not taken place in the slave auctions, but in the detention centers, the concentration camps, that are in the plain light of day.

Horror in reaction to the CNN report is one thing. Clarity is another. This May, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Fatou Bensouda came before the UN Security Council. She made a forthright report on the situation in Libya and mentioned the ‘credible accounts that Libya has become a marketplace for the trafficking of human beings.’ Bensouda wanted to widen her ambit from the investigation of crimes by Qaddafi-era officials to crimes in the post-Qaddafi era. NATO countries that prosecuted the war in 2011 were unwilling to allow the investigation to widen.

When UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres saw the CNN report he said, ‘Slavery has no place in our world and these actions are among the most egregious abuses of human rights and may amount to crimes against humanity.’ But Guterres did not say anything about who created the conditions for these crimes to be so openly committed. He would have had to point his finger at Europe and to the United States. No such finger was raised.

https://www.alternet.org/world/libya-home-21st-century-slave-market-and-un-security-council-wont-act
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
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Yup, slavery is what the democrats always stood for

Projecting names on their opponents is just part the propaganda phase of the wrestling game.

Then you also have the republicans supporting the same policies, which will in the end, all be bad for the US, which in the end, they would like to do the same things to.
(Take a look at which country actually controls the US elections and gets the most illegal aid)

So there you have the soros/banker funded (like the Russian and chinese revolutions A BUSINESS MODEL!!!) CommieNaziglobalist agenda.

You are looking at hundreds of millions dead BTW.
Supported by really STUPID PEOPLE.
 

Hoid

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 15, 2017
20,408
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I would feel fine with this if Canadian bombs had not been dropped here in order to oust a political leader. It is war and should require an act of Parliament.