Letters: Self-fulfilling prophecies over Libya
Chester
. Simon Tisdall (Report, 24 August) is a portrait of a mad dictator Gaddafi 's remarks quoted by the banlieue riots of 2005. I find it very difficult, with Gaddafi 's speech do not agree. Yes, the North Africans were encouraged to come to France as cheap labor. Yes, they were isolated in the bleak suburbs, and yes, they were beaten by French police when they protested. I'm no apologist for Gaddafi, but surely these are not the words of a troubled eccentric. While he certainly amassed wealth for himself and his family, he also used the oil revenues to a backward country into a desert place has modern hospitals to turn a good education system for boys and girls, an efficient infrastructure of services, and above all a secular constitution. Britain and Nato have little interest in the Libyan people, but are there to install a puppet regime to access Libyan oil without the problem of dealing with a stroppy nationalist leader. Their intervention will ensure a weak government, which will soon be toppled by Islamists. Who wins then?
Jane Ghosh
Bristol
. The "historic moment" (Striking image as rebels take 'the beating heart' of dictator's regime, 24 August) when Saddam Hussein's statue was toppled in Baghdad was not the spontaneous eruption of the people's passion that it is usually assumed to be. When the cameras panned out from the image it was clear that the crowd was small and it was the act of a relatively small group of men aided by American soldiers.
- NATO
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(638)
-
▼
August
(50)
- Engineering students take practical action
- Supremely confident: the legacy of Sandra Day O'Co...
- Engineering students take practical action for the...
- Edinburgh festival 2011: It's a wrap - now how was...
- Edinburgh festival 2011: The highs and lows
- Ruud van Nistelrooy lends his reputation to big-mo...
- After the riots: tough tactics to uproot London's ...
- Outsourcing: who's pulling the strings
- Let the luvvie embrace the boffin in the digital f...
- GCSE results: high spirits, top grades and no sign...
- Girls surge ahead at GCSE to open up record gender...
- Friday football blog - live!
- Society daily 03.08.11
- Rolls Building court complex can make London 'glob...
- Letters: Self-fulfilling prophecies over Libya
- After A-levels: school-leavers look forward to new...
- Saif al-Islam Gaddafi's shock return rocks confide...
- Cribsheet 23.10.11
- Riots: 'My familiar childhood places had been turn...
- Catherine Hakim: charm school marm | interview
- England v India - live! | Alan Gardner and Tom Lutz
- After your final status update [video] | GrrlScien...
- Libya: waiting for the 'fog of war' to clear | Mic...
- Is it the end for the gap year?
- NHS waiting times soar as doctors blame
- How sad to live in a society that won't invest in ...
- A-level results: brilliant . but what about the fa...
- Step-by-step guide to dance: National Ballet of China
- How long will the Spanish dynasty last?
- Egypt: Tackling youth unemployment | Claire Provost
- US debt deal: 'a scoreless tie in a cynical game' ...
- Co-operative schools: the antidote to academies
- Iraq: yellow sun may soon rise over an autonomous ...
- France feels the economic force of the credit rati...
- Student loans - how the debt racks up
- Barack Obama under fire as blame game follows US c...
- The dysfunction that lies at the very heart of Ame...
- How youth-led revolts shook elites around the world
- UK faces 'arrears timebomb'
- US stripped of AAA credit rating by S&P as agency ...
- Debt crisis: leaders in a rush to find common purpose
- US credit rating downgrade prompts warning from China
- Chinese warning after US debt downgrade
- S&P statement on lowering US long-term debt to AA+
- Ophelia in Pieces – a novel about ye olde criminal...
- Credit ratings: which country will be next in the ...
- Society daily 02.08.11
- Lampard: England will struggle in 2014
- Ophelia in Pieces – a novel about ye olde criminal...
- Charlie Brooker | Let's think outside the box here...
-
▼
August
(50)
0 comments:
Post a Comment