http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article270893.ece

Libya's 'Brotherly Leader' feels ripples of change
In this Sept. 1, 2009 file photo, Libyan leader Moammar Qdadafi gestures with a 
green cane as he takes his seat behind bulletproof glass for a military parade 
in Green Square, Tripoli. (AP) 1 of 2
By GILES ELGOOD | REUTERS 

Published: Feb 18, 2011 20:47 Updated: Feb 19, 2011 18:38 

LONDON: With his penchant for Bedouin tents, heavily armed female bodyguards 
and Ukrainian nurses, Muammar Qaddafi has cut a showmanlike figure as Libya's 
leader for more than 40 years.

For most of that time he also held a prominent position in the West's 
international rogues' gallery.

He has maintained tight control by clamping down on dissidents but his 
oil-producing nation is now beginning to feel the wind of change that is 
blowing across the Arab world.

Anti-Qaddafi protesters clashed with police and government supporters in the 
eastern city of Benghazi, and Human Rights Watch reported that at least 24 
people had died in two days of unrest this week.

The Arab world's longest serving leader, he has no official government function 
and is known as the "Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution."

Visionary or dictator, Qaddafi's quirky style is unique.

His love of grand gestures is most on display on foreign visits when he sleeps 
in a Bedouin tent guarded by dozens of female bodyguards.

During a visit to Italy in August last year, Qaddafi's invitation to hundreds 
of young women to convert to Islam overshadowed the two-day trip, which was 
intended to cement the growing ties between Tripoli and Rome.

US diplomatic cables released by the WikiLeaks website have shed further light 
on the Libyan leader's tastes.

One cable posted by The New York Times describes Qaddafi's insistence on 
staying on the first floor when he visited New York for a 2009 meeting at the 
United Nations and his reported refusal or inability to climb more than 35 
steps.

Qaddafi is also said to rely heavily on his staff of four Ukrainian nurses, 
including one woman described as a "voluptuous blonde." The cable speculated 
about a romantic relationship.

Qaddafi was born in 1942, the son of a Bedouin herdsman, in a tent near Sirte 
on the Mediterranean coast. He abandoned a geography course at university for a 
military career that included a short spell at a British army signals school.

Qaddafi took power in a bloodless military coup in 1969 when he toppled King 
Idriss, and in the 1970s he formulated his "Third Universal Theory," a middle 
road between communism and capitalism.

Qaddafi oversaw the rapid development of his poverty-stricken country, 
previously known for little more than oil wells and deserts where huge tank 
battles took place in World War II.



Giant projects

One of his first tasks was to build up the armed forces, but he also spent 
billions of dollars of oil income on improving living standards, making him 
popular with the low-paid.

Qaddafi has poured money into giant projects such as a steel plant in the town 
of Misrata and the Great Man-Made River, a scheme to pipe water from desert 
wells to coastal communities.

He has used tough tactics against dissidents, who include Islamists, and has 
used "purification committees" of army and police officers, joined by loyal 
students, to keep control.

But he is also respected by many Libyans. He is a figure of real charisma with 
a popular touch and has exploited the medium television unlike other Arab 
leaders.

Qaddafi embraced the pan-Arabism of the late Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser 
and tried without success to merge Libya, Egypt and Syria into a federation. A 
similar attempt to join Libya and Tunisia ended in acrimony.

In 1977 he changed the country's name to the Great Socialist Popular Libyan 
Arab Jamahiriyah (State of the Masses) and allowed people to air their views at 
people's congresses.

However, he was shunned by the West for much of his rule which accused him of 
links to terrorism and revolutionary movements. US President Ronald Reagan 
called him a "mad dog" and sent war planes to bomb Libya in 1986. One of the 60 
people killed was Qaddafi's adopted daughter.

He was particularly reviled after the 1988 Pan Am airliner bombing over 
Lockerbie, Scotland, by Libyan agents in which 270 people were killed.

UN sanctions imposed in 1992 to pressure Tripoli to hand over two Libyan 
suspects, crippled the economy, dampened Qaddafi's revolutionary spirit and 
took the sting out of his anti-capitalist, anti-Western rhetoric.

Qaddafi abandoned his program of prohibited weapons in 2003 to return Libya 
into international mainstream politics.

The return to Libya last year of the convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Ali 
Al-Megrahi, released from a Scottish jail on health grounds, angered Washington.

In September 2004, US President George W. Bush formally ended a US trade 
embargo as a result of Qaddafi's scrapping of the arms program and taking 
responsibility for Lockerbie.

The return to Libya in 2009 year of the convicted Lockerbie bomber, released 
from a Scottish jail on health grounds, angered Washington.

Last month Qaddafi said he feared the change of power in neighboring Tunisia 
was being exploited by foreign intervention.

Qaddafi said he was "pained" by the violent events in Tunisia and that people 
there had been too hasty in pushing out President Zine Al-Abidine Ben Ali.


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