"I carry the blood of a heroic father in my veins and I have never known the idea of surrender"
<>By Marie Edwards><>
Message from Aisha Qadafi, September 3, 2011:
"Even if my father and my brothers are martyred, I will continue my fight
against Islamic terrorists in Libya.
Soon, I will appear in the media to announce the fight against terrorists and
Al-Qaeda in Libya and other countries in the world.
Let the West and their mercenaries take note; Aisha Qadhafi will never
surrender to their conspiracy of evil.
I carry the blood of a heroic father in my veins and I have never known the
idea of surrender.
NATO and Western assassins killed my husband and my child. But they must know
by now that Aisha Qadhafi is a soldier.
Even at the cost of my own life, I will free my country from the clutches of
Islamic terrorists and Al Qaeda."
* * * *
Aisha Qadhafi is elegant, well educated; smart enough to cope with any
international community. Born in 1976 she has accomplished so much in the
international arena, including lately courageously facing the most adverse days
of her loving father. Aisha Qadhafi really deserves admiration from everyone,
especially women, that she stood up and fought and is still fighting.
Aisha, being trained in the Libyan army, got promoted to the rank of
Lieutenant General, which she is holding till date. She has been the goodwill
ambassador of the United Nations, philanthropist, humanitarian and a lawyer by
profession. She was appointed as the United Nations Development Program National
Goodwill Ambassador for Libya on July 24, 2009, primarily to address the issues
of HIV/AIDS, poverty and women's rights in Libya, all of which are culturally
sensitive topics in the country.
In February 2011 the United Nations stripped Aisha of her role as a goodwill
ambassador. She was placed under a travel ban on February 26, 2011, under United
Nations Security Council Resolution 1970. This resolution by UNSC as well as her
exclusion from being the goodwill ambassador was politically motivated, as the
United States and NATO were jointly supporting the rebels in Libya and they were
wholeheartedly looking for the ouster of Muammar al-Qadhafi from the leadership
in Libya.
Goodwill Ambassador is a collective term sometimes used as a substitute
honorific title or a title of honor for an Ambassador of Goodwill; but, most
appropriately for a generic recognition, it is a job position or description
that is usually indicated following the name of the individual recognized in the
position. Goodwill ambassadors generally deliver goodwill or promote ideals from
one entity to another, or to a population. Aisha has served as a mediator on
behalf of the government with European Union corporations.
In 2000 after sanctions were imposed on Iraq, Aisha Qadhafi arrived in
Baghdad with a delegation of 69 officials. Shortly before the invasion of Iraq
in 2003, she met with Saddam Hussein.
In 2011, she strongly protested the policies of U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton and U.S. President Barack Obama, calling for a mediation of the
Libyan Civil War through an international organization. She vehemently opposed
the anti-Saddam offensives of President George W Bush in Iraq and Aisha had been
consistently a supporter of Democrats in United States.
After the recently NATO bomb attack on the compound of Muammar al-Qadhafi,
Aisha sued NATO over the bombing of a building in Muammar al-Qadhafi's compound
that killed her brother, Saif al-Arab Muammar al-Qadhafi, and her own infant
daughter among the three grandchildren of her father who were killed. She claims
the attack was illegal, as it was a civilian building.
Ms. Qadhafi's lawyers filed the petitions in Brussels and Paris in June 2011.
However, on 27 July it was reported that Belgian prosecutors declined to
investigate the war crimes complaint filed by al-Qadhafi against NATO [whose
headquarters are in Belgium], saying that their country's universal competence
law [requiring a connection between the complaint and Belgium] does not apply in
the case.
Aisha Qadhafi's husband, Ahmed al-Qadhafi al-Qahsi, whom she married in 2006,
was also killed by rebels on 26th July 2011.
When Muammar al-Qadhafi's compound in Libya was occupied by the rebels, Aisha
Qadhafi's house also became a target of attack and looting. Personal belongings
and valuables of Aisha were looted by the rebels. Some of the rebels drank and
danced in the living room in the house and few of them went to her personal
bedroom and had sex with a few Nigerian women they brought from Benghazi. At
least 90 Nigerian girls were captured from several whorehouses in Benghazi by
the rebels, who were later forced to have sex with the Libyan rebels.
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