Gaddafi

UK Sent British-Libyans to Fight Gaddafi, MI5 ‘Sorted’ Travel to Join Rebels

Fighters say government operated ‘open door’ policy allowing them to join rebels, as authorities investigate background of Manchester bomber.

(MEE) — The British government operated an “open door” policy that allowed Libyan exiles and British-Libyan citizens to join the 2011 uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi even though some had been subject to counter-terrorism control orders, Middle East Eye can reveal.

Porkins Policy Review episode 96 Keelan Balderson on the Manchester and London Attacks

Keelan Balderson of WideShut.co.uk joins me today for an in depth discussion of the recent terror attacks in Manchester and London. We begin by looking at the initial narrative that the media presented to us and how that quickly began to change within days of the event. Keelan discusses how the narrative had many of the hallmarks of the 7/7 Terror attacks, such as prior knowledge and security monitoring, slipping through the net, and the calls for internal reviews by MI5. Next to take a closer look at Salman Abedi’s family and the claims that they were Libyan refugees.

5 lessons from the London terrorist attack

All terrorist events are uniquely tragic, yet many have reoccurring themes that ought to make the powers that be take note and change.
Here are some things to consider
1. NO ONE Has To Live With Terrorism 
The idea that any civilians should ‘get used to’ the threat of being blown into a million pieces, hacked to death or shot at any moment, is an insult to the common humanity that binds every good person in the world together.

The Manchester Bombing Wouldn’t Have Happened If We Hadn’t Killed Gaddafi

(SHADOWPROOFDespite initial claims by the British government, it is now clear that Salman Abedi, the man responsible for the bombing of an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, was not a “lone wolf” but a member of terrorist network living in the United Kingdom under the protection of the government.