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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Who killed Gaddafi? Why we should care

Refl: Untuk melihat video footage ketika Gaddafi ditangkap, click : Video: Decoding Gaddafi's death (GRAPHIC)
http://www.globalpost.com/taxonomy/term/20184?page=1
Who killed Gaddafi? Why we should care. 
Even tyrants must be brought to justice because the rule of law civilizes us.
Andrew MeldrumOctober 21, 2011 18:37

Libyans take pictures with their mobile phones of the body of Moamer Kadhafi in Misrata on Oct. 20, 2011. (Mahmud Turkia/AFP/Getty Images)
Bloody Muammar Gaddafi staggering and roughly bundled onto a truck by angry Libyans hurling abuse at him.

The graphic video says it all, or does it?

Who killed Gaddafi? Why wasn't the deposed leader brought to trial?

Many say it doesn't matter because Gaddafi was a brutal dictator, crazed by his years in power, who killed and tortured to the end. He got what was coming to him. Live by the sword, die by the sword.

The video of Gaddafi's capture makes it clear that he was pulled from the storm drain by frightened, angry fighters, pumped up by the adreniline of battle and the deaths they have witnessed. Should they be held to the exacting standards of international law? They found a liberating catharsis in hauling Libya's tyrant around. Even watching the video brings home the gripping reality that Gaddafi is finished.

So why does it matter if he was shot and not taken to court?

Because the rule of law matters. It is what makes us civilized. And each step we make toward making war more civilized is significant.

Christopher Hitchens explores this in The New Libya's First Mistake, an essay he wrote for Slate. Hitchens asserts that neither Libya's new leaders nor U.S. President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton or British Prime Minister David Cameron urged Libyans to bring Gaddafi to trial.

Hitchens concludes:

I was in Romania on the day that Nicolae and Elena Ceausescu were hastily done away with, and I was in Mosul on the day before Uday and Qusay Hussein were surrounded and submitted to lethal shot and shell in a house from which there was no escape. In both cases, the relief felt by the general population was palpable. There can be no doubt that the proven elimination of the old symbols of torture and fear has an emancipating effect, at least in the short term. But I would say that this effect is subject to rapidly diminishing returns, which became evident in Iraq when Moqtada al-Sadr's unpolished acolytes got the job of conducting the execution of Saddam Hussein. There are sectarian scars still remaining from that botched and sordid episode, and I shall be very surprised if similar resentments were not created among many Libyans on Thursday. Too late to repair that now. But it will be a shame if the killing of the Qaddafis continues and an insult if the summons to the Hague continues to be ignored.

The International Criminal Court may appear bureaucratic and ineffective but it is slowly establishing its authority and setting precedents to uphold the rule of international law over war and over the protection of human rights. The ICC's steps are small but critical for us all.

I think of Robert Mugabe. Countless aggreived Zimbabweans would like to see him bloodied and staggering about like Gaddafi. But it would be best for the nation to see Mugabe brought to trial and to justice.

It may not be crucial to find out who killed Gaddafi. But it is imperative to set the precedents so that other despots will be brought to court and judgment, even though they may deserve a lynching mob. 

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Gaddafi's end: how cell phones became weapons of choice 
Emily LodishOctober 21, 2011 17:05 
BOSTON — With 5 billion of the world's nearly 7 billion people using cell phones, their video capabilities are likely to continue to intensify the stories we tell. 
Video: Decoding Gaddafi's death (GRAPHIC)
Solana PyneOctober 21, 2011 16:17 
What does the graphic cell phone video shot after rebels found Gaddafi tell us about how he died?

Could Gaddafi's death derail Libya?
David CaseOctober 21, 2011 15:03 
Gaddafi exercised arbitrary rule for 42 years. Does the revolutionary government risk following in his footsteps? 
Gaddafi's body "packed in shopping center freezer" (VIDEO) (GRAPHIC)
Kyle KimOctober 21, 2011 13:38 
Former Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi's corpse has been stored in a shopping center freezer 
Gaddafi killing: Was it wrong? Readers respond.
Jordan HeltonOctober 21, 2011 14:08 
GP readers give their views on former Libya leader Muammar Gaddafi's death on Facebook and Twitter. 
Gaddafi death "regrettable," South Africa's ANC says
Erin Conway-SmithOctober 21, 2011 12:43 
South African President Jacob Zuma said Gaddafi should have been captured, not killed, and then tried at the International Court of Justice. 
Libya celebration tempered by questions of Gaddafi's death (VIDEO)
Tracey SheltonOctober 21, 2011 11:49 
MISRATA — Death of Muammar Gaddafi at the hands of his own citizens brought an ironic and disturbing end to the rule of an eccentric and tyrannical leader. 
GADDAFI: GlobalPost videos, photos, dispatches
News DeskOctober 21, 2011 11:37Updated October 21, 2011 17:06 
GlobalPost pulls together its best content to explain how Muammar Gaddafi was captured, what were the circumstances under which he died and what will happen next in Libya. 
Gaddafi dead: Video of leader's initial capture (EXCLUSIVE)
Video is earliest known footage of Gaddafi being pulled from hiding place.
Tracey SheltonOctober 20, 2011 21:47

Libyan Head of State Colonel Muammar Gaddafi waves to the crowd in Tripoli followed Commandant Abdussaman Jalloud the number two of the Libyan regime. June 1975.

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The shock discovery of the former dictator, found cowering in a water drain, was captured by a rebel fighter with an iPhone just seconds after Gaddafi was dragged from his hiding spot. 
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