mercoledì 10 giugno 2009

GADDAFI THE MAD DOG IS IN ITALY FOR 3 DAYS

IS NO WELCOME FOR ME THAT ASSHOLE



Gaddafi begins first Italy visit AdvertisementLibyan leader Colonel Gaddafi arrives in Italy
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has arrived in Rome on his first visit to Italy, Libya's former colonial ruler and now its biggest trading partner.
Despite improved relations between the two states, Col Gaddafi landed wearing a photo of a Libyan who was executed by Italian colonial authorities.
He will meet top officials and stay in a tent he uses for foreign trips.
Talks are expected on investment between the two countries and the issue of illegal immigration.
Muammar Gaddafi wore a carefully selected photo on arrival in Rome
Enlarge Image Col Gaddafi - dressed in full military regalia and heading a 200-member entourage - was given a red-carpet welcome by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at Rome's Ciampino airport.
Security will be tight during the three-day visit, says the BBC's David Willey in Rome.
Demonstrations are planned by left-wing students who are against Mr Berlusconi's policy - with Libyan help - of intercepting and forcibly repatriating immigrants who try to reach Italy by sea.
Human Rights Watch said the policy, part of an Italy-Libya Friendship Treaty had seen about 500 migrants towed to Libya without any screening since 6 May.
"It looks less like friendship and more like a dirty deal to enable Italy to dump migrants and asylum seekers on Libya and evade its obligations," the group said in a statement.
Love-hate relationship
Col Gaddafi is expected to meet his visitors in his Bedouin-style tent which has been set up in the park of a 17th Century Roman villa where he is staying.
He is also due to address a group of 700 Italian women from the fields of business, politics and culture.
He held a similar meeting on a visit to Paris in 2007, and told guests he wanted to "save European women".
A tent has been erected on the grounds of Villa Pamphili in Rome Col Gaddafi, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the African Union, will return to Rome next month as a delegate to the Group of Eight (G8) summit.
But this is his first visit to Italy since he took power in a coup in 1969, following Italy's 30-year occupation of Libya.
The BBC's Rana Jawad in Tripoli says the two countries have had a love-hate relationship.
Since independence the Italian language has been effectively banned in Libya, while Italian settlers were expelled soon after Col Gaddafi took power and barred from ever returning.
Italy's brutal occupation of Libya, when tens of thousands of Libyans were forcibly moved to concentration camps, was not easily forgotten, our correspondent says.
But in recent years the relationship has flourished and even turned to friendship.
Business deals have surged and expelled settlers are now allowed to visit. Col Gaddafi is accompanied in Italy by a delegation of Libyan businessmen looking to boost their investments in Italian industry.
Last year Rome agreed to pay Libya $5bn (£3bn) in reparations for colonial policies.
"I praise this generation of Italians for having resolved the issues of the past with great courage," Col Gaddafi said on arrival on Wednesday.
However he had attached to the lapel of his military uniform a picture of national hero Omar al-Mukhtar - who was executed by Italian colonial authorities - chained by his captors.
Col Gaddafi travelled to Rome with Omar al-Mukhtar's elderly son, Mohammed Omar al-Mukhtar, who had to be helped off the plane by security guards.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8092535.stm

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