Another Day
in the Libyan Calendar
Seven years ago the killing machine of Gaddafi murdered eight
innocent Libyans. January 2nd 1997, the Libyan television showed footage of the
execution. Those killed by a firing squad were Colonel Muftah Garroum
Al-Warfally, Colonel Mustafa Abulgasem Al-Kikly, Colonel Saad Saleh, Major
Khalil Al-Jedik, Major Ramadhan Al-Aihuri, and Major Ihbail. Hanging killed Dr.
Saad Musbah and Suleiman Geith. These martyrs were paraded on television as
American spies.
They were tried twice in four years. Colonel Muhammad
Al-Aisawi Al-Ruhiby headed the first trial and he handed them prison sentences
ranging from 5 to 15 years. However, Gaddafi was not satisfied with the decision
and demanded a second trial headed by Colonel Musbah Al-Arousi who was
instructed to change the previous court rule to the count of capital punishment
for all the eight accused Libyans.
During the trial the accusation was the involvement in an
attempted coup to topple the Gaddafi regime, and contacting an exiled Libyan
group. During one of the hearings Major Khalil Al-Jedik was asked about his
meeting with the Libyan group at which there was an American named John present.
His reply was that he met many people while he was abroad and that it did not
make him a traitor, and it was unlikely that the American is being tried in his
country.
During the interrogation period Colonel Garroum was brought
in front of a group of intelligence officers including Abdullah Al-Sanusi, Musa
Kausa, Ahmad Gaddaf-Eldam and Ali Al-Kilani to humiliate him by calling him
“ai-wa ya rayis” and teased him by saying “oh president give us a
speech”. He had to stand for about an hour at a time while being blindfolded
and his hands tied behind his back.
Colonel Mustafa Al-Kikly was the head of the intelligence
training school and was second in command to Garroum in the October 1993
attempted coup. He was an honest soldier and a true Libyan patriot who
sacrificed his life for others, and was ignored completely throughout the
television parade of his comrades. Al-Kikly and Muhammad Al-Ghoul were tortured
the most, and Al-Ghoul was acquitted and a few months after his release he died
of slow acting chemical poisoning. Ramadhan Al-Aihuri refused to ask for
clemency and pointed out that he will be executed regardless, and would rather
die on his feet than on his knees.
From 1993 until now the Gaddafi propaganda machine tried
relentlessly to show that the October 1993 coup was a Warfalla movement aided by
the American CIA, and he personally tried to sell this idea by touring different
parts of the country to rally other tribes behind him against Warfalla. His
agents called the coup the “Beniwalid Uprising” to confuse the rest of Libya
between the coup and the true Beniwalid peoples’ uprising that followed the
coup.
About 120 military and civilian personnel were involved in
the October 1993 attempted coup, and there were only forty individuals from
Beniwalid. Four of the executed Libyans were not Warfalli, and the second in
command was from Kikla. Colonel Saad Saleh Al-Barghthy was from Tokra, Major
Ihbail was Forjani and the nephew of Khalifa Haftar and Sulaiman Geith is from
Al-Baidha.
The Gaddafi regime atrocity did not end by killing those
citizens, but he demolished their houses, exiled their relatives and confiscated
their property. The harm done to their families is beyond imagination as they
were expelled from schools, suspended from their jobs and forced to condemn
there loved ones on television.
The blood of the Libyan victims will not run in vain and we
will not forget them, and may God bless their souls.
Saleh Mansour
|