jueves, 22 de marzo de 2012

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El Mundo al día
Publicada:  19 marzo 2012
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Rusia
Más de 100 detenidos
La policía detuvo ayer a más de cien activistas opositores en dos actos de protesta en Moscú, uno frente al Kremlin y otro frente a la torre de la televisión rusa. Otra docena de opositores fueron detenidos en la plaza de Manezh, cuando lanzaron globos blancos en protesta contra Putin.

Libia
Solicitan extradición
Libia solicitó ayer formalmente a Mauritania la extradición de Abdulá al-Senussi, quien fuera jefe de inteligencia del régimen de Muamar Kadhafi, para enjuiciarlo por crímenes de guerra y de lesa humanidad. Al-Senussi fue detenido el viernes pasado en el aeropuerto de Nuakchot.

Yemen
Año de violencia
Más de 2,000 personas murieron en un año de agitación política que llevó a la renuncia del presidente de Yemen, informó el gobierno ayer. El gobierno difundió sus primeras cifras de decesos en un día que multitudes de manifestantes conmemoran un año del comienzo de la revuelta.

Barein
Más enfrentamientos
Dos personas murieron ayer en nuevos choques entre manifestantes de la oposición y la policía en las calles de Barein, en medio de los preparativos para una nueva ronda de diálogo político y la celebración de la carrera de Fórmula 1 el próximo abril.

París
“Toma” de La Bastilla
El candidato del Frente de Izquierda a las elecciones presidenciales francesas, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, reunió ayer a miles de personas en un mitin en la emblemática plaza de la Bastilla de París. Mélenchon abogó por el paso a una VI República francesa, parlamentaria, social, laica, participativa y ecológica.
EFE y AP

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References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdullah_Senussi

http://www.youtube.com

http://www.google.com

News


Entrega de al Senussi en agenda de delegación libia a MauritaniaPDFImprimirE-Mail
  
Ex jefe de la inteligencia militar libia, Abdulá al SenusiNouakchott, 19 mar (PL) La extradición de Mauritania del ex jefe de la inteligencia militar libia, Abdulá al Senusi, es el objetivo de la visita de una delegación de Trípoli hoy a esta capital.

  "Hemos venido a buscar a un criminal que mató a libios", dijo a su llegada el líder de la comitiva y viceprimer ministro de Libia, Mustafá Abushugur.

Nuestra visita "no necesita ser justificada porque los pueblos de Libia y Mauritania son hermanos", añadió Abushugur sin aludir al nombre de al Senusi, detenido aquí el viernes procedente de Marruecos.

El ex integrante del gobierno de Muamar Gadafi, asesinado tras la invasión al país de una coalición occidental, es también reclamado por Francia y por la Corte Penal Internacional (CPI).

El organismo jurídico de La Haya se basa en cargos de represión ejercida el pasado año contra ciudadanos libios para juzgar al detenido por "crímenes contra la humanidad".

París, por su parte, considera implicado a al Senusi, quien viajó a esta capital con un pasaporte falso, en un atentado el 19 de septiembre de 1989 contra un avión en el que murieron 170 personas, 54 de ellas francesas.

Hervé Besancenot, embajador de Francia en Mauritania, visitó hoy al presidente Mohamed Abdel Aziz, presumiblemente para tratar también sobre la entrega a su país del disputado ex jefe de la inteligencia libia.

La presencia en Casablanca de al Senusi, desde donde voló a Nouakchott no fue explicada por Marruecos, cuyo Gobierno mantiene total silencio sobre el tema.

Mauritania fue uno de los últimos países en reconocer al nuevo régimen libio, y el presidente Abdel Aziz uno de los jefes de estado que mejores relaciones sostuvo con el Gadafi.

msl/apb


http://www.prensa-latina.cu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=489166&Itemid=1 

martes, 20 de marzo de 2012

Welcome


The purpose of this blog is to make this unkown character in the international community notorious so to warn people, make this man visible will save millions of inosent civilians in Libya. He is responsible of many murders of any kind in the whole region. It's time to make a change, invisible is now nothing

VIDEOS





Attacks History


US embassy cables described him as being a confidant of Gaddafi who makes "many of his medical arrangements". During the 2011 Libyan civil war, he was blamed for orchestrating killings in the city of Benghazi and recruiting foreign mercenaries. He was believed to have extensive business interests in Libya.
On 1 March 2011, Libya's Quryna newspaper reported that Gaddafi sacked him.
On 16 May 2011, the International Criminal Court prosecutor announced that he is seeking an arrest warrant for Abdullah Senussi on charges of crimes against humanity.
On 21 July 2011, Libyan opposition sources claimed that Senussi had been killed in an attack by armed rebels in Tripoli; however, a few hours later the same sources recanted on their earlier claim and some even said he might have just been injured.
On 30 August 2011, there were reports that both Senussi's son, Mohammed Abdullah al-Senussi, and Muammar Gaddafi's son, Khamis, were killed during clashes with NATO and NTC forces in Tarhuna. In October, Arrai Televison, a pro-Gaddafi network in Syria confirmed that Mohammed Senussi and Khamis Gaddafi had been killed on 29 August. On 20 October, Niger foreign minister Mohammad Bazoum told Reuters that he had fled to Niger. However, a Libyan fighter later told the Guardian that the rebels had the possession of three other men who were in Gaddafi's convoy when he was killed and that he believed one them was Senussi The other two were identified as Gaddafi's slain son Mutassim and one of his military commanders Mansour Dhao, who was still alive and confirmed his identity, as well as details of Gaddafi's death, to Human Rights Watch while in the hospital; Dhao was earlier thought to have fled to Niger.
However, later reports surfaced that Senussi from his hideout in Niger was helping Saif al-Islam Gaddafi escape from Libya. Senussi was reportedly captured on 20 November near the city of Sabha. It was afterwards reported that he would be taken to Tripoli to stand trial for charges of crimes against humanity, according to the National Transitional Council. However, ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo doubted Senussi was captured. Libyan defense minister Osama Jweli also stated that there was no evidence Senussi had been captured. On 4 December 2011, Abdullah Nakir, a Libyan official, told Al Arabiya that Senussi was arrested and was being questioned about a secret nuclear facility Gaddafi was operating, but admitted that the Libyan government was unable to produce any photographs of him in custody.
On 17 March 2012, news reports stated that Senussi had been arrested at Nouakchott airport in Mauritania. The Libyan government is reported as having requested his extradition to Libya.

Biography


Is a Libyan national born the 5 of December 1949 who was the intelligence chief and brother-in-law of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. He was married to Gaddafi's sister-in-law.
Scottish police officers plan to interview him in connection with the Lockerbie bombing, raising the prospect of a second Lockerbie trial.
According to The Guardian he had a reputation for brutality since the 1970s. During the 1980s he was head of internal security in Libya, at a time when many opponents of Gaddafi were killed. Later, he had been described as the head of military intelligence, but it is unclear whether he actually held an official rank. In 1999 he was convicted in absentia in France for his role in a 1989 bombing of a passenger plane flying over Niger that resulted in the deaths of 170 people. Libyans believe he was responsible for massacring 1,200 prisoners at the Abu Salim jail in 1996. He was also thought to have been behind an alleged plot in 2003 to assassinate Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.