Economic terrorism: U.S.-led embargo of Libya
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The assault on Libya in general
- Mandela urges end to sanctions against
Libya
- South News, 24 October 1997. Nelson Mandela urged the UN
to lift sanctions on Libya because it harm
our African
brothers and sisters
. Mandela’s call was a
rebuff to the US, the main backer of the sanctions. We
should all redouble our efforts to have Africa’s
collective voice heard in the councils of the world in
finding such fair, just and even-handed
solutions.
- Growing Opposition to US Libya
Sanctions
- By Lisa Macdonald, Green Left
Weekly, 5 November 1997. South African President
Nelson Mandela has accused the US administration of racism
and condemned its
arrogance to dictate
to South
African leaders not go to Libya. Mandela said his visit
fulfilled a moral commitment to Libya, which supported
us during our struggle when others were working with the
apartheid regime
.
- UN to debate Libya sanctions
- South News, 8 March 1998. The Security Council decided
to debate the sanctions imposed on Libya since 1992 in
light of a recent world court ruling. But the UK and US
rejected combining the public meeting requested by Arab
and African states, with the council’s periodic
review of sanctions against Libya.
- Embargo costs $5 billion
- Workers World, 16 April
1998. Libya's industry has lost more than $5 billion since
1992 as a result of the UN embargo led by the US and
UK. They charge Libya with
terrorism
and have
insisted that it extradite two citizens accused of bombing
a U.S. airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland.
- Resolution supporting Libyan Arab peoples
Jamahiriya, condemning genocidal UN sanctions
- Diplomatic dispatch from the Lakota Nation, 8 May
1998. Libya is suffering genocidal destruction and death
at the hands of the United States-backed U.N. Essential
medical supplies and Food are being denied to the People
of Libya, denying them basic Human Rights according to the
Genocide Convention.