Israellycool

Down Under Punditry in the Middle East

Palestinian Deportation

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

It seems to be a taboo subject. Except when it is not Israel talking about it.

Libya wants to deport Palestinians to the Gaza Strip, to avoid their permanent settlement in Libya, and facilitate their right to return to the occupied territories.

Libya’s Al-Jamahiriya daily said on Tuesday that Libya intended to expel the Palestinians from its territory to abort “the conspiracy of liquidating the Palestinian cause.”

The state run newspaper said that if Palestinians stayed, then they would be giving up the right of return to their homes in return for Israel’s acceptance of the Beirut initiative.

It said such a deal was aimed at “settling every Palestinian in the diaspora in the countries where they reside”.

There are more than 4.5 million registered Palestinian refugees in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The newspaper said the Libyan authorities will facilitate the return of Palestinians to the Gaza Strip through Egypt to “protect their identity”.

The paper also urged Lebanon and Syria to allow more than 1.5 million Palestinian refugees they host to “return to Palestine and abort this conspiracy.”

Make no mistake. The Arab governments have no love for the palestinians, just an appreciation of their worth as a political tool - whether it be as a demographic weapon against the Jewish state of Israel, or a great way to turn their peoples’ attention away from the corruption of their own regimes. And you can’t discount the possibility that these countries simply don’t want palestinians residing within their borders.

You have to ask yourselves why there are still palestinian refugees after 60 years, along with the only permanent UN agency dedicated to refugees of any kind, while Jews expelled from Arab lands were quickly absorbed into Israel.

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Tags: Libya, Palestinian

Ziggy Stardust in Reverse

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006
Introducing Gadafy: the Opera.
Can an opera about the Libyan dictator Muammar Gadafy really be a good idea? There are precedents: in John Adams’ Nixon in China, for instance, Mao duets with the American president. Evita’s husband was a despot. Hitler is name-checked in Mel Brooks’s The Producers. And let’s not forget Trey Parker’s film Team America: World Police, in which a puppet North Korean dictator, Kim Jong Il, sings a torch song about how lonely it is at the top - which it probably is.
 
But until now, no one has risked making an opera that puts a dictator centre stage, still less while he is alive. This autumn, the Asian Dub Foundation will remedy that with Gaddafi: the Opera, co-written with the playwright Shan Khan, and currently in rehearsal.
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The opera starts with Gadafy’s coup d’Ètat in 1969, when he was 28 years old, and follows his career right through to March 2004, when Tony Blair visited his tent for tea, thereby endorsing a man reviled by the west for more than three decades. But will it include topical showstoppers along the lines of “I’m gonna wash Saddam right outta my hair”, or “Nasser, he’s my baby. No sir, don’t mean maybe”?
 
Probably not - not least because all the music will be original. ADF’s Steve Chandra Savale (nicknamed Chandrasonic, because he used to tune all the strings of his guitar to one note and then play the instrument with a knife) is guarded about the details. He says the opera will deal with all the controversies surrounding the Libyan leader, including the murder of WPC Yvonne Fletcher during a demonstration outside the Libyan embassy in London in 1984, Ronald Reagan’s bombing of Tripoli in 1986, the Lockerbie disaster of 1988, and Libya’s bankrolling of the IRA.
 
“I thought it would be interesting to do an anti-musical,” Savale explains. “Most musicals are just glorified karaoke or too nice, too mainstream. This will be anything but mainstream. It’s about a modern political myth. Gadafy’s like Ziggy Stardust in reverse.” How so? “Instead of a messianic pop star, you have this captivating man who took a great deal, in terms of his cult of personality, from Nasser [the west-defying Egyptian president]. He was and is an immensely seductive person, who isn’t really a fundamentalist, conservative or a socialist but is taken for all those things.
 
“And the story has everything - oil, terrorism, women bodyguards. [Gadafy] draws on his own Bedouin heritage as well as Marx, Rousseau and the Koran to create an idealistic revolution. Did you know,” Savale asks, peering earnestly through his straying locks, “that there is a day of revenge in Libya for the attempted genocide by the Italians?” I didn’t. After the interview, though, I find out that last year, to mark the 94th anniversary of Italy’s invasion, anyone trying to dial into the country heard a recorded message saying: “International communications are interrupted until 6pm to denounce the odious crimes committed by the Italians against the Libyan people.”
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Savale says ADF’s opera will be serious in tone, up until the final scene: Blair’s visit. “That will be shot through with satire, just because it was such a weird moment. He was the demon and suddenly he’s our friend.”
Sounds like a riot.

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Tags: Libya