Anjing.

Seekor bonobo yang otaknya sudah rusak berat dan jadi dungu kayak babi
nanya anda tahu apa yang namany anjing?
Nah anda itu adalah manusia yg hobi berlari-lari dan bermental anjing
yang suka menyalak asal memfitah.


Anjing.

Anda tahu apa yang namany anjing?

Nah anda itu adalah manusia bermental anjing yang suka menyalak asal
memfitah.



Bajingan penipu.
Bangsat penipu.
Manusia bertabit nista.
Kerak kenistaan.



Tolol.

Dungu.

Bodoh.

Goblok.

Pandir.

--- In [email protected], "Jusfiq" <kesayangan.allah@...> wrote:
>
>
> BBC News World
>
> 4 March 2011 Last updated at 13:33 GMT
>
> Tuaregs 'join Gaddafi's mercenaries'
> By Martin Vogl Bamako
>
> Tuareg in the Malian army in the northern city of Kidal Tuareg in the
Malian army in the northern city of Kidal - some former rebels have been
absorbed into Mali's armed forces
>
> Members of the Tuareg community in Mali say a large number of men from
the Tuareg ethnic group have left Mali in the last week to join
pro-Gaddafi forces in Libya.
>
> "About 2-300 have left in the last seven days," said a senior elected
official, who did not want to be named, from the Kidal region in the
north of the country, where many Tuareg live.
>
> Another Tuareg man from Kidal said: "It's true many young men are
leaving. It all started about a week back."
>
> He said he had spoken to a convoy of 40 vehicles who are in southern
Algeria waiting to cross the border into Libya.
>
> The elected official said: "They are being paid about $10,000
(£6,000) to join up and then I've heard they are being told that they
will get $1,000 a day to fight."
>
>
> The official claimed that some of the money was coming through the
Libyan embassy in the Malian capital, Bamako.
>
> I contacted the embassy but was told only the ambassador could comment
and he was sick.
>
> Ever since the start of the uprising in Libya there have been reports
of Colonel Gaddafi using "mercenaries" to put down the protesters.
>
> Eyewitnesses have talked of Africans of darker skin firing on
protesters, speculating that they might be coming from countries such as
Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Niger, Mali and Sudan.
>
> Some of these black African fighters have been in Libya for many
years, however. Some have been in the armed forces for much of that time
and some have taken on Libyan nationality.
>
> It is only in recent days that reports of people who fit with a more
classic definition of "mercenary" have been coming to light and one of
the places of recruitment is Mali.
> Historical links
>
> The Tuareg are a traditionally nomadic people who live in the
Sahel-Sahara zone of north-west Africa. There have also been reports of
Tuareg from Algeria and Niger making the journey to Libya.
>
> The Tuareg and Colonel Gaddafi have a long history.
> Representatives of Mali's government and Tuareg rebels pose for a
picture in front of a portrait of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi after
reaching an agreement in the Libyan capital Tripoli, 3 April 2008. Col
Gaddafi brokered a peace deal between Mali and Tuareg rebels
>
> In the early 1970s, Gaddafi created his Islamic Legion. This was
supposed to be an Islamic military force that would fight for a unified
Islamic state in north Africa.
>
> Many Tuareg joined up, lured then too by the promise of cash salaries
at a time when the Sahel-Sahara zone was experiencing a terrible
drought.
>
> The Legion ended up fighting in places like Chad, Sudan and Lebanon
but in the late 1980s it was disbanded. Many Tuareg stayed in Libya and
joined the country's armed forces.
>
> The other major link between the Tuareg and Col Gaddafi's government
is the various Tuareg rebellions in the region.
>
> The Tuaregs in Mali and Niger have fought on and off for many years
with their central governments, demanding greater independence or at the
very least more investment in the areas they live.
>
> Col Gaddafi has been accused of supporting these rebellions. What is
sure is that he has helped broker peace deals and offered sanctuary to
former rebels when the fighting was over.
>
> It is these historical links that are now being called upon to get
Tuareg to Libya.
>
> "There were people who took part in the Tuareg rebellion here in Mali
who then joined the Libyan Army," the official from the Kidal region
said.
>
> "These people have very good contacts, of course, to the Tuareg who
stayed behind and they are now asking them to come to Libya."
>
> Lure of cash
>
> The Malian government has yet to make an official statement about the
allegations.
>
> But a source at Mali's foreign ministry said: "The government of Mali
is strongly opposed to the use mercenaries in any armed conflict and is
not in any way facilitating the movement of these people. We're thinking
at the moment about how we can stop this."
> Alleged mercenaries from Mali and Nigeria, being held in a classroom
by Libyan anti-government rebels in the western city of Zintan, 28
February 2011 Some of these captured alleged mercenaries are from Mali,
according to anti-Gaddafi forces
>
> Another Malian government official admitted the task was not going to
be easy.
>
> "These people are travelling through the desert. Nobody controls the
borders in the Sahara," he said.
>
> It is about two days drive from northern Mali to southern Libya.
>
> Many of the Tuareg who are leaving have experience either in the
Tuareg rebellions, the Malian armed forces or the Libyan army. On top of
this, some have been involved in smuggling drugs and people across the
region.
>
> In any case, these days in the Sahara most men know how to handle a
weapon. People often travel armed.
>
> The official from Kidal said the lure of huge salaries was just too
tempting for young men in a zone where there are few other economic
opportunities.
>
> "Even some of my own family have gone to fight, even though I've been
begging them not to."
>




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