http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/many-libyans-appear-to-back-gaddafi/2011/03/24/ABHShlRB_story.html

To some in Libya, 'Brother Leader' Gaddafi still a hero
 
Gallery: Conflict and chaos in Libya:?As forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar 
Gaddafi continue attacks on rebels and international strikes begin, thousands 
of Libyans flee the fighting. 


By Liz Sly, Thursday, March 24, 11:25 PM
TRIPOLI - To all outward appearances, this is a city deeply enamored of Libyan 
leader Moammar Gaddafi. His portrait hangs from lampposts, adorns shopping 
centers and sprouts from the gleaming new office blocks rising from the 
seafront. Sayings from his Green Book, required reading for all schoolchildren, 
are posted in government buildings, including public restrooms.

And his supporters, draped in Gaddafi green and clutching pictures of their 
beloved leader, noisily and passionately assert their presence in near 
round-the-clock displays of devotion. Hurtling through the streets in pickups 
or gathering in Tripoli's central Green Square, they bellow the rhythmic chant 
that encapsulates the omnipotence of Gaddafi's self-ascribed role: "God, 
Moammar, Libya: Enough!" 

How deep that support runs in a populace that has been governed by fear for 
decades is impossible to tell. But six days into the allied bombardment of 
Libyan military targets, it is clear that Gaddafi can count on the fierce 
loyalties of at least a significant segment of the population in the vast 
stretches that lie beyond the enclave of rebel-held territory in the east. 

"We don't want anyone except him," gushed Fatima al-Mishai, 20, who joined the 
crowds assembled at Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziyah compound to offer their services 
as voluntary human shields against the bombs. "He gave us freedom and 
everything we need."

Indeed, the Libyan government has kept average incomes relatively high, while 
doling out generous social benefits, including health care and education. Even 
Gaddafi's opponents, who dare murmur their dissent only out of earshot of 
regime loyalists, concede that the man who has governed Libya for nearly 42 
years does command genuine support.

"Seventy-five percent of the people are against him," said one dissident, who 
was in the vanguard of the protest movement that was crushed in Tripoli last 
month and who agreed to a furtive meeting with journalists in a downtown cafe. 
"But there are some people who really do love him. They've known no one else 
all their lives. They think he's in their blood."

That a man who boasts he lives in a tent and whom Ronald Reagan once dubbed 
"the mad dog of the Middle East" still commands devotion four decades into his 
rule is one of the enduring mysteries of this idiosyncratic country. 

To enter the world of the Gaddafi believers is to enter an "Alice in 
Wonderland" realm in which the regime's supporters are the real 
revolutionaries, not the rebels seeking to topple the government, because Libya 
is in a state of perpetual revolution.

The Libyan people can't overthrow their government because they are the 
government, in accordance with the country's definition of itself as the Great 
Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, which loosely translates as "state 
of the masses." 

Gaddafi can't be toppled because he holds no formal position; he is the Brother 
Leader, a guide and a mentor, a patriarch and an uncle who advises his people 
but does not rule them. 

"Brother Leader Moammar Gaddafi and his colleagues are out of the executive 
completely," explained Col. Milad Hussein, who is in charge of ideological 
education for the Libyan military, in a news briefing. "The Libyan people are 
the ones who do the deciding and the executing . . . because the revolution is 
the starting point for everything."

In reality, said Dirk Vandewalle, a Libya expert and associate professor at 
Dartmouth College, Gaddafi is the state, the wellspring from whom all decisions 
and policies spring. Gaddafi is backed by a network of police enforcers and 
so-called Revolutionary Committees, effectively local vigilantes who keep a 
close watch on citizens' activities. 

"The man on the street has no real conviction, but there are nefarious 
consequences if you don't support Gaddafi," Vandewalle said.

Yet some appear to believe fervently in the government's pronouncements. In 
Green Square, small crowds of Gaddafi supporters sustain what is supposed to be 
a permanent vigil of chanting, dancing and singing in celebration of the 
so-called perpetual revolution. They are watched over by matronly female guards 
dressed in camouflage and armed with shiny new AK-47s.

"He made me feel like a free man. If I don't hurt anyone, I'm free in my own 
environment," said Majdi Daba, a 42-year-old dentist who was born the year 
Gaddafi wrested power from Libya's monarchy. Majdi said he goes to the square 
every day. "Gaddafi gives us advice, that's all, and when he dies, 7 million 
people will rule themselves."

The regime's opponents, he said, are interested only in making more money, 
while most Libyan people are satisfied that the government adequately supports 
their needs. 

"It's not complicated," he said. "This place is different from Egypt. There, a 
lot of people are poor, a lot of people are hungry, but here there are no poor 
people, no hungry people."

Libya's role as a sparsely populated, oil-rich state may go some way toward 
explaining why Gaddafi has been able to retain the support he has. Libya is 
nearly twice as big as Egypt, yet contains less than one-tenth as many people. 
Per capita incomes are more than double those in Egypt, where a successful 
revolt last month inspired Libyans to take to the streets. 

The government funds generous social welfare programs that include free 
education and health care, helping keep at bay the poverty that has fueled 
discontent elsewhere. 

"He has done a lot for the country and no one can deny it," said Mustafa 
Fetouri, director of the MBA program at the Academy of Graduate Studies in 
Tripoli. "He's built hospitals, schools, roads, lots of things." 

Moreover, he said, the powerful tribal structure that forms the backbone of the 
government has remained behind Gaddafi, despite initial reports in the early 
days of the uprising that powerful tribal leaders had defected. Gaddafi has 
apparently been helped in this regard by making good on a pledge to distribute 
weapons. 

"There are two kinds of people: those who believe in the regime itself and just 
don't care too much about freedom, and then there is the tribal structure, 
which is behind him," he said. "The support of the tribes goes beyond Gaddafi 
to his tribe, and to their relationship with his tribe, which predates Gaddafi. 
It's nothing to do with Gaddafi." 


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More on this Story

  a.. French jets shoot down Libyan plane, bomb air base
  b.. Many Libyans appear to back Gaddafi
  c.. Pressure building on Obama to clarify Libya mission
  d.. France steps forward to assume spotlight
View all Items in this Story


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