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Gaddafi's Biggest Fans Include Taboo-Breaking Libyan Women

Pro Gaddafi Women

First Posted: 06/08/11 11:24 AM ET Updated: 08/08/11 06:12 AM ET

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The young woman police officer swaggers through a crumbling Tripoli slum, her dark hair cut boyishly short, an empty gun holster and walkie-talkie hanging from her police belt. A tattooed man with a cigarette dangling from his lips shrinks away.

He doesn't want to mess with 25-year-old Nisrine Mansour.

A member of the regime's vice squad, her hero is Libyan ruler Moammar Gaddafi. His image is on her cell phone, his face emerging from rays of green – the iconic regime color. Her ring tone is a tinny pro-Gadhafi chant.

Gaddafi has bestowed many titles upon himself during his 42-years of iron-fisted rule over Libya, branding himself "King of Kings" in Africa and "Brother Leader of the Revolution" in Libya.

Women like Mansour give him another title: emancipator of women.

"Moammar Gaddafi is the one who opened the opportunities for us to advance. That's why we cling to him, that's why we love him," says Mansour. "He gave us complete freedom as a woman to enter the police force, work as engineers, pilots, judges, lawyers. Anything."

Among Gaddafi's most ardent loyalists are a core of Libyan women who have risen to high-profile roles in the police, military and government and credit Gaddafi with giving them greater career avenues than many of their sisters elsewhere in the Arab world. They consider any threat to his regime a threat to their own advancement.
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Even as Gaddafi's regime has cracked down brutally on dissent, locking up and torturing opponents, it has also long touted its policies of breaking cultural taboos concerning women's work and status in the deeply conservative nation. The most well known example is Gaddafi's personal guard of female bodyguards, but women have also been elevated to prominent positions in government ministries.

Gaddafi's policy was in part aimed at weakening traditional tribal and religious powers so he could impose his own vision of society.

It was only somewhat successful. Women who have gained prominence are a small minority in an otherwise strongly male-dominated Libya, far from the popular regime myth of a society filled with revolutionary fighting women. And, just as for men, advancement depends on total adherence to Gaddafi's authoritarian rule.

Women were also at the forefront of the protests that launched the anti-Gaddafi uprising in mid-February, demanding democracy for the country and – they hope – better rights for themselves. Still, while they have no rosy memories of their lives under Gaddafi, they say their struggle for equality is ongoing. Women activists were dismayed when the rebels appointed only one woman to the interim administration in their de facto capital of Benghazi.

"We are very disappointed," said Enas Al-Dursy, a 23-year-old activist. "We feel like we are being marginalized."

For policewoman Mansour, there is nothing a woman like herself can't aspire to in Gaddafi's Libya.

"I've never felt that I was treated differently because I'm a woman. Even when I'm picking up drunkards off the street, nobody ever said: 'She can't do that, she's a woman,'" said Mansour, who is charged with cracking down on drug addicts, drunkards and beggars in the slums of Tripoli.

A woman hugged her as she patrolled the garbage-strewn alleyways of the Hara Kabira slum in Tripoli's walled old city – once the pretty, brightly painted Jewish quarter, now a crumbling mess of homes filled with impoverished Libyans and African migrant workers. A little girl running by slapped Mansour's hand in greeting.

One man with a tatoo on his arm paused at the top of an alley.

"Troublemaker," Mansour said with a wink. He scurried away.

Throughout Gaddafi's Tripoli stronghold, female soldiers – a rare sight in most Arab countries – patrol roadside checkpoints in khaki uniforms and Muslim headscarves. They keep order at gas stations made rowdy by severe shortages that cause days-long lines. Police women sporting large sunglasses cruise by in cars.

Senior government officials in coifed hairstyles lunch at an upscale hotel where reporters stay in Tripoli. Gaddafi's daughter, Aisha, is a prominent lawyer.

Women are also involved in Gaddafi's mechanism of oppression against his opponents. Women run their own interrogation center for suspected female anti-Gaddafi activists, according to a resident who said she was hauled into one in May.

One of the most hated figures among the Libyan rebels seeking to overthrow Gaddafi is a woman – the former Gaddafi-appointed mayor of Benghazi, Huda Ben Amer, known as "the executioner." During a public hanging of a regime opponent in 1984, Ben Amer pulled down on the man's legs so he would die faster.

Early on, Gadhafi created a cadre of female bodyguards – glamorously made-up women in form-fitting military-style uniforms and high-heeled boots known as "amazons." He pointed to them as evidence of his commitment to promoting nontraditional roles for women.

Other hard-core supporters are known as Gaddafi's "nuns of the revolution," mostly women who came of age during the early years of Gaddafi's rule in the 1970s and devote themselves to his regime. Now in their 50s and 60s, many run ministerial departments.

About 27 percent of Libya's labor force were women in 2006 – low by world standards but high for the Arab world. Only Lebanon, Syria and Tunisia had higher rates, and the increase in women's participation in Libya over the past 20 years was by far the highest in the region, rising from 14 percent in 1986, according to the U.N.'s International Labor Organization.

"In part to boost its legitimacy, the regime promoted a more open, expansive, and inclusive role for women," said Ronald Bruce St John, who has written five books on Gaddafi's Libya.

Lisa Anderson, a Libya expert and president of the American University in Cairo, agreed, noting that when Gadhafi seized power in 1969, few women went to university. Now more than half of Libya's university students are women.

"One of the career paths that opened up for women in the past 30 years is the police, but general access to employment, education and the public sphere – as much as there is one for women – dramatically increased under Gaddafi," she said.

In her studio in an upscale Tripoli suburb, 25-year-old Radia al-Bodi, a television anchor for Libyan state TV, said women like herself would fight to defend Gadhafi's regime because of the promise it offered women.

"This is all because of Father Moammar," said Ibtisam Saadeddin, a 35-year-old soldier who wore gold-edged pins of a smiling Gadhafi on her khaki uniform and headscarf. "He is our air and sustenance. We can't be without him."

___

Associated Press writers Michelle Faul in Benghazi, Libya, and Ben Hubbard in Cairo contributed to this report.

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TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The young woman police officer swaggers through a crumbling Tripoli slum, her dark hair cut boyishly short, an empty gun holster and walkie-talkie hanging from her police belt.
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — The young woman police officer swaggers through a crumbling Tripoli slum, her dark hair cut boyishly short, an empty gun holster and walkie-talkie hanging from her police belt.
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05:48 PM on 06/08/2011
How about some Gaddafi propaganda for comic relief?

A prominent French lawyer confirmed that he started a legal proceedings, in the name of the martyrs and the wounded of Nato crusader aggression, against Sarkozy , accusing him of committing a crime war.

During a TV meeting with French24 Channel, Mr. Jack announced his start of a legal proceedings. He unveiled a meeting between French Zionist , brenard Livy, and officials form French intelligence in one of hotels in Paris capital during month of last Nov, in which they planned the conspiracy against Libya.

http://en.ljbc.net/online/news_hp.php
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glenn113
05:19 PM on 06/08/2011
Any of those hot female security guards have a place to stay in Ft. Lauderdale. Free room and board.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glenn113
05:01 PM on 06/08/2011
Gadaffi should have never lit that cigarette up last night when he went to discuss his new strategy with his Generals to keep fighting: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjOUA6YxvpU
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
01:18 PM on 06/08/2011
Wow! Pro Kadaffi propaganda piece on HP.

I wonder who paid for it?
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songoftherushes
I can think, I can wait, and I can fast
07:03 PM on 06/08/2011
They need clicks and I guess the rebels are being a little quiet.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
01:15 PM on 06/08/2011
Women are stuck either way in Libya.
12:48 PM on 06/08/2011
This Violent Occupation is the most obvious human right evil in the past three centuries
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
01:15 PM on 06/08/2011
drama queen
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
b525
12:39 PM on 06/08/2011
Hopefully the democracy revolution in Libya will not cause a transformation/return to backwards Islamic fundamentalist practices, which often involve the oppression and abuse of women.

One of the worst of these funsamentalist practices is forcing women to wear head, face and arm covering religious clothing in 100+ degree weather, which has been shown by medical and university studies WORLDWIDE to cause severe and chronic/long term Vitamin D deficiency in these women....which becomes more severe as these women age. (human skin CANNOT produce vitamin D without exposure to sunlight).

Severe/long term vitamin D deficiency causes.

-Rickett's in many of these women's unborn children, caused by lack of vitamin D in the womb. (Ricketts is a severe and permanent deformity of the leg bones)

-severe arthritis of the spine in older Muslim women who are forced to wear this clothing their whole life. (arthritis of the spine is common in older Muslim women who wear this clothing...this is so common among older Muslim women that there is a nickname for this affliction in Arabic).

-high blood pressure/stroke
-heart disease/clogging of the arteries
-cancer
-diabetes

-obesity (caused by the bodies attempt to store all avilable vitamin D in body fat).

-severe depression, exhaustion, mental confusion

-weakening of the bones (calcium and other nutrients need vitamin D and magnesium to be absorbed into bone).

-weakening of the immune system resulting in skin afflictions/diseases such as severe dermatitis and eczema

-premature aging

-premature DEATH
chinchilla
They say I need to write something here.
05:56 PM on 06/12/2011
The "democracy revolution" in Libya is being led by Islamist extremeists who have been against Qaddafi for years because he will not allow religious extremists to grab power in Libya.

You do realize, through your concern for Libyan women, that the religious extremeists supported by the west will not only make women cover up (even more so than Qaddafi's regime does) but will also set back women's rights in Libya by decades, if not more than a century.
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BoudiccaBlanc
~Yes, my micro-bio is emply! ~
12:02 PM on 06/08/2011
We know what will happen to these women when and if the Islamists get in power in Libya.
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eden4barack08
Yes WE can!!!
04:40 PM on 06/08/2011
Who told you that the pro-democracy rebels are "Islamists"? Ghadafi? Such a credible and unbiased source, huh?

The rebels are training some women to use weapons, just like Ghadafi is, while they're still wearing their head scarves. They both sound equally "Islamists" to me.
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BoudiccaBlanc
~Yes, my micro-bio is emply! ~
04:55 PM on 06/08/2011
If "al-Qaeda" members who fought against the US are in the ranks; you can be sure that it is because KSA wants to have influence in post-Gaddaffi Libya.

The writing is on the wall in Tunisa (anti-Islamist protesters were jailed) when an Islamist was allowed to return.

In Egypt; Christians are being persecuted by the same people that they protested with against Mubarak. The Egyptian government is setting up a "morality (modesty) police" force. Yusuf al-Qaradawi is back in Egypt. The list goes on.....

The "Arab Spring" is going to turn into an "Arab Winter" if any of the Islamists get their foot in the door of any country. Their stated goal is to expand Sharia law.

Sharia law is opposed to "Human Rights" as stated in the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" and in the UN Charter.

(The O.I.C. is pushing to forbid criticism of religion and to impose de-facto Sharia law via the so-called "Cairo Declaration of Human Rights". Four times they have attempted this "addition" and four times the countries that value TRUE FREEDOM have beaten the measure back and defeated it.)
chinchilla
They say I need to write something here.
05:58 PM on 06/12/2011
The rebels are the same Islamist extremists who have been fighting to overthrow Qaddafi for decades because he will not allow them to take over the country and move it back to the stone age.

Try doing some research into the Libyan rebels.
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justitia
11:56 AM on 06/08/2011
Only goes to show that the situation in Libya, just like the rest of the Arab world, does not provide a black and white answer that the US and NATO wants us to believe. Gadhafi has done a lot of very bad things but so much progress have also occurred under him, with his blessings and intentions. Gadhafi will not live forever and none of his children follows his footsteps. They have his genes but none of the circumstances that have made him what he is. One can't predict that things will be the same after Gadhafi is gone. It could be the same, worse or better. It would certainly be worse if there's no outside intervention at all, but then that's already moot. The best intervention is for a diplomatic solution. Gadhafi knows he can't rule in the same way after what has happened. But neither is forcing his ouster especially by military helping the situation any. This approach will only intensify hatred and hostility on both sides and would only succeed in turning the country into another Iraq (come to think of it, maybe that's what the West wants, as an indefinite war situation means continuous profits for the military-industrial complex).

The best solution is still diplomatic. Now that South Africa's Zuma is now leading it (and no longer Chavez) that solution should now be more acceptable to the West. But then old habits, and hypocrisies, die hard.
01:13 PM on 06/08/2011
One of the most reasonable responses on Libya I have read so far.

The situation with Libya, as with the situation anywhere is not black and white. It makes you wonder why does the "free" media here paint the picture as such.
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eden4barack08
Yes WE can!!!
04:42 PM on 06/08/2011
"One of the most reasonable responses on Libya I have read so far."

Seriously? Wow..you must not read much.
11:55 AM on 06/08/2011
Qaddafi enjoyes incredible support in Tripolitania so it's hard for misguided potus, bulldogs and french fries to dislodge him.
05:39 PM on 06/08/2011
Whoever told you that?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
YourNewNeighbor
Dancing with the Stones
11:54 AM on 06/08/2011
Poor little brainwashedFemales.
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eden4barack08
Yes WE can!!!
04:44 PM on 06/08/2011
For real! ""He is our air and sustenance. We can't be without him."" ??? Good grief!
05:41 PM on 06/08/2011
I knew about tents as featured venues in Alice-in-Gaddafi-Land. Didn`t know about oxygen tents.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
11:52 AM on 06/08/2011
Taboo Women? What an utterly false and misleading head line worthy of the misdirection perpetrated by the FoxNews cretins.
12:49 PM on 06/08/2011
And libya is a good thing----how many occupations do you want? need?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
01:06 PM on 06/08/2011
THIS IS ABOUT JOURNALISTIC INTEGRITY AND THE VERACITY Of HUFFPO. IF HYPERBOLE BECOMES THE NORM THERE IS NO ROOM LRFT FOR ANYTHING RESEMBLING THE TRUTH.
sorry about the cap lock. your reaction demonstrates the bias of the headline where none is needed.
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songoftherushes
I can think, I can wait, and I can fast
11:13 AM on 06/08/2011
Where was this report a few months ago?
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justitia
11:34 AM on 06/08/2011
It's only because it turns out ousting Gadhafi isn't that easy.
chinchilla
They say I need to write something here.
06:03 PM on 06/12/2011
These reports were there, along with the ones that had rebel leaders identifying some of the rebel fighters as AQ.

The fact that you chose to ignore them and settle for being brainwashed isn't anyones's fault but your own.
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songoftherushes
I can think, I can wait, and I can fast
07:01 PM on 06/12/2011
Check my posts. You are scolding the converted.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
11:00 AM on 06/08/2011
---general access to employment, education and the public sphere – as much as there is one for women – dramatically increased under Gaddafi,

Well, gals, you can write that off when Arab spring turns to Arab autumn
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
10:52 AM on 06/08/2011
i feel sorry for the libyan women because they will be shunted aside following gadaffis overthrow.
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Sisseline
Do unto others.....
06:04 PM on 06/08/2011
Doesn't that show you why these women are such staunch supporters?
The report is an eye-opener for some, however, I don't trust all of what I read.
Fanned
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
11:21 AM on 06/09/2011
yes, only believe half of what you read. right back at you!
chinchilla
They say I need to write something here.
06:07 PM on 06/12/2011
If you don't trust what you read here then you should do some research on your own.

Research the history of Libya, and the gains made under Qaddafi, not only for women in Libya but for all libyans.

The facts are out there, you just need to be willing to look.