So, how much is Muammar Gaddafi worth at the age of 69 years old? He is from Libya. We have estimated Muammar Gaddafi's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
In a quite eerie coincidence, the year of his death had been predicted by a s sitcom Boys Will Be Boys The pilot episode of the show which aired in featured the ex-Libyan leader as one of the people showing up in Saint Peter's Office on July 29, to be judged whether he will go to hell or heaven.
After the September 11, , terrorist attacks on the US, Gaddafi worked to improve his relationship with the West. In Libyan intelligence agents exploded a bomb on Pan Am Flight over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing over people.
Gaddafi has provoked several incidents with the US, one of which led to an American retaliatory bombing raid on his headquarters in Tripoli on April 15, Gaddafi escaped with only minor injuries but his infant daughter was killed. In exchange for his help in tracking down Islamic militants his government received concessions from the West, including the easing of various restrictions placed against it due to his terrorism of the s.
In Gaddafi seized the private assets of Libya's Italian and Jewish residents, driving them from the country. Since assuming power, Gaddafi has given strong support to a wide variety of terrorist groups and regimes, including Iran, Iraq, Syria, Uganda, the Palestine Liberation Organization and its sub-groups, and the Irish Republican Army.
Heavily supported by the Soviet Union, he fought an unsuccessful war against Egypt and a disastrous war against Chad and its ally France for control of the northern regions of the country. In an attempt to drive French forces out of the country Gadaffi sent an invasion force into Chad, only to see it annihilated by the poorly armed, minimally trained but highly motivated Chadian army.
The survivors fled back to Libya, leaving behind large numbers of vehicles, equipment and weapons. Within four years Gaddafi took control of the army and on September 1, , he seized power in a carefully planned coup. Assuming command of the government as chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Council, Gaddafi declared himself commander-in-chief of Libya's armed forces and its government, with the rank of colonel.
June 7 , age Profession : Politician, Military Officer, Soldier. Muammar Gaddafi is still alive? Read More. World reaction to Gaddafi's death. Muammar Gaddafi: Obituary. Libya's Leader Speaks Out.
Muammar Gaddafi addresses the nation. Muammar Gaddafi - Talk to Jazeera - 25 Sep Influencer Opportunity If you are a model, tiktoker, instagram Influencer We connect brands with social media talent to create quality sponsored content " Join Here ". Top 7 Top 7 World Leaders of the year by vote. Emmanuel Macron. Jacob Zuma. By Friday, the day after he died, the body of the former dictator once so feared by his Libyan opponents was facing a final indignity — being stored on the floor of a room-sized freezer in Misrata usually used by restaurants and shops to keep perishable goods.
If there is an irony surrounding the death of Muammar Gaddafi, it is, perhaps, that he should have met his end in Sirte, a city more than any other associated with his rule. It was Sirte that Gaddafi turned into his second capital — a former fishing village that he transformed into a place dedicated to both his own ego and his Third Revolutionary Theory, which he embodied in his Green Book that was taught in all Libyan schools.
And as the city fell, bit by bit over the weeks, its nature was revealed. There are pictures in the wealthier houses of Gaddafi with their occupants and stylised beaten copper images of Gaddafi on the walls. In one building, discovered by paramedics with the government forces, there is a trove of snapshots of Gaddafi and his sons. No wonder, perhaps, that this is where he chose to make his last stand.
The conflict around the city — during the long siege that began in September — reveals another nature of Sirte that must have made it attractive to Gaddafi. There are concrete walls within walls, compounds within those barriers, easy for Gaddafi and his protectors to defend.
For those attacking Sirte they seemed for a while to be insuperable obstacles, not least the long barrier blocking access to the vast plaza of the Ouagoudougou conference centre. There were small counter-attacks as the government forces crept forward, sometimes with rocket-propelled grenades that burst in the air or crashed into buildings.
At other times machine-gun fire rattled into the bullet-pocked facades of offices, banks, schools or villas.
They probed for weak positions. There were rumours of cars attempting to break out as the net closed. And with each day fighters posed the same question to which they could not supply an answer: why was it that those fighting on the Gaddafi side would not give up? How Gaddafi came to be in Sirte — if not the reason that he went to one of the few locations still strongly supportive of him — remains murky.
It is believed he fled from Tripoli shortly before it fell in August. Motorcades carrying his wife and daughter to Algeria, and at least one other son to Niger, were spotted and the details leaked to the media by Nato. But the convoy carrying the dictator appears to have been missed. For his escape, Gaddafi had only one highway to travel — leading south of the capital to Beni Walid, 90 miles from Tripoli, the only highway not in rebel hands.
A further detour would then have been necessary to avoid the rebels who were pushing in all directions out of the coastal city of Misrata, involving the convoy driving south-east, deeper into the Libyan desert, to the only traffic junction leading to Sirte at Waddan. The rebels were deeply divided over where Gaddafi was. Some believed he had fled on one of the convoys carrying his wife and other sons that were spotted crossing south to Niger and east to Algeria.
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