Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Tuesday, 2nd December 2008 Change Date

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Swiss feel Gaddafi's wrath after he goes cuckoo over son's arrest



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 25 July 2008
AS FAR as attacks of "monster parent syndrome" go, it has to be one of the world's worst. President Moammar Gaddafi appears to have declared economic war on Switzerland after it had the temerity to arrest his wayward son.
Hannibul Gaddafi, 32, and his pregnant wife were detained last week at a luxury hotel in Geneva, after reports of an altercation and shouting in their suite.

The Swiss newspaper Tribune de Genève reported that two of Gaddafi's domestic servants
had claimed he and his wife repeatedly beat them at the hotel with a belt and a hanger. It said a Tunisian woman had been hospitalised.

The angry reaction from Tripoli reached a peak yesterday with the announcement that Libya had halted all its oil deliveries to Switzerland and barred Swiss ships from its ports in protest at the arrest. Libya supplies more than half of Switzerland's crude imports, which totalled 2.5 million tons in 2007.

Tripoli had already recalled some of its diplomats from Switzerland, suspended the issuing of visas for Swiss citizens, reduced the number of flights to Switzerland and detained two Swiss nationals on various charges, according to the Swiss foreign ministry. Switzerland, in turn, has warned its citizens not to travel to Libya.

Libya is now threatening to withdraw about £3 billion in funds held in Swiss banks.

In Tripoli yesterday, the Libyan government organised a demonstration by employees of the Libyan shipping company in front of the Swiss embassy. Some 500 people chanted slogans and distributed flyers calling for an official apology.

The company also issued a statement saying Swiss ships would be stopped from entering Libyan ports and unloading their goods. "Unless the coming hours witness a closure of this file, which is fabricated and illegitimate, and unless the Swiss authorities issue an official apology to Gaddafi, his son and the Libyan people, escalating measures will be taken," it warned.

In Geneva, Laurent Moutinot, the head of the Geneva local government, denied Libyan accusations that Hannibul Gaddafi had been mistreated. "No force was used against the Gaddafi couple," he said. "The reputation of Switzerland as a country of human rights demanded that the police intervene."

Hannibul and his wife were released on bail after being interviewed by police last week, but they have since fled Switzerland. It is not known whether they are now back in Libya.

The Swiss are somewhat perplexed by Libya's actions against them. A diplomatic delegation has been dispatched to Tripoli to give the Libyan authorities more details on the arrest "to prevent a crisis between the two countries", the Swiss foreign ministry said.

Chips off the old block?

GENEVA has suffered with more than its fair share of international brats over the years, its opulent hotels, strict banking code and careful respect of diplomatic status guaranteeing an allure for some of the world's more undesirable despots and their spawn.

Most famous was Uday Hussein, son of Saddam, hated by most Iraqis more than his father, exiled over beating to death one of his father's aides.

Hannibal Gaddafi already has form for causing trouble in Europe. In 2005, Libya was involved in a diplomatic spat with France after Gaddafi beat up a woman in a Paris hotel, scuffled with police, brandished a gun and falsely claimed diplomatic immunity.

It followed an incident in 2004 in which he was released on the spot by police, who had pursued him as he allegedly drove at 90mph through red lights on the wrong side of the Champs Elysées while drunk.

Four years previous to that, his claim to immunity enabled him to leave Rome unhindered after he attacked three Italian policemen in his hotel with a fire extinguisher.



The full article contains 628 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 July 2008 9:52 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Libya
 
1

,

25/07/2008 01:35:17
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 25/07/2008 02:04:26

" goes cuckoo "

He is not the only one that's going,.."cuckoo"!

Take a look at Boy Wonder! :)
3

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 25/07/2008 02:08:39

I mean to say!,

Did you take a look at Boy Wonders,..'Grumps' yesterday,?

MOAN,..MOAN,...MOAN,..MOAN!

Talk about,..'Old Men',?

Takes one to Know one!,..'HUH',..Boy Wonder,?
4

Fanling,

Switzerland 25/07/2008 03:16:22
The Tribune de Genève is a neat little daily paper which reports comprehensively on domestic and international affairs. (We get Scottish football reports too, but that's by the way!) I'm glad it gave the up-yours to Gadaffi senior.

Gadaffi (one of the madder bully-boy dictators) may call the shots in his desert fastness, but should be aware that villainy of this kind is not tolerated elsewhere, and he can't blackmail other nations because of his country's oil wealth. Take away Middle-East and North African oil wealth and what is left? Sand and camels. And nutjobs like Gadaffi. The reported actions of his son and his wife are nothing new in the recent history of dictators' vile offspring. Think Saddam Hussein and Ceausescu for starters.

Well done to the Swiss for digging in on this one. I just hope they don't fold at diplomatic level.

5

CASEY PURVIS,

WEST HILLS 25/07/2008 07:11:08
HOORAY FOR THE SWISS
CASEY PURVIS
6

Kate,

Zurich 25/07/2008 08:05:03
Fanling, absolutely right!
7

Boy Wonder,

25/07/2008 08:52:13
Gadaffi Duck strikes again!

Daffy Chuckles? Well, who knows when he's missed his meds.
8

Chris,

Edinburgh 25/07/2008 10:12:49
And if the Swiss freeze the Libyan bank accounts before they can transfer the money, where will that leave Gaddafi?
9

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 25/07/2008 11:09:15
Gadaffi is a certified nutter and reportedly dresses up in drag and has intimate liaisons with his younger male staff and military officers.

That family is just a collection of rich peasants and have you noticed how STRANGE Gadaffi is looking these days?

Those face lifts are falling, really falling. He looks like a 90 year old woman and his Muslim "drag" just adds to the effect.

The son and wife should have been quietly taken to a dark alley and severely "chastised" for being such mental cases - just like their father.
10

Americanbob,

Edinburgh 25/07/2008 11:20:19
Banned all Swiss ships? Remind me how many ports are there in Switzerland???
11

Truthman,

Washington, DC 25/07/2008 11:46:14
This explains how luxury hotels have bedbugs.
12

Artemis,

25/07/2008 12:57:28
#12 - can you explain what you mean by "This explains how luxury hotels have bedbugs"? Are you implying that luxury hotels have bedbugs because Arabs stay in them? Are you really that racist?
13

Covert Action,

25/07/2008 13:30:19
Tunisian "domestic servants". I think you'll find that is muslim for slave.
14

Covert Action,

25/07/2008 13:42:34
But I suppose if my dad dressed (and looked like) Michael Jackson circa 1985 I suppose I might get a bit touchy...
15

,

25/07/2008 14:50:34
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
16

,

25/07/2008 16:02:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
17

,

25/07/2008 17:05:59
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

,

25/07/2008 17:57:05
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
19

,

25/07/2008 18:02:41
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
20

Griffe,

25/07/2008 19:08:57
People who live in tents, shouldn't throw stones.
21

,

25/07/2008 20:18:58
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
22

,

25/07/2008 20:22:34
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
23

,

25/07/2008 21:34:26
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
24

57Nomad,

california 25/07/2008 21:59:52
Out of all the disputes that could arise between nations, Libya vs. Switzerland is among the more unlikely. I think I'll lean toward the Swiss on this one. Julius Caesar may have turned the Swiss around but Gaddafi is no Caesar. More like a seizure.
25

,

26/07/2008 03:04:41
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
26

,

26/07/2008 05:22:52
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
27

,

26/07/2008 10:22:59
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
28

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 26/07/2008 10:32:00
Everybody just STOP picking on Horrible Cankers.

She is one of the finest women to have ever walked the streets of Edinburgh - in an official capacity, of course.

Horrible Cankers

Some of your critics, if not most, are certifiable mental defectives with no sense of humour or the outrageousness of life or a taste for the sardonic.
29

,

26/07/2008 12:04:19
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
30

,

26/07/2008 12:22:05
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
31

,

26/07/2008 17:05:43
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
32

Dougie, Edinburgh,

27/07/2008 09:58:47
What I'd like to know is why, after all the terrorism they've organised over Europe, Libyans are allowed in to countries like Switzerland anyway? It would be better for Europe to cut off all relations with Libya and buy their oil from more distant corrupt mismanaged backward Arab countries.
33

Fanling,

Switzerland 27/07/2008 17:25:41
#33
You may well ask ... When, for example, the Saudi entourage comes to town (Geneva), the limousines decant hordes of burqa-covered WAGs into the most expensive shops: clothes, watches, perfumery, the lot. Arab mega-money opens doors everywhere, unfortunately.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.