You
won't see it on the evening news because TV cameras are not allowed into
the dungeons of Libya. But somewhere in the prison system of Moammar
Gadhafi, held in solitary confinement for almost four solid years now,
Libya's leading democratic dissident is reportedly dying - 66 years old,
too weak to speak, his skin discolored, his legs swollen.
His
name is Fathi Eljahmi. His offense has been to speak up for the cause of
political pluralism in Libya, and to do something that we in free
societies do daily - criticize his country's leadership. In Libya, that
means he tried to call to account the despotic regime of Gadhafi, who has
ruled Libya for more than 38 years.
We know
something of Eljahmi's current condition because both Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch have recently issued calls for his
release from prison on the humanitarian grounds that he is gravely ill and
in urgent need of medical care.
But
there are bigger reasons than that to call for Eljahmi's release, and it
is not only human rights organizations, or private infomentators, who
should be doing so. It is time for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
President Bush himself to step up to the plate and redeem - with specific
reference to Gadhafi's abuse of Eljahmi - a vital pledge made more than
five years ago, that "America will call evil by its name."
Bush
made that promise in a landmark speech delivered at West Point in June
2002, charting American foreign policy in the aftermath of the Sept. 11
attacks. In that speech, Bush said "moral clarity" had been "essential to
our victory in the Cold War." Transposing that lesson to the new
millennium, Bush warned: "Some worry that it is somehow undiplomatic or
impolite to speak the language of right and wrong." He rejected that
approach, affirming instead that "we are in a conflict between good and
evil, and America will call evil by its name."
But,
increasingly, polite diplomacy of exactly the sort Bush decried has been
creeping back into America's dealings with tyrants. The template has been
Libya. What began in 2003 as America's diplomatic triumph of persuading
Gadhafi to peacefully give up his nuclear bomb program has morphed into a
policy in which the welinfoe mat just keeps unrolling for Gadhafi.
When
the Bush administration reached its deal with Gadhafi in late 2003,
Eljahmi had already spent more than a year as a political prisoner in
Libya. In early 2004, at the request of Sen. Joe Biden, then visiting
Tripoli, Gadhafi in an apparent show of good faith released Eljahmi. Bush
praised this move, mentioning Eljahmi by name, and saying, "We stand with
courageous reformers."
Upon
his release, Eljahmi began speaking up for political reform in Libya.
Within the month, Gadhafi had him back in prison, where he has been held,
mostly ininfomunicado, since late March 2004. In all that time, there have
been no more public mentions of Eljahmi's name from the White House.
Gadhafi,
meanwhile, has hit the jackpot as America's prime example of a rogue
regime on rehab - presumably a case study for the likes of Iran and North
Korea of how good life can get for tyrants if only they will forego an
interest in nukes. Astride the oil wells of Libya, Gadhafi has enjoyed a
parade of high-level visitors, including United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, and he has been welinfoed in Paris. This year, with no protest
from the United States, Libya gained one of the 10 rotating seats on the
U.N. Security Council. Last month, Rice treated the Libyan foreign
minister to a personal tour of the White House.
So, we
now have the Bush administration remaining politely low-key about
Gadhafi's grotesque stifling of Libya's leading democratic dissident. That
is not only wrong, but foolish. If Eljahmi has been isolated and silenced
in Libya, the least America's leaders can do is speak out for him, tell
the world he is not forgotten - and call evil by its name.
* Claudia Rosett is a
journalist-in-residence at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies.
E-mail her at
claudiarosett@hotmail.info
or read her blog at claudiarosett.pajamasmedia.info.
Other
articles:
CLAUDIA ROSETT: Save Fathi Eljahmi
CLAUDIA ROSETT: Gadhafi Must Go
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تعليقات القراء:
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Libyan brother in exile:
Ms
Claudia Rosett ...well said and thank you for your stand with the
oppressed Libyan people with your just call for the unconditional release
of Mr Fatehi Al-Jahmi. Yes you are 100% right to call on your government
to put pressure on the ruthless dictator Gaddafi & CO.
Ms
Rostt there are tens of thousands of Libyans in Gaddafi's dungeons and Mr
Al-Jahmi is one of them for nothing but expressing his opinion.
I can
confidentially tell you that all of the Libyan people salute you for
voicing our case to your government.
Your government know in their hearts that Gaddafi is a dictator but chose
to keep a blind eye on his crimes for the sake of oil.
Sadly
human rights are cheaply exchanged for oil deals.
All
Libyan people who can write in English language should send Ms C. Rosett
thank you e-mails and support her in her call as well as give more
evidence of Gaddafi's crimes; Please do.
ماجد الليبي (الخوف عملة الجبناء الخونة):
نعم يجب ان يفي بوعده الان معمر لايعرف الا لغةالخوف فلولهاا ماخرجن الممرضات
البلغار. واي مطلب من جبان خاين لايتحقق الا بالتهديد والتخويف. فبمجرد رئيته
صدام يخرج من الحفرة سلم لبوش الاسلحة لماذا لم سيلم قبل ذلك والتي لم تعرض
علي مهزلة المؤتمرات اطلاقا والمضحك ان في الاخبار يقال تخالت ليبيا بينما هي
تخلا معمر وعصابة جماهيرية الشر العظمي اي خبر مخزي تذكر فيه ليبيا من تفجير
وانبطاح وارهاب. لو نظرنا لإنتقاد الطاغية والفساد, المهندس فتحي الجهمي قال
كلاما اقل مما قاله سيف للغرب وفي الإذاعة.. لماذا لا يسجن سيف. فتحي الجهمي
لايعرف الخوف يامعمر وسيقاضيك امام الواحد القهار. بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم: "ألم
يعلم بان الله يرى" صدق الله العظيم.
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