Libya Was About to Unveil a Hugely Successful Project Built W/Out the International Banks

dannno

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Just another motivation for the international bankers to take out Libya.


virtually unknown in the West: Libya's water resources

We still wonder how on earth did Gaddafi manage to stay in power for forty years? Did no one notice his madness until now?

Did no one notice that he built a HUGE FRESH WATER PIPELINE to the Benghazi region, that lunatic?

Were they waiting for him to finish?


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The 1st of September marks the anniversary of the opening of the major stage of Libya's Great Man-Made River Project. This incredibly huge and successful water scheme is virtually unknown in the West, yet it rivals and even surpasses all our greatest development projects. The leader of the so-called advanced countries, the United States of America cannot bring itself to acknowledge Libya's Great Man-Made River. The West refuses to recognize that a small country, with a population no more than four million, can construct anything so large without borrowing a single cent from the international banks.

...In the 1960s during oil exploration deep in the southern Libyan desert, vast reservoirs of high quality water were discovered in the form of aquifers. ...

...In Libya there are four major underground basins, these being the Kufra basin, the Sirt basin, the Morzuk basin and the Hamada basin, the first three of which contain combined reserves of 35,000 cubic kilometres of water. These vast reserves offer almost unlimited amounts of water for the Libyan people.

The people of Libya under the guidance of their leader, Colonel Muammar Al Qadhafi, initiated a series of scientific studies on the possibility of accessing this vast ocean of fresh water. Early consideration was given to developing new agricultural projects close to the sources of the water, in the desert. However, it was realized that on the scale required to provide products for self sufficiency, a very large infrastructure organization would be required. In addition to this, a major redistribution of the population from the coastal belt would be necessary. The alternative was to 'bring the water to the people'.

In October 1983, the Great Man-made River Authority was created and invested with the responsibility of taking water from the aquifers in the south, and conveying it by the most economical and practical means for use, predominantly for irrigation, in the Libyan coastal belt.

By 1996 the Great Man-Made River Project had reached one of its final stages, the gushing forth of sweet unpolluted water to the homes and gardens of the citizens of Libya's capital Tripoli. Louis Farrakhan, who took part in the opening ceremony of this important stage of the project, described the Great Man-Made River as "another miracle in the desert." Speaking at the inauguration ceremony to an audience that included Libyans and many foreign guests, Col. Qadhafi said the project "was the biggest answer to America... who accuse us of being concerned with terrorism."

The Great Man-Made River, as the largest water transport project ever undertaken, has been described as the "eighth wonder of the world". It carries more than five million cubic metres of water per day across the desert to coastal areas, vastly increasing the amount of arable land. The total cost of the huge project is expected to exceed $25 billion (US).

Consisting of a network of pipes buried underground to eliminate evaporation, four meters in diameter, the project extends for four thousand kilometres far deep into the desert. All material is locally engineered and manufactured. Underground water is pumped from 270 wells hundreds of meters deep into reservoirs that feed the network. The cost of one cubic meter of water equals 35 cents. The cubic meter of desalinized water is $3.75. Scientists estimate the amount of water to be equivalent to the flow of 200 years of water in the Nile River.

The goal of the Libyan Arab people, embodied in the Great Man-Made River project, is to make Libya a source of agricultural abundance, capable of producing adequate food and water to supply its own needs and to share with neighboring countries. In short, the River is literally Libya's 'meal ticket' to self-sufficiency.


Self-sufficiency?!? Absolutely Not Allowed. Banksters don't like that sort of thing one bit.

This project has been in the works for many years. Have you ever heard of it? We had not until today.


Underground "Fossil Water" Running Out, National Geographic, May 2010

^^^^^^^

Libya turns on the Great Man-Made River, by Marcia Merry, Printed in the Executive Intelligence Review, September 1991

Read More!!

http://twelfthbough.blogspot.com/2011/03/virtually-unknown-in-west-libyas-water.html
 
"About to be unveiled" eh?- it has been publicized and under construction for some 20 years now. So we (sorry- the "bankers") forced their people (or sent in their own people to pretend to be them) to rise up against their leader because they had water? Not becasue he imprisioned, tortured, and killed opponents? Interesting conspiracy theory.
 
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Sounds like a great communist style super project. How many people had to go without basic needs to provide the resources to construct this monstrosity? Dissidents and opponents of the project which likely raised huge taxes on the population had to be silenced, of course.
 
Right, because the media is really going to tell you the whole story :rolleyes:

Dude, I'm watching Al Jazeera, and they've had pretty damn good coverage, with opinions covering all sides.

Have you ever read a conspiracy theory that you DIDN'T believe?
 
Dude, I'm watching Al Jazeera, and they've had pretty damn good coverage, with opinions covering all sides.

Have you ever read a conspiracy theory that you DIDN'T believe?

And have you ever resisted any government/big media official story? Do you actually deny at this point that black ops exist? Al Jazeera is not exactly the US 'A' list major media (the MSM is CBS/NBC/ABC, TIMES/POST/AP, and subordinate outlets that parrot the line set by the big 6). The false flagging and staging of world events to create a pretext for intervention or escalation is standard operating procedure for the military/intelligence community. The fact that Libyan 'rebels' were alone among government opponents in the region screaming for outside forces to intervene sorely suggests they were infiltrated by some group intent on getting the West to bomb and pillage another Mideast country. The US needs to start an new conflict, to then claim then claim "the Libyan terrorists are coming," and scare us into another round of expanded foreign intervention and domestic omni-surveillance.
 
egypt's nasser was known for the answan dam.
there was soon to be an underground aqueduct
network tapping the deep desert aquifers???
 
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Sounds like a great communist style super project. How many people had to go without basic needs to provide the resources to construct this monstrosity? Dissidents and opponents of the project which likely raised huge taxes on the population had to be silenced, of course.

Meh, you are correct in principle, but there is still a lot more to be learned from this.

Done on a local scale it's really not so bad since everyone will benefit from cheaper food. The more you centralize larger areas, the worse these infrastructure type of projects becomes as the needs for each local area is not as thoroughly considered.. here, this was not the case. They're in a desert and they need water. They got their solution, although not from the free market there probably wasn't a huge difference in this case. Not to mention oil revenue was likely the biggest source of funding.

And the really big lesson is the bank issue. The foreign banks dominate small countries by going in and setting up large infrastructure projects, like this one, but generally more useless. They do it by paying off leaders who make big promises, and then putting the entire population into debt. At least this was a "pay as you go" project ;)
 
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Sounds like a great communist style super project. How many people had to go without basic needs to provide the resources to construct this monstrosity? Dissidents and opponents of the project which likely raised huge taxes on the population had to be silenced, of course.

Or maybe Ghadafi took advantage of the of the high price of oil and used the royalties to invest in improving the water infrastructure. And need I remind you that water is one of the most "basic needs". I'm not a fan of Ghadafi, but I can think of a lot of worse ways to spend billions of dollars.

stealth-fighter.jpg
 
Meh, you are correct in principle, but there is still a lot more to be learned from this.

Done on a local scale it's really not so bad since everyone will benefit from cheaper food. The more you centralize larger areas, the worse these infrastructure type of projects becomes as the needs for each local area is not as thoroughly considered.. here, this was not the case. They're in a desert and they need water. They got their solution, although not from the free market there probably wasn't a huge difference in this case. Not to mention oil revenue was likely the biggest source of funding.

And the really big lesson is the bank issue. The foreign banks dominate small countries by going in and setting up large infrastructure projects, like this one, but generally more useless. They do it by paying off leaders who make big promises, and then putting the entire population into debt. At least this was a "pay as you go" project ;)

Something else to check out:

http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showth...osed-by-Madoff-Stanford&p=3171101#post3171101
 
Dude, I'm watching Al Jazeera, and they've had pretty damn good coverage, with opinions covering all sides.

Have you ever read a conspiracy theory that you DIDN'T believe?

Everyone knows Al Jazeera is British intelligence. :D
 
And Gaddafi fucked it up by opening fire on peaceful protesters.

You sound lke a CIA or Mossad troll. Those "peaceful protestors" are now armed to the teeth. Where did the "rebels" get their arms and training from?
 
Interesting bit of info there, particularly considering the quiet "water wars" under way right now around the world, to secure water resources for "Developing Countries". Could this attempt to oust Gaddafi be an attempt to take over this new african water resource? After all, these days all wars are for resources and nothing else, funded by the international bankers and fought with military/industrial complex weapons.
 
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The fact that Libyan 'rebels' were alone among government opponents in the region screaming for outside forces to intervene sorely suggests they were infiltrated by some group intent on getting the West to bomb and pillage another Mideast country.

This one has a really easy and far more plausible answer. Qaddafi responded with more force than any of the other Middle Eastern and North African dictators. Once things escalated as Qaddafi refused to give up power, he turned to the military to take them out. When an actual military was about to crush them, it appears that most of the protesters turned rebels were much more willing to accept a hand from the West.
 
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