viernes, enero 31, 2014

BBC Discovers Gaddafi's Hit Squads Based in Cuba

In the documentary film, "Mad Dog – Gaddafi's Secret World," the BBC has:

"[U]ncovered evidence that Gaddafi used a private hit squad based in Cuba to eliminate opponents, and kept the bodies of victims in freezers."

Of course, the close ties and friendship between the Castro brothers and Gaddafi are well-known.

This must-see documentary sheds lights on the torture, kidnapping and rape of young girls and boys by the Libyan dictator; his depraved sex dungeons and clinics; and political hit squads (based in Cuba).

It also features how Gaddafi shot down a Libyan jet in 1992, killing all 157 people on board, to "show" how international sanctions were hurting Libyans by depriving their planes of spare parts.

Interestingly enough, a Daily Mail article on the film also includes the "re-emergence" of an American fugitive harbored in Cuba, who confirmed the existence of these hit-squads:

"In a secret interview from Cuba, former CIA agent Frank Terpil said: ‘I would say [it was] Murder Incorporated .  .  . murder for hire. Gaddafi thought that anybody who was a dissident, they [should be] eliminated, he had contracts out on a bunch of people in London.’"

Terpil is a former CIA agent turned soldier of fortune, who is wanted by the U.S. for selling arms and nuclear technology to the Uganda's Idi Amin and Libya's Gaddafi.

Obviously, he's still in Cuba.

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