Positive Improvements on the Planet
The
Light of Libya
Now Shines
for More of the World to See |
By Florida News Group (Originally in English)
Libya
On May 15, Golden Year 3 (2006), the US
announced that it would open full diplomatic relations with the nation
of Libya. A new US embassy is now being constructed in the Libyan capital
of Tripoli. The two nations had been sworn enemies for over 25 years,
until Libya unexpectedly denounced nuclear, biological and chemical weapons
in 2003. In February of this year, Libya even allowed US technicians to
come remove and destroy chemical weapons.
According to the leader of Libya, Muammar
Qadhafi, “The world has changed radically and drastically. The methods
and ideas should change, and being a revolutionary and progressive man,
I have followed this movement.”
Libya has more recently made rapid improvements
in human rights, to the extent that it has proposed the abolition of the
death penalty. In terms of education, the status of women and elimination
of poverty, Libya is now among the leading nations in Africa. Much of
the nation’s new openness to change is attributable to Qadhafi’s
son, Sayf, who has spoken openly
for democracy in Libya.
Libya is now opening its stunning landscape—including
2,000 km (1,243 miles) of pristine coastline—to foreign tourism.
Technology such as cell phones, internet access, and satellite television
has become widely available. Meanwhile, Libya retains a flourishing traditional
culture of music, dance, arts and religion. Most local television programs
feature traditional Libyan musicians.
Along with having the largest oil reserves
in Africa, Libya has another perhaps more precious treasure, buried 500
meters beneath the Sahara desert—vast reserves of pure fossil water
from the last Ice Age. There is enough fossil water to develop agriculture
across the Libyan desert, as well as to supply drinking water for several
hundred years. The government has been pumping out the water through the
Manmade River, a multiple-phase project that began supplying water to
Tripoli in 1996. The River is considered by many experts to be the world’s
largest engineering project. It will not be complete for another 25 years.
But by the time Libya has run out of fossil water, desalination from the
Mediterranean will be feasible, and the nation will have developed into
one of the prized jewels of North Africa.
|
|
|
Refer
this page to friends |
|