Posts Tagged ‘Seeking Gaddafi’

Goodie publishers. Baddie dictators.

Friday, October 21st, 2011

In publishing, you often find yourself having to come up with titles for books. It’s not easy. It’s up there with being a journalist and having to come up with witty puns. It’s not really your forté but you give it a bash.

Sometimes you come up with something brilliant – Tory Pride and Prejudice (a-thank-you), and sometimes you come up with something the opposite of brilliant – anyone remember this grilling we received on Twitter for Nick Clegg: The Biography?

Then other times you find yourself with a book title that’s so utterly apt you become very pleased with yourself, albeit undeservedly.

In 2009 – back when the United Kingdom and Colonel Muammar Gaddafi were mates – we published a strangely premonitory book called Seeking Gaddafi. If you think about it, few people were seeking Gaddafi at the time – apart from author Daniel Kawczynski – so arguably it wasn’t the greatest title, but then it did convey what we wanted it to – that this was a book about ‘the man’ himself. A book which shed light on his strange proclivities.

In springtime of this year, the title took on a new meaning. And the international community realised that actually, Gaddafi wasn’t a very good mate to have, he was a baddie. Even Beyoncé realised. Everyone turned around and thought ‘uh oh, I might get into trouble for shaking my tailfeather for the Libyan dictator and his acolytes!’

It was a very tense time.

Anyway, I walked into the office today and found this.

If only as goodie publishers we had predicted this completely unpredictable sequence of events, we would have named our book something that didn’t mean we’re going to get a shed load of returns next month…

These things happen…

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

A lot has happened here since I last blogged. I think that’s probably why I haven’t blogged.

For one thing I wound up locked in the bathroom of my new flat for what felt like an inordinate amount of time. Fortunately I had my phone with me. But the only housemate whose number I had, had her phone on silent in her bag and was totally engrossed in Dirty Dancing on the telly with the door shut and couldn’t hear my desperate cries. So I facebooked my plight. I was promptly innundated with unhelpful messages from unhelpful people. Most of them began with the varying derivatives of the sound of laughter.

Then I got a bit paranoid. It was very hot. I was concerned I might run out of air. I opened the window. All fine. Then I worried that if I was in there for much longer I would have nowhere to ‘go’ – in extreme circumstances nature inevitably calls. In this particular bathroom there is no loo. Meanwhile I was still receiving facebook messages to the tune of “This has made my evening. Thank you to all involved”. I needn’t point out that actually it was only me and the door ‘involved’ and that the door was holding me against my will. I had to get out. I began smashing at the lock with a plastic hairbrush… no joy.

When Staff Writer of Total Politics (and housemate of Katy Scholes) arrived home I had to call her Political Editor because I still couldn’t be heard over the brooding, squelchy sounds emanating from Patrick Swayze’s manly, man muscles. Amber Elliott rang Caroline and informed her, between laughs, about my pickle.

Caroline ran upstairs and booted the door so hard – without prior warning – that it flung open, swung over my foot and whacked me on the bonce. Fortunately I’d already lost my big toenail in a freak accident at a wedding earlier this year so my foot, largely, went unscathed – but I’ll never get those brain cells back.

On facebook, in case you were wondering, 12 people ‘liked’ this.

Aside from that, we’ve got a new publicity manager. She is wonderful, as you can see from this picture.

See how she smiles and looks all professional. She is too. Smiley and professional, that is. That said, she has just swanned off on a two week holiday to the Big Apple. Who does that?

On top of that, bossman James Stephens is back in action after he spent some time in a hospital bed being all lazy. The result of a burglary which got a bit stabby. He’s OK now. And we’re all very glad of the fact. I should point out that James was the burgled, not the burglar and the stabbee not the stabber. Welcome back James!

In the past two weeks we’ve published a number of books that have hit the headlines, Matthew Collins’ Hate under the spotlight here in the Indi, Nick Clegg: The Biography had a full four pages of coverage in the Mail on Saturday, Daniel Kawczynski, author of the fully updated Seeking Gaddafi: Libya, the West and the Arab Spring laid down his plan for the future of Libya in the Sunday Express last week, and Nigel West could be heard on the Today Programme on Monday speaking about the subject of his latest book, Operation Garbo.

So despite there being a slight lack of blogging (it’ll never happen again, I promise) it’s not like we’ve been doing nothing.

A giant amongst men

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Here at Biteback, we always knew that Daniel Kawczynski was a literary colossus: his book, Seeking Gaddafi, is a fascinating portrait of one of the most controversial – and, let’s face it, blimmin’ mental – figures in modern time. Daniel’s thoughts and analysis in the book are underpinned by a combination of research conducted whilst residing in sunny Shropshire and information gleaned from his travels to Libya, during which he worked his socks off trying to gain access to the mentalist himself.

And they’re rather large socks, it turns out. For Daniel Kawczynski, the Daily Mail reports today, stands at a staggering 6ft 9in tall – a fact which possibly contributed to his difficulty in gaining access to Gaddafi, who is notoriously self-conscious about his own stature. The big D is so tall, the Mail says, that he even campaigned a few years ago for new building regulations to have all doors built 7ft high as standard. Unfortunately the campaign was unsuccessful, but banging his head on so many door frames luckily doesn’t seem to have blunted his literary largesse, as evidenced by his titanic of a book: Seeking Gaddafi, priced £20

Biteback FC won’t suffer fools

Friday, March 18th, 2011

I woke up this morning, turned on the telly and, to the tune of Shampoo’s seminal 1994 hit record, immediately broke into a chorus of “uh oh, Gaddafi’s in trouble, the UN has come along and burst his bubble, yeah yeah, uh oh” with a big fat smile on my face. I didn’t really. Well, not out loud…

But if you thought, as I did, that the world was going to sit back and watch as Gaddafi’s forces in Libya quashed the uprising which began in the East of the country against 42 years of his autocratic rule – and, frankly, sectionable behaviour – you’d have been wrong. Libya has declared an immediate ceasefire.

The fact remains that Daniel Kawczynski’s Seeking Gaddafi is the only contemporary biography of Colonel Muammar Al-Gaddafi available. And while I don’t delight in saying it, we have seen a boost in sales over the last three weeks. Most of these, presumably, from the politicos over at the Foreign Office trying to find out just who this crazed bastard really is.

The tents, the clothes, the directionless rantings (which, let’s be honest, have been pretty frequent – or certainly more widely reported – of late) and ultimately, the man himself.

Seeking Gaddafi is available now in hardback, priced £19.99. I can assure you, he doesn’t receive any of the proceeds – nor are we empowered to give him or any members of his family a doctorate, nor offer his children a place on the bench of the Biteback football team.

The leader who “makes Ceaușescu look positiely sanguine”

Monday, February 28th, 2011

As the international community unites over its pressure on Colonel Gaddafi to relinquish power in Libya, leaders the world over are voicing strong statements warning those Libyans still loyal to the ailing regime that violence and human rights abuses against anti-government protesters will not be tolerated: the world is watching. Speaking today at a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Foreign Secretary William Hague pronounced: ‘crimes will not be condoned, will not go unpunished and will not be forgotten’.

In the spirit of not forgetting, our author Daniel Kawczynski reminded us on today’s Start the Week that the killer of WPC Yvonne Fletcher – fatally shot by a submachine gun whilst on duty policing a demonstration outside London’s Libyan Embassy on 17 April 1984 – has still not been brought to justice. Kawczynski’s book, Seeking Gaddafi, sheds some light on why this may be, chronicling the difficulties faced by the Metropolitan Police in trying to investigate the murder and exploring the conspiracy theories sounding Fletcher’s death. Kawczynski, speaking today to Andrew Marr, hopes that the dawn of a new Libya in the weeks and months ahead will allow UK teams to re-enter Libya to resume investigations.  

Describing Gaddafi as a ‘butcher’ who ‘makes [Romanian dictator] Ceaușescu look positively sanguine’, Kawczynski discusses Libya’s tortuous history and Gaddafi’s vision of a unified pan-Arab (and later pan-African) state with himself at the helm.

This, and more, in Seeking Gaddafi, priced at £19.99 (unless of course you can persuade the author to give you one for free – according to a report by ePolitix.com, Speaker Bercow managed it this aftenoon).

Daniel in demand

Friday, February 25th, 2011

Daniel Kawczynski MP, author of Seeking Gaddafi, has certainly been busy.

From appearances on Newsnight and The World At One to articles in The Guardian and blog posts on ConservativeHome, our author is fast becoming the Press’s go-to man for information and analysis of the Libyan turmoil and the British Government’s response to it.

Having authored a candid and insightful exploration into what makes Gaddafi tick, Kawczynski is well-placed to comment. He was right on the money when he warned yesterday of the need for the international community to tread carefully when responding to Gaddafi, saying on The World At One that ‘any bellicose statements from us could put lives at risk’. Today we are hearing reports that the UK’s tough rhetoric against Libya may indeed have resulted in Britain having to pay bribes to Libyan officials at Tripoli airport in order to ensure the safe departure of British citizens.

Kawczynski – who also chairs the parliamentary all-party group on Libya – is not only concerned for the safety of those Britons still stranded in isolated Libyan desert compounds but is also, it seems, keen to dig deeper into the relationship between Gaddafi and former Prime Minister Tony Blair, with the Daily Mail reporting that he plans to raise questions in Parliament next week about the amount of money Mr Blair has made through his links with Libya.

Seeking Gaddafi by Daniel Kawczynski is available now, priced £19.99

Seeking Gaddafi reviewed in The Sunday Times

Monday, February 15th, 2010

February 14, 2010

Seeking Gadaffi by Daniel Kawczynski

The Sunday Times review by Stephen Robinson

Libya’s leader Muammar Gaddafi attends a celebration of the 40th anniversary of his coming to power at the Green Square in Tripoli September 1, 2009 If you have the good fortune not to be a Libyan, it is tempting to laugh at all the camp, insane excesses of the man who grabbed power in a military coup in 1969, and has clung on ever since through barbarism and canniness. For there is something superficially arresting about what Daniel Kawczynski terms the “corrupt grandiosity” of Colonel Gadaffi’s rule. These include his absurd revolutionary outfits, platform heels (he is touchy about his height), risibly dyed hair, and overseas travels with glamorous female guards who dress in foxy paramilitary gear and thigh-high boots. But the absurd posturing conceals a much shrewder figure who switches his ideological rhetoric to suit changed international circumstances, who has used terrorist proxies to undermine rivals and raise his international standing, and who has deployed terror within Libya with a cynical effectiveness.

The only truthful aspect of the official Gadaffi story that is drummed into the minds of his subject population is that he was born into a family of Bedouin goatherds, members of a minor clan whose name translates as “spitters of blood”, which might explain what was to follow. He picked the traditional African route to political power, the army, having come under the influence of Nasser’s anti-colonial ideology as a young man. He was handsome in his youth, with a certain charisma.

At the age of only 27, he and a group of fellow army officers struck against the hapless and hopeless King Idris. The coup was relatively bloodless as the monarchy quickly disintegrated, but brutal purges and public hangings were soon to mock the western and Arab governments that recognised his power grab. As Kawczynski grudgingly concedes, Gadaffi’s capacity to cause mayhem by funding international terrorism means that Libya (a country of just 6m) punches above its weight. This brings him some prestige at home, and this kudos, along with Libya’s vast oil wealth, and the weakness of the civil and political institutions inherited from Idris, explains why his domestic enemies have failed to topple him.He funded and gave sanctuary to several factions within the broader Palestinian cause, often it seemed to spite his rivals rather than to advance Arab interests. He was an early backer of Abu Nidal and Carlos the Jackal — both kept luxury apartments in Libya in the 1970s and 1980s. Money and equipment were also directed towards ETA, the Italian Red Brigades, Action Directe, Baader-Meinhof, and, of course, the IRA. Gerry Adams was so impressed by his credentials that he set up a Revolutionary Council modelled on the Libyan version. When Gadaffi bores of a terrorist cause, though, he drops the group and, as in the case of the Lockerbie bombing, frequently pays compensation to its victims, tacitly — but not formally — conceding “general responsibility”.

Internal oppression through ¬violence has been his consistent hallmark. In 1996, prisoners at Abu Salim prison in Tripoli took guards hostage in protest at the disgusting conditions. The rebellion was put down relatively peacefully, and the prisoners were ordered to muster in the prison yard, reportedly by Gadaffi’s brother-in-law. For the next four hours, guards posted on the rooftop shot at them until some 1,200 were dead. After years of denial of the massacre, relatives have since received compensation.
Journalists, Islamic scholars and internal dissidents are routinely killed. One journalist, Daif al-Ghazal, was abducted in 2005, and when his body was recovered, most of his fingers had been cut off. When the publicity for that murder proved embarrassing, Gadaffi had three Revolutionary Guards held responsible executed.

The Gadaffi who emerges in this study is not really a ideological zealot; indeed he does not seem to believe in anything much beyond entrenching his power and rewarding his family. Immediately after taking control, he replaced Libya’s legal code with Sharia law, but later realising the threat from Islamic fundamentalism to his own power, replaced that with the incoherent political credo laid down in the Green Book. This created a new form of state, jamahiriya, supposedly based on direct consultation of the people, but in reality establishing a vast network of informers.

Gadaffi’s essential canniness is evident in how he has changed his tune since September 2001, fearing he would go the way of Saddam Hussein. Now he describes radical Islam as “more dangerous than Aids”; last year he wrote an article in the New York Times on the importance of being nice to Jews. He is on first-name terms with Tony and Cherie. For Gadaffi, international terrorism has served its purpose.

Kawczynski is a 6ft 8in tall Tory MP of recent Polish descent who views Britain’s emerging relationship with Libya with a detached bemusement. As chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Libya, he argues that it is perfectly reasonable that the British government should cut deals that allow firms such as BP to share the vast oil wealth that Gadaffi withholds from his subjects.

This is a lightly written and well-researched account of Gadaffi’s life, though dependent largely on secondary sources. Kawczynski failed in his efforts to meet his subject, an obvious flaw in a book called Seeking Gadaffi. But it offers an intelligent analysis of Britain’s relations with Tripoli, even if Kawczynski seems as conflicted as many of the Lockerbie families as to Gadaffi’s culpability in the Lockerbie attack, pointing out that Iran also had good reason to order the bombing.

But he is surely right to be enraged by successive governments’ refusal to order a proper public inquiry; and he finds it shameful that London has normalised relations with Libya without ensuring that the killer of policewoman Yvonne Fletcher is sent for trial here. He is disgusted, too, that the government has not pursued justice and compensation for the victims of the IRA bombs made with Semtex provided by Libya.

In the 1980s, western governments made the mistake of ¬demonising Gadaffi as “mad” and “evil”, which missed the point and only encouraged him. Kawczynski argues persuasively that Ronald Reagan’s bombing of Libya, though richly deserved, probably cemented his rule to this day. Now Gadaffi’s regime is sanctified by western governments who tolerate his domestic oppression in exchange for his rhetorical attacks on Al-Qaeda, a force that threatens him much more than the West.

When he dies, Libya will almost certainly lapse into chaos. His sons who might succeed him are, if anything, worse and more absurd than he is. There is the brutal playboy Hannibal, who triggered a huge diplomatic breach with Switzerland by beating up a member of his entourage there. Then there is the preposterous London-based Saif, the British university-educated “intellectual”, painter of kitsch watercolours and close friend of Lord Mandelson. It is bad enough that Libyans have to tolerate this dismal dynasty of vainglorious freaks; it is surely worse that we encourage them and call them our friends.

Colonel Gaddafi on sport, from Seeking Gaddafi by Daniel Kawczynski

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

For many years in Libya spectator sports were outlawed. In a strange exercise of logic, Gaddafi felt professional sportsmen stole the benefits of physical exercise from their fans, labelling sporting clubs ‘rapacious social instruments, not unlike the dictatorial political instruments which monopolise power to the exclusion of the people’. Fans were ‘a multitude of fools… practising lethargy’. Football clubs were only allowed after Gaddafi’s son, Saadi, personally requested his father relax these restrictions. Since then, Saadi has gone on to become a long-serving member of the Libyan national team, although, his abilities have often been questioned. National Libyan team coach, Franco Scoglio, who was eventually dismissed for putting Saadi on the bench once too often, remarked of him, ‘as a footballer he’s useless. With him in the squad we were losing. When he left, we won’. Similarly, it’s claimed that during his career with Libyan team, al-Ittihad, the opposition would turn and run away rather than tackle Gaddafi’s son. However, Gaddafi junior went on to play for several prestigious Serie A clubs in Italy, signing for Perugia in 2003, to Udinese in 2005-06 and to Sampdoria in 2006-07. In all, he took to the field twice during his entire Italian career, and rumours circulated that Italian clubs were keen to profit from Libyan sponsorship. Indeed, Italian football has certainly profited from the Gaddafi connection. In 2002, at Saadi’s prompting, his father bought a £14 million stake in Juventus.

In the Pakistani city of Lahore, the stadium which hosts international cricket matches is named after Colonel Gaddafi, in gratitude for the aid he sent to West Pakistan in its 1971 civil war with East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). Gaddafi’s firmly entrenched place in the popular culture of cricket-obsessed South Asia suggests the extent of his involvement in the continent.

Seeking Gaddafi by Daniel Kawczynski is available from 8th February 2010