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FACTBOX: Key facts about Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi

Thu Sep 4, 2008 6:27pm EDT

(Reuters) - Condoleezza Rice will meet Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on Friday when she makes the first visit to the north African Arab country by a U.S. secretary of state in a more than a half century.

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Following are facts about Gaddafi, the Arab world's longest serving leader but who has no official government function and is known as the "Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution".

* Born to a Bedouin herdsman in 1942 in a tent near Sirte on the Mediterranean coast. Abandoned university geography studies for a military career that included a short spell at a British army signals school.

* Embraced the pan-Arabism of the late Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser and tried without success to merge Libya, Egypt and Syria into a federation. A similar attempt to join Libya and Tunisia ended in acrimony.

* In 1977 he changed the country's name to the Great Socialist Popular Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah (State of the Masses) and allowed people to air their views at people's congresses.

* U.N. sanctions, imposed in 1992 to pressure Tripoli to hand over two Libyan suspects for trial for the 1988 Lockerbie airliner bombing over Scotland, crippled oil-rich Libya's economy, dampened Gaddafi's revolutionary spirit and took the sting out of his anti-capitalist, anti-Western rhetoric.

* Gaddafi, shunned internationally for much of his rule because the West accused him of terrorism, abandoned his program of prohibited weapons in 2003 to return Libya into international mainstream politics.

* In September 2004, U.S. President George W. Bush formally ended a U.S. trade embargo as a result of Gaddafi's scrapping of the arms program and taking responsibility for Lockerbie.

* In August 2006, Gaddafi made a series of speeches scolding his nation for over-reliance on petroleum, foreigners and imports and telling them to start making things people need.

* His showmanship is most on display on foreign visits when he sleeps outdoors in a Bedouin tent guarded by dozens of female bodyguards. Crowds of attendants accompany him abroad and he has even been known to take camels along for their milk.



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