Following are excerpts
from an interview with Libyan rebels'
military commander in Tripoli, Abdelhakim Belhaj, which aired on France
24 Arabic TV, via Youtube, on September 1, 2011:
Abdelhakim Belhaj:
In 1989, [the Libyan regime] launched a large campaign against the Islamists,
or against anyone involved in any [opposition] activity. I was forced
to leave the country. I left for Saudi Arabia at the beginning of 1988,
and from there to Afghanistan.
[…]
I travelled to Afghanistan
to support the just cause of the Afghan people. Everybody knows that
Afghanistan faced a Soviet invasion in 1978. When I went to Afghanistan
in 1988, my goal was to respond to the call, as dictated by our duty
to help our brothers there.
In Afghanistan, I was
involved in many kinds of activities. I taught Arabic and other subjects
to students in the refugee camps. I also participated in aid activities.
There were many aid organizations there. I also participated in military
activities in the framework of the resistance against the Soviet occupation.
As we all know, the cause
of Afghanistan was supported by the Islamic countries, by some Arab
countries, and by many European countries, first and foremost the US
[sic], which was arming the mujahideen factions back then.
My role was to support the Afghan revolutionaries, the mujahideen,
in the liberation of their country, rescuing it from the Communist regime.
Interviewer: What
is your relation to the Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb?
Abdelhakim Belhaj:
I had no relation whatsoever with the Al-Qaeda organization. The claims
made by some in the media about such relations are baseless and unobjective.
We shared the same front, that of Afghanistan, but we all know that
Afghan cause drew thousands of supporters.
Like others, I was present
in Afghanistan. My military activity was limited to the fronts within
Afghanistan. Many of the people who came from Arab countries were interested
in various aspects, such as education, aid, and military activity. After
the establishment of the Al-Qaeda organization, I was invited to join
it, like all the people who were on the scene, but I refused, because
I disagreed with Al-Qaeda's approach.
In 1998, when the World
Islamic Front for Fighting the Jews and Crusaders was declared, I received
a letter. I was outside Afghanistan at the time. It was an invitation
to join Al-Qaeda, but I refused to join that front. I held different
views than those held by the people who formed this organization.
[…]