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Khaddhafi's complicity in international terrorism led to his country's diplomatic isolation in the 1980s and 1990s. In 1986 US president Ronald Reagan ordered the bombing of Khaddhafi's compound in Tripoli, after Libya was linked to a terrorist bombing in Berlin which killed a member of the US military. In 1992 UN air, arms, and oil equipment sanctions were imposed against Libya after Khaddhafi's refusal to allow extradition of two suspects in the 1988 Lockerbie and 1989 Union de Transports Aériens bombings. With growing economic problems at home and anxious to modernize Libya's oil industry, from the late 1990s Khaddhafi sought to mend fences with the West. In 1999 the two Lockerbie suspects were handed over and UN sanctions suspended. Their trial ended in January 2001, with one suspect convicted and the other acquitted, and in September 2003 UN sanctions were lifted after Libya admitted responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing and agreed to pay $2 billion in compensation to the families of the Lockerbie victims. In 2000 Libya also mediated a hostage crisis in the Philippines, in which the Abu Sayyaf Muslim guerrillas kidnapped people of various nationalities who were holidaying in the area. Libya paid $24 million in ransom money for the remaining hostages in September 2000.
Red symbolizes blood. Yellow represents sunshine. Green stands for the islands' riches. Black reflects the Melanesian population. Effective date: 30 July 1980.
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