The result was merge to Afghan training camp. Black Kite (t) (c) 10:01, 13 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Suspected training camp which fails wp:gng. No significant coverage, just some trivial mantions in US military documents. There's also no good reason to identify all these camps with eachother - "Libyan training camp" isn't a proper noun. Claritas § 21:41, 5 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In the early years of the war against the Soviets, the number of Moroccans who went to fight in Afghanistan remained limited compared to other Arab nationalities. As a result, those volunteers joined the Libyan camp that was run by the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group.
Mr. Shihri "was identified as an al Qaeda facilitator in Mashad, Iran, for youth traveling to Afghanistan"; "wanted two individuals to assassinate a writer based on a fatwa by Sheikh Hamud bin Uqla" (a favorite of Osama bin Laden); and "trained in urban warfare at the Libyan Camp north of Kabul, Afghanistan."
In the government's most recent allegations, it was noted that Khalifh had "worked overseeing Sudanese drivers for one of Osama bin Laden's construction companies in Sudan," had been "identified" as a trainer and the leader of a Libyan training camp near Kabul, visited by bin Laden, where he was "identified as someone whom others would approach to receive explosives training if they wanted to commit a terrorist attack,
Anas al-Liby, 38 (Libyan): Training camp commander linked to U.S. embassy bombings in Africa; captured in Afghanistan in January 2002.
Guantanamo military tribunal documents allege al-Shihri was an al-Qaeda travel facilitator and trained in urban warfare at Libyan Camp, located north of Afghanistan's capital of Kabul</ref>
!vote is not the same as arguing for deletion. I still think an individual training camp, mentioned a small handful of times without any real description, would be better placed at the Afghan training camp article. First Light ( talk) 01:50, 12 August 2010 (UTC) reply
The result was merge to Afghan training camp. Black Kite (t) (c) 10:01, 13 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Suspected training camp which fails wp:gng. No significant coverage, just some trivial mantions in US military documents. There's also no good reason to identify all these camps with eachother - "Libyan training camp" isn't a proper noun. Claritas § 21:41, 5 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In the early years of the war against the Soviets, the number of Moroccans who went to fight in Afghanistan remained limited compared to other Arab nationalities. As a result, those volunteers joined the Libyan camp that was run by the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group.
Mr. Shihri "was identified as an al Qaeda facilitator in Mashad, Iran, for youth traveling to Afghanistan"; "wanted two individuals to assassinate a writer based on a fatwa by Sheikh Hamud bin Uqla" (a favorite of Osama bin Laden); and "trained in urban warfare at the Libyan Camp north of Kabul, Afghanistan."
In the government's most recent allegations, it was noted that Khalifh had "worked overseeing Sudanese drivers for one of Osama bin Laden's construction companies in Sudan," had been "identified" as a trainer and the leader of a Libyan training camp near Kabul, visited by bin Laden, where he was "identified as someone whom others would approach to receive explosives training if they wanted to commit a terrorist attack,
Anas al-Liby, 38 (Libyan): Training camp commander linked to U.S. embassy bombings in Africa; captured in Afghanistan in January 2002.
Guantanamo military tribunal documents allege al-Shihri was an al-Qaeda travel facilitator and trained in urban warfare at Libyan Camp, located north of Afghanistan's capital of Kabul</ref>
!vote is not the same as arguing for deletion. I still think an individual training camp, mentioned a small handful of times without any real description, would be better placed at the Afghan training camp article. First Light ( talk) 01:50, 12 August 2010 (UTC) reply