ハーンニーバール・ムアンマル・アル=カッザーフィー (Japanese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "ハーンニーバール・ムアンマル・アル=カッザーフィー" in Japanese language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Japanese rank
219th place
241st place
638th place
37th place
30th place
177th place
8th place
73rd place
197th place
276th place
low place
low place
3,528th place
low place
36th place
268th place
49th place
67th place
3,663rd place
low place
2,786th place
low place
3,790th place
244th place
581st place
3,488th place
211th place
13th place
1,746th place
5,511th place
571st place
3,710th place
low place
low place

abna24.com

en.abna24.com

afpbb.com

albawaba.com

bbc.co.uk

news.bbc.co.uk

bbc.co.uk

bt.dk

  • “Gadaffi Junior tabte til Ekstra Bladet [Gadaffi Junior lost to Ekstra Bladet]” (Danish). Business Times. (2008年6月25日). http://www.bt.dk/krimi/gadaffi-junior-tabte-til-ekstra-bladet 2011年4月3日閲覧. "Hannibal Gadaffi, mødte aldrig op i landsretten for at tale sin sag, og derfor har dommerne støttet sig til forklaringer fra Ekstra Bladet og fra politiets rapporter i den opsigtvækkende affære. I januar 2005 fik Københavns Politi en anmeldelse om, at en libysk borger var blevet bortført fra en lejlighed på Nordre Fasanvej og ført til den libyske konsuls hjem i Gentofte. Manden havde ringet på sin mobil og fortalt, at han var bundet i kælderen og havde fået "smadret" arme og ben. Da politiet efterforskede sagen nærmere, gik det op for dem, at det tilsyneladende var Hannibal Gadaffi, der nu studerede på handelshøjskolen i København, som stod bag afstraffelsen." In English: "Hannibal Gaddafi never appeared in court to present his case and therefore the court has relied on explanations from Ekstra Bladet and police reports in the current case. In January 2005 Copenhagen Police received a report that a Libyan citizen was abducted from his apartment at Nordre Fasanvej and taken to the Libyan consul's home in Gentofte. The man had called by his mobile phone and told that he was tied in the cellar and had got his arms and legs "damaged". When the police investigated the case more closely the realized that appearently it was Hannibal Gadaffi, who then studied at the Copenhagen School of Business, that directed the punishment." 

dailymail.co.uk

ekstrabladet.dk

guardian.co.uk

ibtimes.co.uk

independent.co.uk

nikkei.com

reuters.com

shariahfinancewatch.org

shikoku-np.co.jp

telegraph.co.uk

timesofisrael.com

voanews.com