A LUTA CONTINUA: Libya will Be Free - The Revolution Is Unstoppable

LIBYA WILL BE FREE

The Revolution Is Unstoppable

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Amazingly brave 18-yr old Libyan woman via Skype to CBC radio

 

ScarceClips | Feb 26, 2011 |  likes, 0 dislikes

Except from an interview on CBC radio "As it Happens" program, 2.25.11.

Full audio is here:

http://www.cbc.ca/video/news/audiopla...

 

>via: 

 

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Live Blog - Libya Feb 27

 

By Al Jazeera Staff in on February 26th, 2011.

 

As the uprising in Libya enters its twelfth day, we keep you updated on the developing situation from our headquarters in Doha, Qatar.

Blog: Feb17 - Feb18 - Feb19 Feb20 Feb21 - Feb22 Feb23 Feb24 Feb25 - Feb26


AJE Live Stream
  - Special Coverage: Libya Uprising - Twitter Audio: Voices from Libya 

Benghazi Protest Radio (Arabic)

(All times are local in Libya GMT+2)

  • Timestamp: 
    12:00am

    Missed our liveblog from yesterday?  Catch up by clicking here.

  • Timestamp: 
    12:02am

    We have received this statement from a group named "The Network of Free Ulema - Libya", which purports to be a collection of Muslim religious scholars and intellectuals, calling for humanitarian aid - but rejecting international military action.

    File 10731

  • Timestamp: 
    12:11am
    We're hearing that the UN Security Council is due to vote on a draft resolution - including an arms embargo on Libya, as well as a travel ban and "asset freeze" of  "targeted individuals" - at around 1:00am GMT, that's in about three hours.

    The draft also authorises UN members to "take all measures to enable the return of humanitarian assistance to Libya".

  • Timestamp: 
    12:42am

    The Libyan ambassador to the US has announced his support for the interim government formed in Benghazi, Reuters reports.

  • Timestamp: 
    1:00am

    The World Food Programme says the food supply chain in Libya "is at risk of collapsing". The Red Cross has also launched an appeal for more than US$6million for medical assistance.

  • Timestamp: 
    1:25am

    Henry Schuler, former US diplomat, tells Al Jazeera that the Obama administration "inherited a terrible situation created by the Bush administration in letting Gaddafi off the hook in 2004".

    "Time will tell whether that was accomplished based on a clear assessment of US interests, or to get the oil companies back into Libya, or to promote the re-election campaign of George W Bush.

    "It's a fool's errand if anyone thinks sanctions will persuade Gaddafi to back off. He said he will shed his last drop of blood on Libyan soil. What the US should be doing is ensuring that as little as possible other Libyan blood is shed." 

  • Timestamp: 
    1:33am

    An Al Jazeera correspondent who has made it to Benghazi tells us the city's court house has become "press/uprising central", with a media centre, printing press, newspaper, medical clinics and satellite internet.

    File 10751

    File 10771

  • Timestamp: 
    2:18pm

     

    As many as 50 civilians and many more severely wounded in an attack by Gaddafi loyalists in the oil refining town of Zawiyah, 50km west of Tripoli, a resident named Ibrahim told Reuters.

     

     

     

  • Timestamp: 
    2:38am

    Al Jazeera understands the UN Security Council resolution will freeze the assets of six members of the Gaddafi family, including the Libyan leader - while 16 members of his administration will be slapped with a travel ban. Waiting on news of the vote... But you can watch all the details as they unfold on our TV stream - live - by clicking here: Watch Al Jazeera now.

  • Timestamp: 
    3:05am

    All 15 UN Security Council members are reportedly "on board" to pass a resolution referring Libyan officials to the International Criminal Court, says Kristen Saloomey, Al Jazeera's correspondent at the United Nations headquarters in New York.

    It is the first time the council has referred a country's leadership to the ICC, she says. Vote expected very soon - we're watching the diplomats settling into their chairs now. 

  • Timestamp: 
    3:11pm

    All 15 members vote for SC resolution 1970, a unanimous decision.

    Gaddafi family members will have their assets frozen, and which administration members will be prevented from leaving Libya. 

    Asset freeze: Aisha, Hannibal, Khamis Muammar, Muammar Mohammed Abu Minyar, Mutassim and Saif al-Islam Gaddafi.

  • Timestamp: 
    3:17am

    US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice: "When atrocities are committed against innocents, the international community must act with one voice - and tonight it has."

     

     

  • Timestamp: 
    3:55am

    Here's a photo of that vote...

     

  • Timestamp: 
    4:04am

    Those slapped with a travel ban: Liaison office head Dr Abdulqader Mohammed al-Baghdadi, Gaddafi's bodyguard chief Abdulqader Yusef Dibri, extrenal intelligence agency boss Abu Zayd Umar Dorda, defence minister Major General Abu Bakr Yunis Jabir,  Utilities secretary Matuq Mohammed Matuq, alleged hit squad chief Sayyid Mohammed Qadhaf Al-dam, Gaddafi's daughter Aisha, sons Hannibal Muammar, Khamis Muammar, Mohammed Muammar, Mutassim, Saadi, Saif al-Arab and Saif al-Islam. Also military intelligence director Col Abdullah al-Senussi - and Gaddafi himself.

  • Timestamp: 
    4:06am

    The UNSC resolution also includes a ban on selling weapons to the Libyan regime, Al Jazeera's Kristen Saloomey notes 

  • Timestamp: 
    4:11am

    Ban Ki-moon: "In the following days, even more bold action may become necessary." 

  • Timestamp: 
    4:13am

    Libyan ambassador to UN: "We expect the people with the regime take a position and side with the Libyan people." 

  • Timestamp: 
    4:15am

    Libyan ambassador to the UN: "I am a career diplomat ... I am not nominated by Gaddafi [to speak]. My colleagues and I are siding with the people." 

  • Timestamp: 
    4:17am

    Libyan ambassador, Ibrahim Dabasshi: "It is difficult to tell how many [are dead] in Tripoli - because when someone is killed, they come and take the body - also when they are injured." Says the UNSC resolution will send a warning to senior regime figures and encourage them to abandon Gaddafi.

  • Timestamp: 
    4:21am

    Graffiti spotted by our correspondent in Benghazi:

    File 10831

  • Timestamp: 
    4:24am

    Libyan ambassador Ibrahim Dabasshi says the diplomatic mission at the UN is not taking orders from Tripoli. 

    "I am not brave," he says. "The brave are those who face the bullets in the streets of Libya. I am just hoping to make the international community aware of what is happening."

  • Timestamp: 
    4:48am

    Libyan poet Prof Khaled Mattawa of the University of Michigan tells Al Jazeera that Libya's "cultural revolution" represents the end of tolerance to Colonel Gaddafi.

    "It's game over after a long, patient struggle," he says. "This is a great cleansing coming over the Libyan people"

 

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Gaddafi 'losing grip' over Libya
 
Demonstrators remain on the streets as leader's power may soon be confined only to the capital, Tripoli.
Last Modified: 26 Feb 2011 19:55 GMT

Most of Libya is out of control of the government, and Muammar Gaddafi's grip on power may soon be confined only to the capital, Tripoli, Libya's former interior minister has said.

General Abdul Fatteh Younis told Al Jazeera on Saturday that he had called upon Gaddafi to end his resistance to the uprising, although he does not expect him to do so.

The embattled Libyan regime passed out guns to civilian supporters, set up checkpoints and sent out armed patrols, witnesses said in Tripoli.

LIVE BLOG

Some of Libya's security forces reportedly have given up the fight. Footage believed to be filmed on Friday showed soldiers joining the protesters.

The footage showed demonstrators carrying them on their shoulders in the city of Az Zawiyah after having defected -- a scene activists said is being repeated across the country.

Al Jazeera, however, is unable to independently verify the content of the video, which was obtained via social networking websites.

Our correspondent in Libya reported on Friday that army commanders in the east who had defected had told her that military commanders in the country's west were also beginning to turn against Gaddafi.

They warned, however, that the Khamis Brigade, an army special forces brigade that is loyal to the Gaddafi family and is equipped with sophisticated weapons, is currently still fighting anti-government forces.

Our correspondent, who cannot be named for security reasons, said that despite the gains, people are anxious about what Gaddafi might do next and also because his loyalists were still at large.

Interim government

Mustafa Mohamed Abud Ajleil, Libya's former justice minister, has led the formation of an interim government based in the eastern city of Benghazi, the online edition of the Quryna newspaper reported on Saturday.

Quryna quoted him as saying that Muammar Gaddafi "alone" bore responsibility "for the crimes that have occurred" in Libya and that his tribe, Gaddadfa, were forgiven.

"Abud Ajleil insisted on the unity of the homeland's territory, and that Libya is free and its capital is Tripoli," Quryna quoted him as saying in a telephone conversation.

Abu Yousef, a resident from the town of Tajoura, told Al Jazeera that live ammunition was being used against anti-government protesters.


The latest on who is in control of main towns along Libya's Mediterranean coast - View Libya in a larger map
 

"Security forces are also searching houses in the area and killing those who they accuse of being against the government," he said.

Anti-government protesters have attacked black Africans in Libya, mistaking them for mercenaries.

"The situation is very dangerous. Every day there are more than a hundred who die, every day there are shootings. The most dangerous situation is for foreigners like us and also us black people. Because Gaddafi brought soldiers from Chad from Niger. They are black and tey are killing Arabs," Seidou Boubaker Jallou told Al Jazeera.

Jallou and his friend, both from Mali, fled by night to the Tunisian border. They said the roads out of the West are still in the hands of those loyal to Gaddafi.

Zawiya, a town 120 km from the Tunisian border, is now in the hands of the people. Egyptians who arrived at the border described a bloody massacre on Thursday which left many dead.

"I was in Zawiya's martyrs square. There was a group of army men in the square who attacked the protesters. It was a very fierce confrontation. They were shooting using heavy weaponry. There were at least 15 to 20 dead and I had footage of what happened but the Libyan authorities on the Tunisian border took even my phone. Gaddafi wants to commit a crime with the absence of any media," Ahmed, an Egyptian, told Al Jazeera's Nazanine Moshiri.

'Civil war'

Seif al-Islam Gaddafi, the Libyan leader's son, said people in "three-quarters of the country are living in peace".

In an interview on Al-Arabiya television, Seif said that the protesters are being manipulated and that the situation had "opened the doors to a civil war".

He denied that African mercenaries had been recruited to attack the protesters in a crackdown that the United Nations say has killed at least 1,000 people.

 

 

Twitter Reaction

Libya Protests

governgroup profile

governgroup The Security Council Sanctions will squeeze#gaddafi. He will become more frantic and manic. In panic he will ramp up the killing. #libyaabout 1 minute ago · reply

wheelertweets profile

wheelertweets NY Times: US froze #Gaddafi assets/imposed travel ban unilaterally Friday night, after last US citizens left#Libyahttp://nyti.ms/hVQV7sabout 1 minute ago · reply

denisfitz profile

denisfitz RT @aprilledaughn: Full text of #UN Security Council resolution on #Libya:http://bit.ly/gdlt1W #UNSC#Gaddafi54 seconds ago · reply

verncrawford profile

verncrawford RT @marwame: RT @shabablibya: We urge all Austrians to protest outside Hotel Imperial #Austria where Aisha #Gaddafi is currently staying #Libya #Feb1724 seconds ago · reply

 

1 new tweet

 

"Show us the mercenaries, show us the women and children who were killed," he said. "These reports about mercenaries are lies." The protests were being led by "small groups, armed groups," according to Seif al-Islam.

"Those provoking these people are terrorists," he added, echoing his father who in a televised address last week blamed al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden for manipulating the country's youth with drugs. 

The eastern region of the oil-rich North African nation is now believed to be largely free of Gaddafi control since the popular uprising began on February 14 with protests in the city of Benghazi. 

Al Jazeera's Hoda Abdel-Hamid, reporting from the town of Al-Baida in eastern Libya, said that while many parts of the country's east is no longer government controlled, local residents do not want to separate from the rest of Libya.

"They still want a united Libya, and want Tripoli to remain its capital," she said.

Our correspondent added that many in the country's east have felt abandoned by the Gaddafi government, despite the vast oil wealth located in the region.

The crackdown has sparked international condemnation. The United States said it was moving ahead with sanctions against the regime.

Barack Obama, the US president,  issued an executive order, seizing assets and blocking any property in the United States belonging to Gaddafi or his four sons.

The European Union also agreed to impose an arms embargo, asset freezes and travel bans on Libya.

Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, said on Friday that decisive action by the Security Council against the crackdown must be taken, warning that any delay would add to the growing death toll which he said now came to over 1,000.

The official death toll in the violence remains unclear. Francois Zimeray, France's top human rights official, has said that it could be as high as 2,000.

Ban's call, as well as an emotional speech by the Libyan ambassador to the United Nations, prompted the council to order a special meeting on Saturday to consider a sanctions resolution against Gaddafi.

  
 
 

>via: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/02/201122641559301766.html

 

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In Libya, African Migrants Say They Face Hostility

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February 25, 2011

Among the foreigners desperate to flee the troubles in Libya are thousands of African migrants from all over the continent. They say they've become targets for Libyans who are enraged that African mercenaries are fighting on behalf of the regime.

Copyright © 2011 National Public Radio®. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MICHELE NORRIS, host:

Among those desperate to flee the troubles in Libya are thousands of African migrants from all over the continent.

As NPR's Ofeibea Quist-Arcton reports, they say they've become targets for Libyans who are enraged that African mercenaries are fighting on behalf of the regime.

OFEIBEA QUIST-ARCTON: Tens of thousands of sub-Saharan Africans are employed in Libya's oil industry and in other sectors. They want out, and not just to escape the violence. Samuel, who's from Ghana, told the BBC he's frightened. Samuel is in Benghazi, Libya's second city, which is in the hands of anti-Gadhafi supporters. But it's these Libyans the Ghanaian and other Africans fear.

Mr. SAMUEL: Holy God, holy God, holy God. For five weeks now I'm indoors. Everybody's panic, we need help. We need help. Please, we need help. They do not like the blacks, so, please, we need your help.

QUIST-ARCTON: The hostility Samuel describes stems directly from reports that Moammar Gadhafi has mercenary recruits in his security forces from Africa who are indiscriminately killing protesters.

Saad Jabbar, deputy director of the North Africa Center at Cambridge University, is monitoring developments in Libya and confirms Africans have become targets.

Professor SAAD JABBAR (Deputy Director, North Africa Center at Cambridge University): I tell you, these people, because of their scheme, they will be slaughtered in Libya. There is so much anger there against those mercenaries, which suddenly sprung up. I think it is urgent to do something about it now, otherwise, a genocide against anyone who has black skin and who doesn't speak perfect Arabic.

QUIST-ARCTON: This Turkish oil worker, who's managed to escape from Libya, told the BBC he'd witnessed violence against his African colleagues.

Unidentified Man: (Through translator) We left behind our friends from Chad. We left behind their bodies. We had 70 or 80 people from Chad working for our company. They cut them dead with pruning shears and axes, attacking them, saying you're providing troops for Gadhafi. The Sudanese, the Chadians were massacred. We saw it ourselves.

QUIST-ARCTON: Experts say Gadhafi's hired African fighters probably come from neighboring Chad, Niger, Mali and Sudan, some who've been in Libya for years and other newer recruits. Zimbabwe today denied reports its soldiers were deployed in Libya. Zimbabwe has this week arrested and charged with treason 40 people who'd gathered to watch news footage of Egypt's revolution.

Ofeibea Quist-Arcton, NPR News, Accra.

>via: http://www.npr.org/2011/02/25/134065767/-African-Migrants-Say-They-Face-Hosti...