Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011


(CNN) -- Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah returned home to a Middle East shaken by unrest Wednesday after spending three months abroad for medical treatment.

The king, 86, had surgery late last year at New York's Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center for a herniated disc and a blood clot that were causing him back pain. He spent the last few weeks in Morocco undergoing physical therapy.

King Abdullah issued a number of decrees not uncommon in a time of celebration, but their sweeping nature raised the prospect that the Saudi ruler was attempting to stave off the potential for the kind of revolts that have engulfed neighboring nations.

The decrees, announced on state media, boost spending for social welfare programs, housing and education, including funds to help needy students attend college.

Bahrain's King Hamad was among those on hand to welcome King Abdullah home. It was not immediately clear whether they discussed the protests in Bahrain, which analysts believe could easily spill over into the oil fields of Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter.

Source : http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/02/23/saudi.king/index.html?iref=NS1

Saudi king returns home to a shaken Middle East

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(CNN) -- Leading his children through the crowd, a Libyan man walks past armored vehicles and tanks perched in front of Benghazi's courthouse. He proudly presses on, wanting to show his children a new day.

A moment later, soldiers fire a spray of bullets and tear gas, choking out the startled crowd. Terror paints his children's faces.

"We thought it was going to be peaceful, but then it turned ugly," remembered the Benghazi man, who asked not to be identified. "Thankfully, nothing happened. We didn't expect this."

He is just one of many who've witnessed fear and hope, violence and calm, doubt and determination over the last few weeks, as protests sweep through the Middle East and North Africa and change daily lives.

Here are five of their stories.

LIBYA: 'The fear wall broke'

Born and raised in Libya, the man in his 40s says this is the first protest he's ever seen in his native land. With no freedom of speech, no one ever dared to utter an ill word about the government or its powerful leader, Moammar Gadhafi, lest they risk jail time, he said.

But with Friday's protests, violent clashes and dozens of deaths, something changed.

"We can speak now," he marveled from a noisy street near the protest's epicenter. "The fear wall broke. Even after the killing, nobody is getting scared. Their numbers are increasing."
Gallery: Nations facing unrest
Hope for 'real Libya' after Gadhafi
Bahraini demonstrator buried
Eastern Libyan: I'm a free man
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* Libya
* Bahrain
* Egypt

Freedom of speech, the right to own land, and a good education are among the things this man is fighting for. He believes democracy is the solution. He dreams of his children getting a solid education and not having to live in a closed society as he did.

Internet access has been cut off in Libya, so word of mouth has been crucial in connecting the people, he said. Multiple friends had called to let him know about protests. "Libya is very strong socially. Most people know each other. I think they're united by the calls," he said.

His yearning for Libya is what brought him back to his home last year. He had been living in Canada for 15 years while he worked and earned a Ph.D.

He's proud to be there for the time of change. "We are fortunate to have this happening when we are here. Everyone in Libya and all the Libyans outside are dying to come here but they can't," he said.

He thanks other recent revolutions for the opportunity to see that change.

"I think the driving force is what happened in Tunisia and Egypt. Because of that fear, that wall, we felt that we couldn't do anything. After we saw Tunisia and Egypt, we thought that we can do it too. Tunisia and Egypt give us hope."

TUNISIA: 'I hope that nothing will be forgotten'

Walking the streets of Tunis, Hager Ben Mahmoud sees open stores, working people and streets free of shouting protesters and burning cars. Few signs remain of the unrest of last month's protests.

"The only sign that there was a revolution is that Ben Ali's pictures are not all over the place," she said. "You hear of carjacking and of theft, which is a new thing in Tunisia. People don't carjack."

Only three weeks ago, the landscape in her neighborhood was vastly different. One of her friends was hit with a rock while they were walking. She saw a stranger get hit by a car another day. A couple of her cousins participated in the protests and say they were tear-gassed.

"We all have friends or co-workers who went to the protests," said Ben Mahmoud, 34, who only observed the events. "Some saw violence, some saw nothing. Experiences varied from one person to another depending on where and when."

iReport: More photos from Hager Ben Mahmoud

Ben Mahmoud, who was born in Tunisia but has lived all over Europe and in the U.S., moved back to her home five years ago. She recognizes that she witnessed history unfold in her country. Some protesters, she feels, saw it as a "now or never situation" to get what they wanted.

"People protested because they wanted to be freer in a way and they wanted jobs, less corruption," she said. "They did not start because they wanted freedom of expression; they started because people wanted jobs."

While some rallied for change, others suggested sacrificing a day a week of paid wages to help fund the state, she said. She also heard about a company that did away with overtime so it could keep more employees on the payroll.

One of the biggest challenges for Tunisia will be to learn how to act like a real democracy, she said. People don't quite realize the effects of what they are doing in this "complicated and chaotic" time.

"We don't know what a democracy is and how to behave so far as asking for a raise, or your right, or having the political maturity for knowing what a democracy is -- it's about knowing what's best for everyone."

In this time of growth and change, Ben Mahmoud hopes for normalcy in the coming year. She hopes for people to find and retain jobs. She hopes for free elections in March.

But most of all, she said, "I hope that nothing will be forgotten."

EGYPT: 'The fate of the country is in our hands'

Omar Sultan and hundreds of fellow Egyptians of all ages erupted with chants and cheers on a packed street near the presidential palace when President Hosni Mubarak stepped down on February 11.

"I've never been prouder to be an Egyptian," the 25-year-old told CNN iReport that day.

"I was so happy. It's been 18 days of protests and unrest. When you finally get what you've been asking for, it's amazing," he reminisced last week.

iReport: Celebration video from Omar Sultan

Mubarak's Egypt is the only one Sultan has ever known. Sultan's generation is used to stability, but the youth is looking for a new Egypt, he said.

"We need to change and start moving our country to become better, to better understand politics," he said. "It's the behavior of the people that will define the coming period in this country. We are now free. The fate of the country is in our hands."

Sultan participated in several of the protests in Tahrir Square in the days preceding Mubarak's ouster, most of the time chanting and singing the national anthem. He and his friends heard about the gatherings on Facebook.

Even though he was singing for change in the streets, his daily life was suffering.

"Basically we couldn't do anything," he said. "Everything was shut down. We had a week with no internet. Work was suspended with military curfew at 3 p.m. We barely had enough time to do anything outside. I spent a lot of time staying at home doing absolutely nothing."

When the curfew lifted and people streamed back to work, Sultan noticed some life hadn't resumed. Banks were slow to open and the stock market remained uncertain.

"The protests did have a downside in terms of economic downfall, businesses closed for such a long time, but I think it's a price everyone had to pay to be a democratic country," he said.

Sultan will never forget how protesters carried on without violence when police gunfire broke out at protests on January 28. The protesters could have fought back, but they didn't.

"It felt like we were asking for a change, trying to do something different and in a peaceful manner, nothing violent," he said.

"It just seems good to witness history like this," he said. "You don't usually get the chance to see something happen in front of you. This defining moment, usually you read it in history books instead. Very rarely do you get to be a part of it."

YEMEN: 'Waiting for a change'

Mohammed Bahashwan sees crowds of young protesters shouting for jobs, education and less corruption in Yemen. But there's one thing the 23-year-old doesn't see: organization.

Bahashwan joined two of the peaceful protests last week in Sanaa, Yemen, but he fears the demonstrations may go unnoticed as there's no unified front.

"The government isn't seeing it. We shouldn't be doing it blindly; it needs to be organized somehow," he said. "We have a united cause and we go for it. I would love to go and organize but I don't know if anyone would listen."

Bahashwan says he's been using his Facebook page to voice his ideas for a united cause. He's never protested before, let alone tried to organize one.

"The side which I am on is against the corruption," he said. "Most of the people aren't asking the president to step down; they're asking the leaders to negotiate with the people."

While he doesn't think President Ali Abdullah Saleh should leave, he hopes the protests will bring attention to solving Yemen's education, health care and income woes, he said. Bahashwan holds education near to his heart, as he's an English teacher.

As he shouted for an end to corruption, Bahashwan was awestruck by the number of women who were also protesting alongside him. He hadn't seen women protest much in the past. Even his 19-year-old sister joined the cause.

"I saw a lot of women shouting," he said. "They really needed freedom and right. That was quite profound."

Bahashwan finds himself glued to the TV, waiting to see the latest developments and how they will change the game in Yemen.

"At work, school and at home, we are waiting for a change," he said. "We saw what's happening in Tunisia, Egypt and Bahrain. We're really worried about complications and what's happening nowadays. We're worried a war might show up."

BAHRAIN: 'My neighborhood turned into a war zone'

At 3:15 a.m. Friday, loud bangs outside his luxury apartment roused Greg Kramer from his slumber in Manama, Bahrain. He trudged to the balcony and saw riot police shooting tear gas and rubber bullets into the throngs of protesters at Pearl Roundabout.

"My neighborhood turned into a war zone the next day," he said. "There was glass on everything. The entire neighborhood was enclosed with barbed wire. Tanks were parked all over. It was quite intense."

iReport: More photos from Greg Kramer

The American citizen, who has been living in Manama for the better part of a year, evacuated to a hotel in suburban Juffair for three days before returning to his apartment in the city.

As a newcomer to Bahrain, Kramer is observing the protests, but he can't pin down what they're all about. "I'm not really sure what the people want," he said.

"It's unfortunate," he said. "I understand they want more representation and I understand their reasoning, but it's sad what it will do to this place. I'd be interested to see what it will be like in a year's time."

He's saddened to see the negative economic effects the protests have had on the country. Countless businesses, restaurants and malls have closed for the time being, mostly in areas with high levels of protest activity.

The Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix, which was slated to begin March 13, has been canceled, which could cost the country hundreds of millions of dollars, according to The Times of London.

Despite the turmoil, Kramer, 25, says he doesn't plan on leaving Bahrain any time soon. He's supposed to continue working at a publishing and consulting group for another year.

"I love this country. It's my home," he said. "To watch Bahrainis attack other Bahrainis hurts me. I think everyone wants to see some sort of resolution, some sort of conclusion to what's happening. It is not in the best interest of anyone that is living in Bahrain for this to continue."

Source : http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/02/23/protests.eyewitnesses/index.html?hpt=C1

Arab unrest: 5 eyewitnesses to history

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A series of explosions and gunfire have rocked the main city of Abidjan that supports Ivorian presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara, with protesters calling on his rival to step down. At least three soldiers were killed in the clashes.

The fighting had continued in Abobo, residents and the military said on Wednesday, while African presidents met with
Ouattara on a trip aiming to end his violent post-election power struggle with incumbent Laurent Gbagbo.

The election that was meant to heal the wounds of a 2002-3 civil war and years of economic stagnation since, looks increasingly likely to reignite the conflict.

A day earlier the delegation - the presidents of South Africa, Chad, Mauritania and Tanzania - met Gbagbo, who has
defied international sanctions and pressure to yield to the results of a November 28 poll that showed he lost to Ouattara.

'Everyone is terrified'

The military that supports Gbagbo has crushed dissent in a series of bloody crackdowns, but military officials say they
have been provoked because some Ouattara supporters are armed.

"Since this morning, there has been constant shooting between the military and the people here," said Sephora Konate, an Abobo market trader, who added that she heard explosions and machine gun fire.

Later in the night, the violence had calmed.

"Everyone is terrified. Children are crying but there's nothing we can say to comfort them," said Konate.

A commander at army headquarters who could not be named said three soldiers were confirmed killed in the clashes, but thought there were up to five dead. The military rarely gives civilian casualties, but previous clampdowns have left a trail of dead.

More than 300 people have been killed since the poll and the turmoil has driven cocoa futures to their highest level in more than three decades.

Cote d'Ivoire is the world's biggest cocoa producer, and a spokesman for Ouattara said he would extend the ban he had
ordered on cocoa exports to March 15.

Zuma mobbed

Before Tuesday's meeting with Ouattara in the Golf Hotel, where he is besieged by Ivorian troops, South African President Jacob Zuma was mobbed by angry pro-Ouattara youths.

Chanting "Zuma, Zuma, tell the truth", the protesters surrounded the car Zuma was travelling in and armed police had to intervene to push the youths back, South Africa's SABC radio news reported.

Zuma is visiting the country as part of African Union efforts to solve the four-month-long political impasse in the country.
Zuma was mobbed by angry supporters of Cote d'Ivoire's internationally-recognised president Ouattara [AFP]

West Africa's regional body ECOWAS had said it would not come as planned due to threats by Gbagbo supporters, though James Victor Gbeho, the ECOWAS commission chief, later arrived. Such threats kept Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore from coming.

A source close to the talks said the panel would make no public statement until everyone has left.

At least six people trying to protest against Gbagbo were killed by the security forces on Monday, witnesses said.

Ouattara's camp said the toll was double that, including three of his supporters killed by a rocket-propelled grenade.

In a further sign that Gbagbo is digging in, and with February salaries due soon, his government said it would open
two nationalised French banks later this week.

Gbagbo's camp has earmarked the Ivorian branches of Societe Generale and BNP Paribas, two of many foreign banks to have suspended operations, for nationalisation.

"The government will take all measures necessary to put these banks back to work," Bernadin Yapi, Gbagbo's inspector general of finance, said. "This will show the whole world that the state can take its responsibilities."

Source :http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/02/201122375122918390.html

Gun battles erupt in Ivorian city

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Barbara Walters smacked down a guest who brought up her relationship with a U.S. Senator on Tuesday's "The View."

The show is doing a week of "Where Are They Now?" episodes featuring guests who had 15 minutes of fame years ago. Tuesday's guest was Jessica Hahn, a woman who had a sexual encounter (one she claimed was rape) with televangelist Jim Bakker in the 1980s. The revelation of the incident led to a major scandal for Bakker.

But Hahn bristled when Sherri Shepherd called the incident "an affair"--and she brought up Walters' past for comparison.

"This wasn't an affair," she said. "Unlike, I don't want to be cruel or anything, in your book Audition you had an affair with a Senator," she said.

This was a reference to Walters' admission that she had an affair with Senator Edward Brooke in the 1970s.

Walters jumped in.

"This is about you, my dear. this is not about me. OK?" she said, to applause from the crowd. "I'm very happy talk about my relationships, but this is about you."

Source : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/22/jessica-hahn-barbara-walters-affair-the-view_n_826703.html

Jessica Hahn Smacked Down By Barbara Walters Over Affair Comments On 'The View' (VIDEO)

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi has refused to stand down amid widespread anti-government protests which he said had tarnished the image of the country.

In his first major speech since unrest began last week, Col Gaddafi said the whole world looked up to Libya and that protests were "serving the devil".

Reading from the country's constitution, he said enemies of Libya would be executed.

Rights groups say nearly 300 have been killed in the violence so far.

A defiant and angry Col Gaddafi said that he had brought glory to Libya. As he had no official position in Libya from which to resign, he would remain the head of the revolution, he said.

He blamed the unrest on "cowards and traitors" who were seeking to portray Libya as a place of chaos and to "humiliate" Libyans.
Civil war threat

The protesters had been given drink and drugs, he said, frequently shouting and banging his fist on the table as the address continued.

He called on "those who love Muammar Gaddafi" to come on to the streets in support of him, telling them not to be afraid of the "gangs".

"Come out of your homes, attack them in their dens. Withdraw your children from the streets. They are drugging your children, they are making your children drunk and sending them to hell," he said.

"If matters require, we will use force, according to international law and the Libyan constitution," he said, and warned that the country could descend into civil war or be occupied by the US if protests continued.

The BBC's Frank Gardner said it was an extraordinary speech even by Col Gaddafi's usual standards, full of theatrical defiance against almost everyone.

He appears completely divorced from reality, says our correspondent, saying that he had not authorised the army to use force, despite opposition statements that more than 500 people have been killed and more than 1,000 are missing.

Human Rights Watch said at least 62 bodies had been taken to hospital morgues since Sunday, in addition to the 233 people it said had been killed outside the capital previously.

Source :http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12544624

Defiant Gaddafi refuses to quit amid Libya protests

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Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro says the US has no interest in seeing peace in Libya but is solely concerned with the country's oil reserves.

Mr Castro, in a column published in state media, said it was too early to evaluate what was happening in Libya.

But, he said, it was clear the US would not hesitate to order Nato to invade.


Mr Castro led Cuba for almost 50 years after the 1959 communist revolution before officially handing over to his brother Raul in 2008.

In his latest "Reflections", Fidel Castro outlines the importance of oil and what he argues is the long-standing aim of the US to control supplies.

"What is for me absolutely evident is that the government of the United States is not worried at all about peace in Libya," he writes.

Instead, Washington will not hesitate to order a Nato invasion of the oil-rich North African country, in "a matter of hours or a few days".

Mr Castro makes no direct reference to reports from Libya that clashes between security forces and protesters left hundreds dead.

"We will have to wait the necessary time to know exactly how much is truth or lies," Mr Castro writes.

Mr Castro and Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi have been allies for many years, sharing both a revolutionary history and fierce opposition to the US.

Mr Castro handed over control of Cuba to Raul Castro in 2006 after falling ill in 2006. He officially stepped down as president two years later.

Despite some easing of economic restrictions by Raul Castro, Cuba remains a one-party state.

Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-12542002

Fidel Castro: US ready to order Libya invasion

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Monday, February 21, 2011


(CNN) -- Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi made a brief television appearance early Tuesday to announce that he was still in charge, denying reports that he had fled the country in the face of a spreading revolt.

Speaking to a state television reporter in front of his Tripoli home, Gadhafi said he wanted to show people "that I am in Tripoli, not in Venezuela. Don't believe those dogs in the media."

His 40-second appearance came after his government unleashed warplanes and helicopter gunships Monday in an attempt to bottle up the revolt that captured the country's second-largest city over the weekend. Witnesses said the aircraft were attacking anti-government demonstrators around Tripoli, the capital.

But Libya's government denied it was turning its air force against civilians, and Gadafi's son, Saif Al-Islam Gadhafi, told the state news agency Al-Jamahirya the warplanes were targeting weapons depots in remote areas.

In eastern Libya, much of the army appears to have gone over to anti-government forces, and much of the traffic on the roads was made up of Egyptians leaving the country. CNN correspondent Ben Wedeman, who entered the region Monday, witnessed one ammunition dump ablaze in the desert, apparently set afire by retreating troops.
Protester: 'We want our basic rights'
Protester in Benghazi
Benghazi protester describes offensive
Libya's ex-ruling family speaks out

Wedeman is the first Western television correspondent to enter and report from Libya during the crisis.

The younger Gadhafi said early Monday that anti-government forces had taken heavy weapons from government troops in Benghazi, the country's second-largest city, which fell to protesters over the weekend. And Gadhafi's regime faced defections from prominent officials who declared their solidarity with the Libyan people.

Justice Minister Mustafa Abdul Jalil resigned, saying he was protesting the "bloody situation" and "use of excessive force" against unarmed protesters, according to the Libyan newspaper Quryna. And Libya's deputy ambassador to the United Nations called the crackdown "genocide," adding, "The mass killing has reached a stage where no one can stay silent about it."

"Whenever people are getting to the streets, whenever they are demonstrating peacefully, the army and militias are shooting at them," the diplomat, Ibrahim Dabbashi, told CNN on Monday. But Gadhafi "cannot survive" this uprising, Dabbashi said.

"The Libyan people are determined to get rid of him. It's a matter of time. I don't know how long it will last, but it will be soon," he said.

On Monday, people in Benghazi could be seen cleaning up the streets, and local committees were being formed to run the city. Some young men provided security and organized traffic. Radio stations gave information and encouraged people to act peacefully. There was no visible presence of the regime's security forces.

CNN could not immediately confirm reports for areas beyond Benghazi. The Libyan government maintains tight control on communications and has not responded to repeated requests for access to the country, though CNN has interviewed numerous witnesses by phone.

Libyan state television reported that government security forces were demanding citizens' cooperation. It showed a crowd in Green Square chanting pro-government slogans and holding a sign supporting the regime.

But a woman in Tripoli reported that warplanes and helicopters were attacking parts of the capital, and armed men in cars were firing at anyone on the streets. The leader of an opposition movement told CNN that helicopter gunships were firing into crowds, and two Libyan pilots defected to Malta after being asked to bomb Libyan citizens, a Maltese government source said.
Protests outside Libyan Embassy in Egypt
Libya timeline of protests
Watching the Libyan unrest from afar
Demanding democracy in Libya
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* Libya
* Benghazi
* Moammar Gadhafi
* Protests and Demonstrations

The defecting pilots' French-built Mirage F1 jets were armed with rockets and loaded machine guns when they landed in Malta, the Maltese source said.

Video posted on YouTube showed what CNN was told were the charred remains of six Libyan troops in open body bags. Opposition sources in Libya say the dead were soldiers who refused to shoot at anti-government demonstrators.

The minute-long video was captured on a mobile phone camera and posted on Monday, but it was not clear when it was taken. It depicts a crowd gathered around the bodies, which were burned beyond recognition, and the opposition sources said many more bodies were found in an adjacent military barracks.

Citing hospital sources, Human Rights Watch said Monday that at least 233 people had been killed in the past week of upheaval. CNN has been in communication with medics and witnesses in Libya, whose accounts appear to corroborate the Human Rights Watch report, but Dabbashi said the toll could be as high as 800.

Libya is the latest Arab nation to fall into turmoil since January's ouster of Tunisian strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Similar protests toppled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on February 12 and have spread across the region, from Morocco to Bahrain.

Gadhafi has ruled Libya since a 1969 coup d'etat, but questions about his whereabouts swirled Monday after his son delivered a televised address on the crisis. In that speech, the younger Gadhafi acknowledged that protesters had seized heavy weapons from government troops in Benghazi and that the country faced a civil war that could smash it to pieces and release "rivers of blood."

"We have a very dangerous decision to make," said Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, the country's "general coordinator" and a top lieutenant of his father's. "We are all the same, we all have weapons, we are all Libyans, and this is our country, our homeland."

U.N. General-Secretary Ban Ki-moon "had an extensive discussion" with the Libyan leader Monday, the United Nations said.

Ban "expressed deep concern at the escalating scale of violence and emphasized that it must stop immediately," a U.N. spokesman said. "He reiterated his call for respect for basic freedoms and human rights, including peaceful assembly and information," the spokesman said, and Ban "underlined the need to ensure the protection of the civilian population under any circumstances."

Quryna, a traditionally pro-government organ that did not mention the protests when they began last week, reported that African mercenaries had opened fire on unarmed civilians in Tajouraa, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) east of Tripoli. A Quryna reporter also said snipers had shot an unarmed woman in the same area.

In Tripoli, a woman who asked not to be identified reported seeing violence in the streets. "I've seen myself red Hyundai cars with tinted windows that had armed people inside it shooting random people," she told CNN in a telephone interview. "Three victims have fallen in the street where I live."

During a meeting with EU ambassadors in Tripoli, Prime Minister Baghdadi Mahmudi blamed the upheaval on "terrorists and destructive plans" and stressed that Libya has the right to "take any measures" to protect its unity, stability, people and resources, Libyan state television reported.

The Arab League will hold an urgent summit Tuesday to discuss Libya, Egypt's official news agency MENA reported Monday, and Arab League Secretary-General Amre Moussa called for an end to the violence. He criticized the younger Gadhafi's assertion during a speech early Monday that Tunisians and Egyptians were to blame for Libya's revolt, saying demands for reform, development and change were the "legitimate rights" of the Arab people.

In Washington, the United States condemned the violence and called for a halt to the "unacceptable bloodshed" in response to civil unrest, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a statement.

"The government of Libya has a responsibility to respect the universal rights of the people, including the right to free expression and assembly," Clinton's statement said.

Source : http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/21/libya.protests/index.html?hpt=T1

Libya struggles to quell spreading revolt

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The protests continue in Wisconsin, as Governor Scott Walker said Monday he will not back down from his controversial budget bill. As typical with rallies, there has been no shortage of clever signs in Madison. BuzzFeed rounded up the 100 best. Here are 15 signs to get you started and you can view BuzzFeed's full gallery of the best protest signs here. Vote on your favorites!

Source : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/21/best-wisconsin-protest-signs_n_826265.html#s243900&title=GPA_Fail

The Best Wisconsin Protest Signs (PHOTOS)

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The BBC's James Robbins looks at the latest video purportedly showing Libyan protests
Continue reading the main story
Mid-East Unrest

Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime is under huge pressure after a night of protests in the Libyan capital Tripoli.

Several senior officials - including the justice minister - have reportedly quit their posts after security forces fired on the Tripoli protesters.

In a TV address, Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, conceded that protesters had taken over eastern cities of al-Bayda and Benghazi.

But he warned of civil war and vowed to "fight to the last bullet".

The BBC's Jon Leyne, in neighbouring Egypt, says Col Gaddafi has now lost the support of almost every section of society.

Reliable sources say Col Gaddafi has now left the capital, our correspondent adds.
'Hatred of Libya'

On Monday, state TV reported an operation had been mounted against the Tripoli protesters.

"Security forces have started to storm into the dens of terror and sabotage spurred by the hatred of Libya," Libyan TV reported.

Unconfirmed reports suggested soldiers were once again using live ammunition in the capital on Monday evening.
Continue reading the main story
Analysis
image of Jon Leyne Jon Leyne BBC News, Cairo

The situation in Libya is becoming increasingly confused and chaotic. There are several reports that Col Gaddafi has now left Tripoli, possibly for his hometown of Sirt or his desert base of Sabha.

In Tripoli itself, elements of the security forces are still on the streets, though the violence seems to be increasingly random.

During the night, there were more brutal attacks on demonstrators who had gathered, after rumours spread that Col Gaddafi had fled the country.

Hour by hour, there are reports of more defections. Almost all major tribal leaders seem to have joined the opposition, as well as important religious leaders and several senior Libyan ambassadors.

The east of the country is already almost entirely out of the hands of the government. Col Gaddafi's hold on power is becoming weaker by the hour.

Security forces fired live rounds and tear gas to disperse protests on Sunday night.

Justice Minister Mustapha Abdul Jalil became the latest senior official to resign, saying he was leaving his post because of the "excessive use of violence", privately owned Quryna newspaper reported on Monday afternoon.

Libya's envoy to the Arab League, Abdel Moneim al-Honi, announced he was "joining the revolution", and its ambassador to India, Ali al-Essawi, told the BBC he was also resigning.

Mohamed Bayou, who until a month ago was chief spokesman for the Libyan government, said the leadership was wrong to threaten violence against its opponents.

Mr Bayou, in a statement quoted by the Reuters news agency, called on Saif al-Islam to acknowledge the opposition and open dialogue with them.

In another blow to Col Gaddafi's rule, two tribes - including Libya's largest tribe, the Warfla - have backed the protesters.
'Decisive moment'
Continue reading the main story
Mid-East unrest: Libya
Map

* Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has led since 1969
* Population 6.5m; land area 1.77m sq km, much of it desert
* Population with median age of 24.2, and a literacy rate of 88%
* Gross national income per head: $12,020 (World Bank 2009)

* Country profile: Libya
* Oil price jumps on Libya unrest
* Difficulty of reporting from inside Libya

Human Rights Watch says at least 233 people have died since last Thursday, though in his speech, Saif al-Islam insisted reports of the death toll had been exaggerated.

The US, UK and French governments are among those condemning the harsh treatment of protesters.

But Italy, the former colonial power in Libya, has close business links to Tripoli and voiced alarm at the prospect of the Gaddafi government collapsing.

"Would you imagine to have an Islamic Arab Emirate at the borders of Europe? This would be a very serious threat," said Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.

The head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, described the protesters' demands as legitimate, calling it a "decisive moment in history" for Arab nations.
Oil price jumps

Reports from several cities suggest the country is in turmoil:

* In Az-Zawiya, 40km (25 miles) west of Tripoli, witnesses say the police have fled, government buildings have been burnt down and the city is in chaos.
* Unconfirmed reports from the port city of Darnah say protesters are holding more than 300 workers hostage - many of them Bangladeshis.
* Several hundred Libyans stormed a South Korean-run construction site west of Tripoli, injuring at least four workers.
* In Benghazi, reports say 11 solders were killed by their commanding officers for refusing to fire on protesters.

The violence has helped to push up oil prices to their highest levels since the global financial crisis of 2008.

At one point, Brent crude - one of the main benchmarks on world oil markets - reached $105 (£65) a barrel.

International firms including BP, one of the world's biggest oil companies, are preparing to pull their staff out of Libya.

Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12523669

Col Gaddafi under mounting pressure : Libya protests

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Five burned bodies have been found in a bank which was set on fire following anti-government protests in Morocco on Sunday, the interior minister has said.

Taib Cherkaoui said the bodies were discovered in the northern town of al-Hoceima.

He said the protests in al-Hoceima and other towns and cities were peaceful, but added that acts of vandalism and looting took place after the rallies.

The protesters demanded that King Mohammed VI give up some of his power.

So far there has been no independent confirmation of the deaths in al-Hoceima, and it is not clear how the five may have died.
Problems lurking

Journalist Sietske de Boer in al-Hoceima told the BBC that crowds of young men came from outside the town and began ransacking banks, shops and government buildings on Sunday.

Protests have spread across the region since popular movements in Tunisia and Egypt forced out leaders.

However, analysts say that - unlike other countries that have seen protests - Morocco has a successful economy, an elected parliament and a reformist monarchy, making it less vulnerable to a major uprising.
Continue reading the main story
Map

* Led by King Mohammed, seen as a reformist while retaining sweeping powers
* Population 32.3 million, land area 710,850 sq km, including Western Sahara
* Median age 26.5, literacy rate 56%
* Gross National Income per head: $2,770 (World Bank)

* Country profile: Morocco

Former BBC Morocco correspondent Richard Hamilton says regular protests are allowed and the government has promised to double food subsidies.

But beneath the surface real problems are lurking, he adds.

Morocco has a huge young population, many of them poor or unemployed.

The gap between rich and poor has been described by one commentator as "obscene" and parliamentary elections are said by critics to be a fig leaf for an undemocratic system, our correspondent says.

King Mohammed is a member of the Alawite dynasty that has been ruling Morocco for some 350 years, claiming a direct line of descent from the Prophet Muhammad.

It is regarded as almost sacrilegious to question his role as king, our correspondent says.

Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12524647

Morocco protests: Five burned bodies found - minister

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(CNN) -- Wedged between two countries where decades-long regimes toppled under relentless demonstrations, protesters in Libya hope to accomplish what Egypt and Tunisia has and oust their ruler of 42 years. But the country's fate hanged precariously Monday after the son of longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi warned of a chaotic civil war if citizens side with anti-government demonstrators.

The unrest -- spurred in part by demands for freedom and angst over high unemployment -- has left at least 233 people dead in Libya, according to Human Rights Watch, citing information from hospital sources.

CNN is not able to independently confirm the figure, as the network has not been granted access to report on the ground. But CNN has been in communication with medics and eyewitnesses in Libya, whose accounts corroborate closely with information from Human Rights Watch.

Early Monday, sporadic gunfire continued to ring out in parts of the North African nation, albeit a far cry from the tumult seen Sunday when the unrest came to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's doorstep in the capital Tripoli for the first time.

Monday morning, about 500 rioters stormed a South Korean-operated construction site near Tripoli, wounding 17 workers and causing a stand-off with police, the South Korean foreign ministry said.
Protester: 'We want our basic rights'
Protester in Benghazi
Benghazi protester describes offensive
Libya's ex-ruling family speaks out

A few hour earlier, Gadhafi's second-oldest son proposed the speedy implementation of significant democratic reforms in the traditionally restrictive country while warning of a civil war, return to colonialism and mass poverty if opposition protests continue.

"We can speak rationally, we can spare the blood, we can stand all together for the sake of Libya," Saif al-Islam Gadhafi said on Libyan state television. But if the unrest continues, "forget about democracy, forget about reform ... It will be a fierce civil war."

The younger Gadhafi criticized international media for overstating the extent of the violence but acknowledged "mistakes" by police and military in addressing the unrest. Still, he principally blamed drunks, criminals and foreigners for fanning dissent and instigating attacks that threatened to tear apart Libya.

It was not certain why Saif Gadhafi spoke instead of his father.

Obtaining independent confirmation on events in Libya is very difficult. The Libyan government maintains tight control on communications and has not responded to repeated requests from CNN for access to the country. However, CNN has interviewed numerous witnesses by phone.

Saif Gadhafi accused anti-government elements of "sedition."

"This is a national treason," he said. "Each one of us wants to be a leader; each one of us wants to be a prince."

Unlike in Tunisia and Egypt, where demonstrators proclaimed a stance of nonviolence, some anti-government protesters in Libya set fire to cars and tried to breach a military camp, according to witnesses.

Saif Gadhafi, appointed in 2009 as Libya's general coordinator, insisted his father, Moammar, was not like recently deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Protests outside Libyan Embassy in Egypt
Libya timeline of protests
Watching the Libyan unrest from afar
Demanding democracy in Libya
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* Libya
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He also said Libya was unlike those two countries, predicting that its civil war would be "1,000 times worse" and its economic hardship even more severe should the current government fall.

He conceded these are "difficult times" and that "there are people inside Libya who are opposing us."

Even while he cast blame, Saif Gadhafi also acknowledged changing times regionally and proposed "radical" reforms -- like bolstering local governments, relaxing restrictive laws, raising salaries, extending loans and drafting a constitution, which doesn't now exist.

Michele Dunne ofthe Carnegie Endowment for Peace, noted that the Western-educated Saif Gadhifi has pushed such reforms previously, but they have not gotten much traction.

Saif Gadhafi claimed in his speech that international media had overstated the death toll. He also claimed foreign nationals and "illegal immigrants" had stirred the uprising, with some dissenters attacking government installations as well as stealing caches of weapons.

On Sunday, the central government apparently lost control of Benghazi, with multiple witnesses reporting that protesters took over the city with support from some military who dropped their allegiance to Moammar Gadhafi.

"Benghazi is free from the tyrant," a protester said. "Hopefully the whole country will be free of him."

The witnesses are not being identified for security reasons.

However, Saif Gadhafi continued to insist the military remained loyal to the ruling government and would be taking an increasingly active role in suppressing unrest in the coming days.

One man told CNN that uniformed troops opened fire on thousands of mourners as they passed through the streets during a funeral procession honoring those killed the previous day.

Later Sunday, protesters packed at least one car with explosives and sent it crashing into a compound wall at a military camp in the eastern city, eyewitnesses said. Security forces then fired on the protesters as they attempted to breach the camp.

On the camp's southern side, meanwhile, protesters drove a tank from a nearby army base in another attempt to break in, witnesses said. They have also obtained other weapons, the protester said.

Libyan state television reported the camp has been defended, and that protesters were being warned on loudspeakers not to attack the compound. The network called it an act of sabotage.

The protester said that the military camp is significant because it houses Gadhafi's eastern palace.

A protester said some fellow anti-government demonstrators had other weapons. Saif Gadhafi alluded to this claim in his speech early Monday, claiming criminal elements had stolen weaponry and even fired them in an attempt to cast blame on military and security forces.

One man, a technology expert who has set up cameras airing live online video streams around Benghazi, estimated that the numbers of anti-government demonstrators in the city has grown since the protests began Tuesday.

"There are a lot of people getting killed for their freedom," he said Sunday. "Our goal is simple: We want Gadhafi to leave. We want freedom. ... We want democracy."

Meanwhile, the most significant unrest to date hit Tripoli on Sunday.

Clashes broke out between a large crowd of demonstrators and people who appeared to be mercenaries in the center of the city, according to an activist.

A witness said crowds of anti-government demonstrators hit the streets and set cars on fire.

Masked, armed men in sports utility vehicles drove through the streets blasting pro-government music, said the witness, claiming that the same people had been firing at protesters and passerby.

Gunfire also rang out near Green Square and the presidential palace, according to multiple witnesses. Another man said that men were walking around Libya's streets with automatic rifles early Monday, firing seemingly indiscriminately.

The crackdown, as well as the government's role and reaction to it, stoked the ire of many opposed to Moammar Gadhafi as well as governments outside Libya.

Libya's ambassador to the Arab League said Sunday he resigned his position on Saturday over "the killing of innocent people." Abdel Elhuni said the protesters are asking for "normal things" and that Gadhafi is "over, finished." He speculated that the Libyan leader has only a day or two left in power because "he lost the people."

British Foreign Secretary William Hague spoke on Sunday with Saif Gadhafi and "made clear the U.K.'s grave concern at the escalation of violence," the Foreign Office said in a statement. "He expressed alarm at reports of large numbers of people being killed or attacked by Libyan security forces."

The United States also said it was "gravely concerned with disturbing reports and images coming out of Libya."

U.S. officials have communicated to Libyan officials including Libyan Foreign Minister Musa Kusa "our strong objections to the use of lethal force against peaceful demonstrators," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. "Libyan officials have stated their commitment to protecting and safeguarding the right of peaceful protest. We call upon the Libyan government to uphold that commitment and hold accountable any security officer who does not act in accordance with that commitment."

One man in Tripoli said was particularly angry at state-run TV for "pretending that nothing is happening." A medical staff member at Benghazi Medical Center was among those sharply critical of Saif Gaddhafi's speech, calling him a liar and disputing his assertion that Libya could split into several parts if not united under his father's rule.

"There are no divisions among Libyans," the staff member said. "We want to be united with our brothers and sisters ... All Libyans think this way, it is the regime that lacks knowledge about the people."

Source : http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/21/libya.protests/index.html?hpt=T1

At least 233 dead in Libyan protests...?:Human rights group

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Beijing, China (CNN) -- If organizers planned big protests in China to echo those in the Mideast and North Africa, they failed.

On Saturday microbloggers passed around tweets calling for protests at 2 p.m. (0600 GMT) Sunday in a dozen major Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. But no specific place was cited until several hours beforehand.

In Beijing, the place was supposed to be in Wangfujing, a typically busy shopping street less than a kilometer from Tiananmen Square.

Wangfujing may have been a perfect place to trigger a mass action. The four-lane street is a designated pedestrian street, with thousands of people walking there at any given business hour; no cars and buses are allowed. For decades it has been a favorite shopping district, especially for out-of-town Chinese and foreign tourists. (Locals prefer to shop elsewhere.)

At around 2:15 p.m., according to CNN's Tomas Etzler, who saw the scene, a large presence of police -- uniformed and in plain clothes -- mingled with a gaggle of foreign journalists and scores of people carrying digital cameras. Soon they gathered a group of onlookers from the usual traffic of shoppers and tourists.

Around this time, a young man started arguing with the police.

It is not clear whether the event was related to the planned protest or "performance art."

Most of the crowd dispersed after an hour.

Security officials exercised restraint in handling the scene, Etzler said.

Around Tiananmen Square and Zhongnanhai, the seat of China's government, there was significantly more -- but not massive -- security presence. Tourist traffic on Tiananmen Square appeared normal, with a couple Chinese tourists seen taking pictures in front of the Zhongnanhai front gate, watched by half a dozen police officers.

In Hong Kong, at the same hour, police outnumbered 30 demonstrators outside the gates of the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government. Leung Kwok Hung, a lawmaker nicknamed "Long Hair," told the tiny crowd that the demonstration was the first in Hong Kong in support of China's "Jasmine Revolution" and would not be the last.

He led the group in chanting slogans against the Chinese Communist Party and the crackdown on activists, including lawyers and human rights advocates, in the mainland.

Afterwards, some in the crowd made paper airplanes of their signs, which featured jasmine flowers, and threw them and paper funeral money over the fence onto the grounds of the liaison office. A security officer responded by loudspeaker, saying that if the protesters did not stop, he would file an official complaint.

The protest ended after an hour, all in all a nonevent.

Even though these attempts to initiate protests showed little traction, they have apparently made Chinese authorities more nervous.

A day before the planned protests, police reportedly detained scores of people, including lawyers and human rights advocates, in Beijing and other major cities.

Beijing has appeared to step up the filtering and control of the internet since the outbreak of protests in the Arab world. Search functions for words like "jasmine" and "Egypt" are blocked on certain sites like Sina Weibo and Renren, a clone of Facebook, suggesting the leadership's wariness for similar calls for change.

Read about how microbloggers deal with 'Great Firewall' challenges

Twitter, Facebook and You Tube are regularly blocked in China, even though savvier internet users could overcome the firewall with a VPN, or virtual private network. The popular Sina Weibo microblogging service is erratic, with retweeting and the posting of photos blocked.

Source :http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/02/20/china.protests/index.html?hpt=C1

'Jasmine' protests in China fall flat

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BOSTON — Love him or hate him — and there are plenty of people on either side — Malcolm Gladwell is provocative. By devising big, here’s-how-the-world-works theories, and supporting them with lively anecdotes, Gladwell has forged a remarkable career for himself, as a New Yorker writer and best-selling author. While most scribes celebrate a brief stopover on the New York Times bestseller list, Gladwell’s books — the "Tipping Point," "Blink" and "Outliers" — stick around for years.

But his admirers must be scratching their heads at the moment. In October, Gladwell published a lengthy New Yorker feature refuting the notion that Facebook and Twitter could play a central role in an uprising like Iran’s 2009 Green Revolution. “The platforms of social media are built around weak [inter-personal] ties,” he argued. And “weak ties seldom lead to high-risk activism” of the type needed to overthrow a government.

Gladwell (who didn’t respond to our emails requesting comment) deserves credit for reality-checking the hyperbole over the democratizing magic of social media — such as serious calls for Twitter to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Not only does focusing on the technology distract from the brave citizens who suffer the bludgeons and bullets of riot police, but more importantly it ignores the harmful uses of the technology as well, such as cyber-vigilantism in China.

So while Twitter certainly doesn’t deserve the Purple Heart, did Gladwell go too far in dismissing its power against tyranny?

The world has changed radically in the few months since Gladwell’s New Yorker piece hit newsstands. We now benefit from the hindsight of Tunisia’s and Egypt’s revolts. Once again, newscasters are gushing about a critical role for social media. Are they right? Was Gladwell off target with his latest theory?

There’s ample evidence that Middle Eastern strongmen perceive danger in social media. As the turmoil erupted in Tunisia, former President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s regime launched a “remarkably invasive and technically sophisticated” phishing campaign, harvesting Facebook passwords in a desperate attempt to delete material that threatened them. The regime also arrested key users of social media, such as twittering activist Slim Amamou, who was ordered to turn over passwords and information about the online resistance. (In one of the Jasmine Revolution’s more intriguing yarns, Tunisia’s post-Ben Ali government named Amamou minister of youth and sports).

Egypt was even more aggressive in attacking the new media. Mubarak’s thugs seized and threatened with torture Wael Ghonim, the Google marketing manager who created a Facebook group memorializing Khaled Mohamed Said, 28, who was allegedly murdered by police in June 2010. Images of Said’s mutilated corpse drew over half a million followers on Facebook, catalyzing outrage and protests. Later, when the demonstrations boiled over in Tahrir Square, the government hit the off switch on the internet, and left it that way for days, crippling the economy.

Why would the erstwhile regimes take these steps if they didn’t see social media as a threat? Was this proof that the internet was indeed shifting the calculus of power in ways that entrenched dictators?

NY Times correspondent David D. Kirkpatrick thought so. From Tunis, he wrote (in a news article, not an opinion piece): “Before the advent of [Facebook and Twitter] local outbursts of unrest here were quickly crushed. This time, the revolt flashed across the country as protesters shared video of their own demonstrations. Grainy cellphone images of a clash with police in one town egged on the next.” Likewise, The Atlantic’s Andrew Sullivan points out that at the height of Tunisia’s revolution, Facebook membership soared, because “users stayed one step ahead of the censors.”

So is Gladwell backing down? Does he think that social media may have helped topple Ben Ali and Mubarak?

Apparently not.

He broke his silence in a Feb. 2 New Yorker blog post titled “Does Egypt Need Twitter?” As evidence that communication innovations don’t matter, he argued: “People protested and brought down governments before Facebook was invented.” He cited the uprising of phoneless East Germans in the 1980s, as well as the French Revolution, where “the crowd in the streets spoke to one another with that strange, today largely unknown instrument known as the human voice.”

“People with a grievance will always find ways to communicate with each other,” Gladwell concluded. “How they choose to do it is less interesting, in the end, than why they were driven to do it in the first place.”

Really? So if communication is inevitable and means of dissemination are irrelevant, why does every dictator worth his jackboots control the mass media? Given that the people of Burma, North Korea and Zimbabwe have ready access to the human voice, does Gladwell think they simply lack sufficient grievances to curse their heinous oppressors? It couldn’t possibly be that the regimes they live under have so thoroughly marinated them in paranoia that they fear confiding in their neighbors, could it?

“Gladwell’s observation may be beside the point,” writes Yale genocide scholar Ben Kiernan in an email to GlobalPost. “Whatever the grievances, a key political issue determining the outcome is the scale of mobilization. Other things being equal, additional or faster means of communication (social media offer both) will make mass actions easier and more likely, if not broader-based and more effective as well.”

Clearly, uprisings are complex events, and many factors contribute to how they fare. In the Middle East, food prices, unemployment and the daily humiliation of repressive regimes gnaw at citizens’ patience. Another critical variable is a regime’s inclination toward brutality. “Iraq in the 1980s was willing to gas their own people. Egypt wasn't willing to do that,” points out Joshua Glover, director of international affairs at the Glover Park Group.

But it can’t be denied that social media changes the dynamic. It’s not so much a question of whether social media forges the strong ties of real-world friendships, as Gladwell suggests. Rather, it’s the speed and persuasion of the outreach. Social-networking sites like Facebook facilitate revolutions, just as financial aid helps students attend college, and IVF enables infertile couples conceive. We all know that digital communications contribute to productivity, and that’s especially true if you’re a revolutionary with banned, incendiary material to disseminate. In the more affluent countries of the Middle East, the powers of social media are changing the communication calculus. The pen might be mighty, but the photocopier is mightier yet, just as Facebook and Twitter dramatically outgun their predecessors.

Source : http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/egypt/110218/malcolm-gladwell-social-media-facebook-twitter

Is Malcolm Gladwell wrong on Egypt and social media?

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Sunday, February 20, 2011


Protests in Wisconsin continue to surge Friday, even as reports from Thursday evening claimed as many as 25,000 demonstrators had taken to the state's capitol building in Madison. Residents are turning out in droves to oppose a bill they view as an anti-union effort that would infringe on the rights of state workers, proposed by Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

As dissenters streamed into the halls of the capitol building Thursday, Democratic state senators fled the state in a move to block a vote on the measure. They ended up at a hotel in Northern Illinois, where they remain, at least for the time being. The state's Assembly has planned a vote for Friday.

While many, including President Obama, have characterized the bill as an "assault on unions," Gov. Walker maintained Friday that his legislation, which would strip state employees of their collective bargaining rights and force them to pay a larger share of the cost of health care and pensions, was a "modest proposal."

In an interview Thursday night, Walker told Fox News that the protests were serving as a cohesive force for Republican lawmakers in Wisconsin.

"If anything, I think it's made the Republicans in the Assembly and the Senate stronger," he said. "They're not going to be bullied. They're not going to be intimidated."

Walker has the support of some in GOP leadership, such as Speaker of the House John Boehner, who on Thursday released a statement commending the governor for "daring to speak the truth about the dire fiscal challenges Americans face at all levels of government." Some national Democrats have taken the side of the protesters, however, as the DNC has ramped up their pro-union organizing in Wisconsin and other states.

Source : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/18/wisconsin-protests-madison-scott-walker_n_825080.html

Wisconsin Protests: Tens Of Thousands Turn Out In Madison Against Anti-Union Proposal

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MADISON, Wis. — Sarah Palin says union members protesting Wisconsin Republicans' plan to help balance the state's budget by cutting collective bargaining rights are taking up "the wrong fight at the wrong time."

Palin weighed in on the debate in a Friday night posting on her Facebook page but didn't indicate whether she would join weekend conservative counter-protests organized by groups including the Tea Party Patriots and Americans for Prosperity.

In the posting addressed to "union brothers and sisters," Palin says Wisconsin taxpayers shouldn't be asked to pay for benefits "that are not sustainable." She says "real solidarity means everyone being willing to sacrifice."

New Republican Gov. Scott Walker insists the concessions he's seeking from public workers are necessary to deal with Wisconsin's projected $3.6 billion budget shortfall and to avoid layoffs.

Source : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/19/sarah-palin-wisconsin-protesters_n_825476.html

Sarah Palin Addresses Wisconsin Protesters: You Must Be 'Willing To Sacrifice'

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Saturday, February 19, 2011


Libyan security forces have killed 84 people have been killed in three days of protests against Colonel Gaddafi, according to a leading human rights group.
New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) cited witnesses and hospital sources as saying it is the worst unrest faced by Libya leader Muammar Gaddafi's four decades in power.

Protests against Gaddafi's rule, inspired by uprisings in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt, have been met with force.

The news came amid other reports that Libyan special forces had stormed a two-day-old protest encampment in the city of Benghazi on Saturday morning.

At 5am, special forces attacked hundreds of protesters, including lawyers and judges, camped out in front of a courthouse in the city, said witnesses.

They fired tear gas on protesters in tents and cleared the areas after many fled carrying the dead and the injured.

One protester said: "This is a ghost city - we are all afraid that something big is going to happen in Benghazi today."

Wounded demonstrator stretchered into hospital. Photo from Quryna Newspaper, Benghazi

An injured protestor stretchered into a Benghazi hospital

Internet access had also been cut around 2am in Benghazi, removing one of the few ways Libyans can get out information about the anti-government protests in the country.

There were further reports that Facebook and Twitter had also been shut down in the capital of Tripoli, while the city was said to be full of government supporters.

Further restrictions on foreign media have also made it difficult to establish the full extent of the violence.

HRW said 35 people died on Friday alone.

Most of the protest focused in the restive region around Benghazi, 600 miles east of Tripoli.

According Alex Rosi, Sky News' correpsondent in Cairo, the situation in Libya is "extremely volatile".

Describing very strong scenes of unrest in Benghazi, he said: "At least 35 people... had been taken to the morgue. Most of those people shot with live ammunition."

In the capital, Tripoli, he said the unrest appears to be more "muted, but there is unrest".

He added that although it was a "very volatile situation, it does appear to be calmer in the capital".

L-Libya-protests

Leaked footage from Libya shows increasingly violent protests

HRW said the deaths in the city happened when security forces opened fire on people protesting after funeral processions for people killed in earlier violence.

There has been no official word on the number of dead.

"We put out a call to all the doctors in Benghazi to come to the hospital and for everyone to give blood because I've never seen anything like this before," the group quoted a senior hospital official in Benghazi as saying.

"Special forces who have a very strong allegiance to Colonel Gaddafi are still fighting desperately gain to control, to gain ground and the people are fighting them street by street," a local resident was reported as saying.

While the level of unrest has not previously been seen before in the oil exporter, Libya-watchers say the situation is different from Egypt, because Mr Gaddafi has oil cash to smooth over social problems.

Mr Gaddafi is also respected in much of the country, though less so in the Cyrenaica region around Benghazi.

:: Arbor Networks, a US-based security company, has said that internet traffic in the North African country abruptly ended late on Friday night.

:: Libyan authorities have also thwarted foreign journalists attempting to enter the country by refusing entrance visas.

Source : http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Human-Rights-Watch-85-Killed-In-Three-Days-Of-Protests-As-Libyan-Demonstrations-Spread/Article/201102315936808?lpos=World_News_Carousel_Region_0&lid=ARTICLE_15936808_Human_Rights_Watch%3A_85_Killed_In_Three_Days_Of_Protests_As_Libyan_Demonstrations_Spread

Death Toll In Libya Protest 'Hits 84' - Claim

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Bahrain Protests: Security forces open fire on crowds in Manama (Video)

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Wednesday, February 16, 2011


At least two people have been killed in clashes between Libyan security forces and demonstrators in the town of Bayda, east of Benghazi, the second largest city, as activists plan major anti-government protests throughout the country on Thursday.

The victims' names were: Khaled ElNaji Khanfar and Ahmad Shoushaniya.

Wednesday's deaths come as hundreds of protesters have reportedly torched police outposts in the eastern city of Beyida, while chanting: "People want the end of the regime."

At least 38 people were also injured in the clashes, including ten security officials.

"All the people of Beyida are out on the streets," said 25-year-old Rabie al-Messrati, who said he had been arrested after spreading a call for protests on Facebook.

Inspired by popular and successful uprisings in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt, Libyan protesters are seeking an end to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's 41-year-old rule, one of the longest and most repressive leaders in the world.

Online calls of dissent have been growing rapidly over the past few days, with Facebook groups calling for "Uprising on February 17" doubling in popularity.

In the southern city of Zentan, 120km south of the capital Tripoli, hundreds of people marched through the streets and set fire to security headquarters and a police station, then set up tents in the heart of the town, as a wave of unrest spread south and westwards across the country.

Chants including "No God but Allah, Muammar is the enemy of Allah," can be heard on videos of demonstrations uploaded to YouTube. Independent confirmation was not possible as Gaddafi's government keeps tight control over the movements of media personnel.

With internet access severely limited, protesters have taken to Twitter to spread details on how to bypass government clampdowns. Social media sites, which became the tools of choice across the Middle East, were reportedly blocked for several hours through the afternoon, but access was restored in the evening.

Al Jazeera is understood to have been taken taken off the state-owned cable TV network, but is still reportedly available on satellite networks.

Old wounds stoke fresh unrest

The rare protests in Libya reportedly began after relatives of those killed in a prison massacre about 15 years ago took to the streets. They were joined by scores of supporters.

The relatives were said to have been angered by the detention of Fathi Terbil, human rights lawyer and official spokesman of the victims' families, who was arrested by the Libyan security forces, for no apparent reason.

However, Terbil was later released, according to reports.

Twelve-hundred prisoners were killed in the Abu Slim prison massacre on June 29, 1996, after they had objected to their inhumane conditions inside the prison.

Those killed were buried in the prison's courtyard and in mass graves in Tripoli. The families of the victims have been demanding that the culprits be punished, but the Libyan government ignored these demands.

Mohammed Maree, an Egyptian blogger, said "Gaddafi's regime has not listened to such pleas and continues to treat the Libyan people with lead and fire."

"This is why we announce our solidarity with the Libyan people and the families of the martyrs until the criminals are punished, starting with Muammer and his family."
Benghazi residents have a history of distrust of Gaddafi

Calls for reform

Much like other countries engulfed in similar wave of pro-democracy protests, the US state department on Wednesday said it urged Libya to meet the aspirations of its people.

"Countries across the region have the same kind of challenge in terms of the demographics, the aspirations of their people, the need for reform," said Philip Crowley, a spokesman. "And we encourage these countries to take specific actions that address the aspirations and the needs and hopes of their people. Libya certainly would be in that same category."

elations between Libya and the US have seesawed over the last 30 years. The ties were restored in 2004 after Libya renounced its quest for weapons of mass destruction.

Also calling for reforms are some of Libya's eminent d individuals. A group of prominent figures and members of human rights organisations have demanded the resignation of Gaddafi.

They said that the Libyans have the right to express themselves through peaceful demonstrations without any threat of harassment from the regime.

The demands came in a statement signed by 213 personalities from different segments of the Libyan society, including political activists, lawyers, students, and government officials.

Gadhafi's government sought to allay further unrest by proposing the doubling of government employees' salaries and releasing 110 members of the armed - and outlawed - Libyan Islamic Fighting Group who oppose him--tactics similar to those adopted by other Arab regimes in the recent wave of protests.

In a telephone interview with Al Jazeera, Idris Al-Mesmari, a Libyan novelist and writer, said that security officials in civilian clothes came and dispersed protesters in Benghazi using tear gas, batons and hot water.

Al-Mesmari was arrested hours after the interview.

Anti-government activists have vowed to hold the biggest rallies on Thursday in what they call "A Day of Rage."

Source :http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/02/201121623948974864.html

Protesters die in Libya unrest

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Saturday, February 12, 2011


The protesters for democracy have already taken down two dictators in Tunisia and Egypt but the Algerian authorities have been successful so far in holding down protests that have started soon after the Tunisian revolts in early January 2011.

Videos of thousands of protesters have been posted on You Tube and facebook. The following video posted on February 12 around 11 am London time shows the arrests of several activists as police forces clashes with protesters amidst chants:

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Organizers of an officially banned anti-government demonstration in the Algerian capital say it's picking up steam. Organizers say several thousand people have gathered in the city center. Hundreds of riot police in Algiers, blocked streets and charged the crowd in a bid to keep protesters out of the city center. The protest comes a day after Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigned.

CAIRO (AP) — The military is now fully in charge in Egypt, following the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak after three decades of authoritarian rule. Military officials, who have pledged to shepherd reforms for greater democracy, told the nation they will announce the next steps soon. Protesters are trying to decide whether to head home or stay until the military announces reforms.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says he is making difficult cuts to allow needed spending increases in education, technology and basic infrastructure like roads and bridges. His weekly radio and Internet address provided a broad preview of his administration's budget for fiscal 2012. Obama says the combination of cuts and new spending will result in an overall spending freeze for the next five years.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans are taking issue with President Barack Obama's budget plans. In the Republican radio and Internet address, Utah Senator Orrin Hatch argues Obama's spending reduction plans are too timid. Hatch says the nation is "on borrowed time and needs to "make some significant changes in order to compete."

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) — At least one person is dead in a bold midday assault on the provincial police headquarters in the southern city of Kandahar by Taliban insurgents. The insurgents fired rocket-propelled grenades and touched off an ongoing street battle. The assault showed insurgents are still able to launch strikes on heavily fortified government institutions despite an influx of U.S. troops into Afghanistan.

Source : http://www.9and10news.com/Category/Story/?id=281546&cID=3

Algeria: Protesters

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Friday, February 11, 2011


Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigned Friday, relinquishing power after three decades of iron-clad rule in the powerhouse nation of the Arab world.

Vice President Omar Suleiman announced the resignation on state television and said he was transferring authority to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to "run the affairs of the country."


Tens of thousands of emotional anti-government protesters erupted in deafening cheers on the streets of Cairo after the announcement.

"Egypt is free!" they chanted.

It was a moment anti-government protesters had been waiting for after 18 days of relentless demonstrations that called for Mubarak's departure.

U.S. President Barack Obama said he was notified of Mubarak's decision Friday morning and was closely watching the extraordinary developments unfold in Egypt, a key U.S. ally. He will make a statement Friday afternoon, the White House said.

A source with close connections to Persian Gulf government leaders told CNN that Mubarak had gone to the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Source : http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/11/egypt.protests/index.html?hpt=T1

Hosni Mubarak resigned Friday

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