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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Lest we forget Libya
Monday, March 7, 2011 11:07 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:BENGHAZI Long a stronghold of the opposition, Benghazi appears to remain under opposition control. The National Transitional Council, a group with 31 opposition representatives for most of the regions in Libya, met in the eastern port city over the weekend. On Sunday, a group of British special forces who were briefly detained in Benghazi were let go and they returned to Europe, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in a statement. They had been sent there to "initiate contacts with the opposition." BIN JAWAD Pro-government forces appeared to be in control of Bin Jawad on Monday. On Sunday, heavy fighting broke out for control of the city, and medical sources told CNN that at least five people had been killed. MISRATA A witness said the opposition managed to repel government forces Sunday after they converged on a courthouse the opposition was using as a base of operations in the city. The witness described jubilation afterward as people celebrated success over the heavily armed forces. The witness spoke to CNN even as pro-Gadhafi demonstrators in Tripoli declared that the government had taken back Misrata. A doctor at Central Misrata Hospital said 42 people were killed -- 17 from the opposition and 25 from pro-Gadhafi forces -- and 85 were wounded, most of them in civilian clothing, in the fighting Sunday. The youngest victim, 3 years old, was killed by direct fire, the doctor said. U.N. emergency relief coordinator Valerie Amos, in a statement, urged Libyan authorities to "provide access without delay to aid workers to save lives," describing conditions there as dire. RAS LANUF An airstrike targeted the main road heading into the opposition-controlled town of Ras Lanuf on Monday. Earlier, an airstrike hit about five kilometers southeast of the Libyan oil town of Ras Lanuf on Monday. Planes flew over the area, and opposition forces fired anti-aircraft guns in their direction. Some families fled the eastern Libyan town to get away from the situation. Ras Lanuf appeared to be in the control of rebel forces in recent days. TOBRUK Libyan state TV claimed that the government had gained control of the eastern port city on Sunday. "Morning victory, oh people of Libya. Victory city of Tobruk from terrorist gangs," the station said. However, witnesses there said the city remained under opposition control. TRIPOLI The scene in Tripoli appeared relatively calm Monday -- a stark contrast from boisterous pro-Gadhafi demonstrations in the Libyan capital on Sunday. Several hundred expatriates from Mali gathered outside Mali's embassy in Tripoli, seeking assistance in getting out of the Libya. Many were migrant workers who said they no longer had work. Some migrant workers tried to cross into Algeria -- which shares a border with Mali -- but were refused by Algerian officials. ZAWIYA A Libyan government official proclaimed Sunday that the government has taken back Zawiya. CNN was not allowed into the city to verify that independently. CNN also was unable to call people in Zawiya on Sunday; reports said communications had been cut off. On Saturday, the opposition announced that it had prevented pro-government forces from taking Zawiya.
Saturday, March 12, 2011 11:16 PM
OLDENGLANDDRY
Monday, March 14, 2011 4:57 PM
RIONAEIRE
Beir bua agus beannacht
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