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Technology News Update

Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Planes 'attacking protesters' in Libya

There are reports of airstrikes happening in at least two Libyan cities this morning (NZ time).

The city of Misratah, east of Tripoli, is latest to be attacked by airstrikes, Al Jazeera reports in its live blog.

Heavy artillery fire is devastating buildings as tanks roll into the city, witnesses are telling the Arabic news network.

Earlier, there were reports from Libya's capital that warplanes and helicopters were bombing protesters in the city, where veteran dictator Muammar Gaddafi clings to power.

Adel Mohamed Saleh, who called himself a political activist in Tripoli, told Al Jazeera news the aerial bombing had initially targeted a funeral procession.

"What we are witnessing today is unimaginable. Warplanes and helicopters are indiscriminately bombing one area after another. There are many, many dead," Mr Saleh told Al Jazeera television in a live broadcast.

"Our people are dying. It is the policy of scorched earth." he said. "Every 20 minutes they are bombing."

http://www.middleeast.org/mereport/go.php?bWlkZGxlZWFzdC5vcmd8fG1lcnx8aHR0cDovL3d3dy5uemhlcmFsZC5jby5uei93b3JsZC9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUuY2ZtP2NfaWQ9MiZvYmplY3RpZD0xMDcwNzcxMw==

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Libyan 'massacre' fears as protests grow

 Anti-regime protesters in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi have reportedly seized army vehicles and weapons amid worsening turmoil in the African nation.

A local witness told Al Jazeera that a section of the troops had joined the protesters as chaos swept the streets of the city, worst hit by the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year old rule.

Mohamed, a doctor from Al Jalaa hospital in Benghazi, confirmed to Al Jazeera that members of the military had sided with the protesters.

"We are still receiving serious injuries, I can confirm 13 deaths in our hospital. However, the good news is that people are cheering and celebrating outside after receiving news that the army is siding with the people," he said.

"But there is still a brigade that is against the demonstrators. For the past three days demonstrators have been shot at by this brigade, called Al-Sibyl brigade."

Human Rights Watch said it feared a catastrophe, with more than 200 people dead in the bloody crackdown.

More detailed information is difficult to obtain, as western journalists are banned from Libya.

Meanwhile, Bahrain came under fresh pressure to introduce reforms and thousands rallied for change in Morocco.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague urged Arab nations to speak out and said he would raise the iron-fisted crackdown with EU ministers beginning a two-day meeting in Brussels late on Sunday.

Libya bluntly warned the European Union it will "suspend cooperation" in the fight against illegal immigration if the bloc does not stop fanning pro-democracy protests, the EU presidency said.

When the ambassador of Hungary, which holds the EU chair until the end of June, was summoned by Tripoli on Thursday, it was "signalled" to Europe that "if the EU were to continue to encourage demonstrations, Libya would suspend its cooperation with the EU in the fight against illegal immigration".

Libyan security forces clashed with anti-regime protesters in the Mediterranean city of Misrata, 200km from Tripoli, witnesses said.

Demonstrators took to the streets there to show support for residents of Benghazi, 1000km from the capital, who have endured the brunt of a crackdown in eastern Libya, they said.

The witnesses said Libyan security forces backed by "African mercenaries" had been shooting into the crowds "without discrimination".

In Libya's second largest city, Benghazi, there were protests against Gaddafi's four-decade rule and new fighting, lawyer Mohammed al-Mughrabi told AFP by telephone.

"Lawyers are demonstrating outside the Northern Benghazi court; there are thousands here. We have called it Tahrir Square Two," he said, referring to the Cairo square central to protests that brought down Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Separately, others are "storming the garrison" and "taking fire from snipers," Mughrabi said, without elaborating.

"At least 200 have been killed altogether (since the outbreak of unrest this week) but we can't verify from hospital. We are pleading for the Red Cross to send field hospitals. We can't take it any more."

Bahrain's Sunni Muslim ruling family came under increased pressure to open in-depth negotiations with the Shi'ite-led opposition on Sunday, as protesters stayed camped out in the capital Manama's Pearl Square.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for immediate reforms and blasted as unacceptable any violence by the Gulf kingdom's security forces.

"Bahrain had started on some reform and we want to see them get back to that as quickly as possible," she told ABC's This Week program in an interview conducted on Friday.

Bahraini Crown Prince Sheikh Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa has offered to open a sweeping national dialogue with the opposition, after a deadly police raid on Pearl Square on Thursday, which was followed by the army deploying to quell anti-government protests.

Morocco became the latest in a string of Arab nations rocked by protest, as thousands gathered in several cities demanding political reform and limits on the powers of King Mohammed VI.

Between 3000 and 4000 people demonstrated in the capital Rabat, shouting "The people want change" and denouncing corruption.

Libya-watchers are now waiting anxiously to see if protests spread to western Libya and the capital, Tripoli.

Most violence is confined to the east of the country where unemployment is high and Gaddafi's grip said to be weaker. But they stressed that his regime had survived for 41 years through brutality and he showed no signs of losing his nerve.

William Hague, Britain's Foreign Secretary, condemned Libya for firing on demonstrators. "This is clearly unacceptable and horrifying," he said. "Governments must respond to the legitimate aspirations of their people, rather than resort to the use of force, and must respect the right to peaceful protest."

However, experts admitted the British Government and business interests were watching the situation closely. BP declined to comment on the situation today but said it was concerned for its 140 employees in Libya. Security experts said all UK companies in Libya had contingency plans if the uprising spread.

Douglas Alexander, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, said: "From Libya to Bahrain, many past assumptions have been dissolved by these demonstrations. Britain should speak out against violence, speak up for human rights in all countries and make clear that moves towards democracy are the best guarantee of long-term stability."

Critics claim that British economic interests in Libya had muted support for the uprising there. British exports to Libya have risen to more than £400m and are set to increase dramatically as oil and gas investments by Shell and BP deevelop.

Protests have continued to grow in strength and violence after the first demonstration last Tuesday, when thousands massed following the arrest of a human rights campaigner.

A Benghazi cleric, Abellah al-Warfali, told al-Jazeera television he had a list of 16 people being buried yesterday, most with bullet wounds. "I saw with my own eyes a tank crushing two people in a car," he said. "They hadn't done any harm to anyone."

Several reports said government-recruited mercenaries were behind the worst violence including sniper attacks and the use of heavy machine guns. A British-based IT consultant, Ahmed Swelim, 26, originally from Benghazi, said relatives told him the situation had reached "critical point".

"People are living in fear since he [Gaddafi] brought in African mercenaries. They are dressing as normal people but doing random killings. They will shoot or cut people's hands off. The shops are shut; there's no medical aid getting in; people have no weapons to defend themselves. The whole city is erupting. People went out to protest peacefully. They want an end to this oppression. The death toll is much higher than reported. There are more than 200 dead. My cousin, a doctor at a main hospital, has seen the bodies. There are more than 1,000 injured."

He said people in Benghazi were desperate. "We need an end to this oppression. It's been 41 years. We've been dreaming of this day. There's no going back. If we go back, the whole area will be wiped out. We know how crazy he is. If we step down, we will be taken out."

The Libyan regime has suppressed the internet. Technical experts reported that 13 globally routed links were withdrawn late on Friday. Foreign journalists are prevented from entering Libya and local reporters are barred from travelling to Benghazi. Al-Jazeera said its signal was being jammed on several frequencies. The state-run media defended the regime.

The Al-Zahf Alakhdar (Green March) newspaper published an editorial entitled: "No leader except Gaddafi!" Elsewhere, the country appeared calm. A government-run newspaper blamed the protests on Zionism and the "traitors of the West". Officials said foreign media had exaggerated the violence.

Sir Richard Dalton, of the foreign affairs think tank Chatham House, described it as the most serious crisis yet faced by Colonel Gaddafi. "It could be the regime is approaching a tipping point that threatens its survival," he said. "We don't know what the willingness of ordinary Libyans will be to take such casualties without coming out in larger numbers.

"It's clear that itis a highly political revolution. It's not economic grievance, although that will be in the background. It's an extraordinary significant event for Libya." He warned that the security forces and protest groups both possessed "considerable capability for ruthlessness".

"It is too early to write off Gaddafi's regime because it is resilient and has a lot of people who will go to considerable lengths to maintain their positions," he warned. Complaints about poor economic and social provisions such as education and health were of long standing, he said.

"The ratio between risk and likely reward is still pointing towards the risk being unacceptably high. In Egypt, when it was clear that the army wasn't going to use live ammunition, the perception of potential for success soared and a lot more people came out on to the streets. That could happen in Libya, but we're still some way from that point because the security forces are still willing to inflict considerable casualties."

He denied UK economic interests in the country would compromise the official response. "It is very much in the UK's political and security interest to work with Libya," he said.

- AFP, INDEPENDENT, AL JAZEERA, AGENCIES

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Libya: leaders say 'to fight to death'

Although government restrictions have complicated the task of compiling a tally, Human Rights Watch said 233 had been killed since last Thursday while the International Federation for Human Rights (IFHR) put the toll at 300-400.

IFHR head Souhayr Belhassen said several eastern cities, including the second city of Benghazi and Sirte, had fallen to demonstrators after army units formerly loyal to Kadhafi had defected.

Libya's al-Jamahiriya Two television and al-Shababia radio were both forced to halt broadcasts after their offices were ransacked, witnesses said.

Although they did manage to resume broadcasts, a number of witnesses said protesters had torched other public buildings in the capital overnight, including police stations and offices of the governing People's Committees.

While his 68-year-old father has yet to address the nation since the unrest erupted last week, his son Saif al-Islam took to the airwaves on Monday to condemn the uprising as a foreign plot that would be crushed.

"Libya is at a crossroads. If we do not agree today on reforms ... rivers of blood will run through Libya," he said in a fiery but rambling speech.

"We will take up arms ... we will fight to the last bullet. We will destroy seditious elements. If everybody is armed, it is civil war, we will kill each other... Libya is not Egypt, it is not Tunisia."

But his insistence the regime would not share the fate of its two north African neighbours and crumble in the face of a popular revolt did not convince those in Tripoli.

"We can hear gunfire outside. It hasn't stopped all day," a resident of a suburb east of Tripoli said by telephone.

"When we heard the unrest was approaching, we stocked up on flour and tomatoes. It's definitely the end of the regime. This has never happened in Libya before. We are praying that it ends quickly."

Witnesses arriving at the western border into Tunisia said that police had abandoned the city of al-Zawiya which had sunk into chaos.

"Libyans are burning everything in sight and they are attacking public buildings," said one witness at the border.

AN assault on Moamer Kadhafi's 41-year rule of Libya spread to Tripoli as protesters torched police stations.

Barely a week after his neighbour Hosni Mubarak was forced from office, the Middle East's longest-ruling leader sent out a warning that he was ready for a fight to the death, despite growing signs that his grip on power was loosening.

The president of Yemen, another ruler who has chalked up more than three decades in power, also defiantly insisted he would only exit if defeated at the ballot box but faced growing calls to quit.

And a top exiled opposition figure said he planned to return to Bahrain, fuelling pressure on the ruling royal family for reform.

While there was fresh violence in several Arab cities, the most dramatic events were in Tripoli where the sound of heavy gunfire broke out in downtown areas for the first time since the uprising began in eastern Libya.

"It's hard to tell who is firing: plainclothes police, supporters or opponents of Kadhafi," said another, who added that he had seen three bodies.

A Libyan newspaper reported that the justice minister had resigned in protest at "the excessive use of force" while several ambassadors, including the envoy to the Arab League, also quit.

Portugal sent a military plane to Tripoli to evacuate its nationals and those of other EU countries while several other European governments warned against all but essential travel.

Norwegian energy giant Statoil said it had begun evacuating non-Libyan staff working in Libya while British energy group BP said it too was making preparations to evacuate some of its staff.

Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh, the region's second longest-ruling leader, also struck a note of defiance against a growing clamour for his departure.

"If they want me to quit, I will only leave through the ballot box," Saleh told reporters as protesters, including opposition MPs, gathered outside Sanaa University.

In the country's south, police shot dead a protester in Aden, where protests have raged killing 12 people and wounding dozens since February 16. And tens of thousands of Huthi rebels rallied in northern Saada to demand Saleh's ouster.

While Yemen is the poorest Arab country, wealthy states have also been caught up in the wave of unrest.

In Bahrain, where a mainly Shiite population has long chafed against being ruled by a Sunni royal family, protesters geared up for a rally they hoped would bring tens of thousands to the central Pearl Square on Tuesday.

"We will stay here for as long as it takes," said student Qassem Hassan, as he passed out fruit and water to protesters.

Hassan Mashaima, leader of Bahrain's opposition Haq movement, said he would return to Manama on Tuesday, despite the threat of terrorism charges.

The unrest has also spread to Morocco where five burned bodies were found in a bank set ablaze during protests on Sunday in the northern town of Al-Hoceima demanding limits on the powers of King Mohammed VI.

 

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Libya: Over 80 dead in protests

Libyan security forces have killed at least 84 people in a violent response during three days of protests, said the New York-based Human Rights Watch. On its part, the Libyan government shut off Internet early on Saturday.

The protests calling for the departure of Moammar Gadhafi, Libya's leader since 1969, have reported mainly in the east of the country. "The Libyan authorities should immediately end attacks on peaceful protesters and protect them from assault by pro-government armed groups," the organization said in its statement.

Most of the deaths were reported in the city of Benghazi, where doctors told the Associated Press Friday that 35 bodies had been admitted, on top of more than a dozen killed the day before.

Internet was also cut off in Libya in the early hours of the morning Saturday, reported the U.S.-based Arbor Networks security company, which detected a total cessation of online traffic in the North African country just after 2 a.m. local time.

At least five cities of eastern Libya have seen protests and clashes in recent days. In one of them, Beyida, a hospital official said Friday that the bodies of at least 23 protesters slain over the past 48 hours were at his facility, which was treating about 500 wounded.

Forces from the military's elite Khamis Brigade moved into Benghazi, Beyida and several other cities, residents said. They were accompanied by militias that seemed to include foreign mercenaries, they added. 

http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/libya-over-80-dead-protests

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Day of Rage' brings Libya protest deaths to at least 24, says human rights group

Day of Rage' protests in Libya yesterday have increased pressure on Muammar Qaddafi, the Arab world's longest-ruling dictator, with funerals today potentially serving as a catalyst for more violence.

At least 24 people have been killed in Libya's antigovernment protests since activists took to the streets late Tuesday night and staged a "Day of Rage" yesterday. A number of other activists have been wounded in the clashes with security forces, reports Human Rights Watch.

Libya’s protests, which are expected to continue today, come on the heels of popular revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt that resulted in the removal of the leaders of both nations. Libyan demonstrators are seeking the removal of Muammar Qaddafi, the Arab world’s longest-ruling dictator. He has controlled the country since taking power in a 1969 coup.

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Libya, Jordan And Yemen Hit By Renewed Unrest

Renewed civil unrest inspired by the recent uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt is being reported in three other Middle Eastern countries - Libya, Yemen and Jordan.

Libyan authorities have deployed troops in the city of Benghazi following night time rallies over the killings of more than 20 protesters.

A major demonstration is taking place in the northern city of Tobruk and in Tripoli three people have reportedly been killed in an attempted jail break, according to security officials.

In Yemen, at least two people have reportedly been killed and dozens injured in protests in the southern city of Aden.

In the city of Taiz two activists have been killed and seven people have been injured after a hand grenade thrown from a car exploded, according to witnesses.

Yemeni security forces and pro-government supporters have clashed with protesters demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule.

It is the eighth consecutive day of protests in the country.

 

Anti-government protesters attend the weekly Friday prayers in the southern Yemeni city of Taiz

Anti-government protesters attend prayers in Taiz, Yemen

 

Witnesses said one protester was shot and four were wounded as police tried to disperse crowds in Aden.

Thousands of campaigners have taken part in rallies in various parts of Aden, which have been sparked by the killings of six people earlier this week.

At least 10,000 people also took to the streets of Taiz but state television put the number at one million.

Meanwhile in Jordan there's been a seventh day of demonstrations in the capital Amman.

Eight people were reported to have been injured in clashes between government supporters and people calling for more freedoms and lower food prices.

Elsewhere in Iran thousands of government supporters called for the execution of opposition leaders in the Iranian capital of Tehran, following last week's anti-government demonstrations.

 

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

Injured protestor stretchered into a Benghazi hospital

 

Libya has issued no casualty or injury figures after two days of protests.

But Human Rights Watch, quoting sources in the country, said at least 24 people have been killed by Libyan security forces.

Libya exerts strict controls on media and communications, making independent verification of claims about the unrest difficult to obtain.

Reports on social network sites say up to 50 people have been killed in protests in several Libyan cities.

A privately-owned Benghazi newspaper quoted a security source saying seven protestors were killed in the city overnight by live fire.

 

Supporters of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi hold his pictures as they take part in a pro-government rally in Tripoli

Tripoli rally in support of Libya's leader Muammar Gaddafi

 

Libya's state news agency, JANA, has made no mention of any violence. However, it has reported that "popular rallies" have taken place in "various Libyan cities to express support for the leader".

A later report from the agency said Muammar Gaddafi had toured the capital, Tripoli, to rally support for his rule of more than 40 years.

Political analysts say Libya's oil wealth will probably enable it resist demands for change, unlike neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt.

Tunisia's former President Zine al Abidine Ben Ali is said to be in a grave condition in hospital in Saudi Arabia. His 23-year rule was ended by a popular revolt on January 14.

Egyptians meanwhile have held a nationwide "Victory March" to celebrate the overthrow a week ago of Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.

Mike Bradbury, Sky News Online
http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Renewed-civil-unrest-inspired-by-Egypt-and-Tunisia-uprisings-hits-Libya-Yemen-and-Jordan/Article/201102315936118 

 

 

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Bahrain army controls capital; Crackdown on protesters by Police in Pearl Square; 5 dead

 Without warning, hundreds of heavily armed riot police officers rushed into Pearl Square Manama early on Thursday, firing shotguns, tear gas and concussion grenades at the thousands of demonstrators who were sleeping there as part of a widening protest against the nation's absolute monarchy.


At least five people died, some of them reportedly killed in their sleep with scores of shotgun pellets to the face and chest, according to a witness and three doctors who received the dead and at least 200 wounded at a hospital here. The witness and the physicians spoke in return for anonymity for fear of official reprisals.

The abrupt crackdown on what had been a carnival-like protest injected a new anger into demonstrations calling on King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa to enact reforms. "Death to Khalifa, death to Khalifa," hundreds of protesters chanted on Thursday outside a hospital as women ran screaming through wards and corridors seeking lost children.

"They made the people feel safe," said a nurse, Fatima Ali, referring to what had initially seemed to be official tolerance of the huge protest in Pearl Square, emulating an uprising in Cairo's Tahrir Square that brought down President Hosni Mubarak. "Then they killed them."

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