Saturday, February 19, 2011

The protests are charged 84 people in Libya and maintain the pulse in Bahrain

.- The demonstrations demanding political change has taken in the last three days in Libya life of 84 people, according to the humanitarian organization Human Rights Watch, while in Bahrain today gave the army control of the Plaza Lulu (Pearl ) from Manama to the police. In Yemen, Sana'a University in Yemen's capital of riots that caused one death and a deputy in Algeria seriously wounded by police who surrounded the Square on May Day to abort a high concentration.

In Libya, the security forces have killed 84 people, according to the latest statement from Human Rights Watch (HRW), during the last three days of protests in several cities to demand political change to the regime of Muammar al-Gaddafi which carries 41 years in power. According to HRW, which bases its figures on telephone conversations with hospitals and witnesses, "the security forces fired Al Gaddafi citizens who simply demand a change." Amnesty International (AI) stood at 46 people killed in the past three days, accused authorities of "excessive" use of force against "demonstrators calling for political change" and said most of the victims were hit in "the head, chest and neck." In Algeria, the deputy of the opposition Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD) Tahar Besbes today was seriously injured by police during protests in Algiers to demand changes in the scheme, the spokesman told Efe that political force , MOHC Belabo.

Hundreds of police tried to stop in the streets adjacent to the Plaza del Primero de Mayo in central Algiers, the protesters began a march to demand reforms in the power to call for the National Coordinator for Change and Democracy. The protesters chanted "murderer power", "Down oppression" and other slogans against the regime and the Algerian president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

In Bahrain, the Army withdrew today from the Pearl Plaza in Manama, which has become the reference point of the protests of activists, but the number of police on the scene. Several hundred people are now maintained in the vicinity of the plaza, after initially trying the police used tear gas to disperse those who are concentrated.

Military units were deployed last 17 on the streets of Manama, where riot police evicted them from the square to several thousand protesters who have camped two days demanding political reforms and improvements in living conditions. The return of the military to barracks call coincides with a new crown prince of Bahrain, Sheikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the opposition to "address all issues with sincerity." Bahrain protests began on Feb.

14 in the heat of the popular uprisings of Tunisia and Egypt. In Yemen, at least one person was killed and several wounded by gunfire from a group of government supporters against opposition activists a manifestation of the regime in Sana'a University, witnesses reported. The pressure of the Yemeni opposition groups forced the second of February to President of Yemen Ali Abdullah Saleh, in power since 1990, reversing constitutional reforms which sought to perpetuate themselves in power.

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