Abandoned vehicles in rows of several kilometers off the pump, motorists exchanging angry shouting match with soldiers guarding gas stations and many shops were closed part of the picture of Tripoli, the Libyan capital, in what should have been a day. Multiply in ways that increasingly, residents in the Libyan capital are feeling all kinds of disorders related to lack of supplies.
The shortage is a dramatic indication of how the rebellion of nearly three months in Libya, and the resulting chaos is affecting daily life in the bastion of Moammar Gadhafi and other parts of the West of Libya still under its control. International sanctions have begun to cause significant effects.
Many supply routes are unstable and there is a shortage of qualified personnel in certain sectors and for the city running smoothly.
The shortage is a dramatic indication of how the rebellion of nearly three months in Libya, and the resulting chaos is affecting daily life in the bastion of Moammar Gadhafi and other parts of the West of Libya still under its control. International sanctions have begun to cause significant effects.
Many supply routes are unstable and there is a shortage of qualified personnel in certain sectors and for the city running smoothly.
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