and with - the events that stir Libya since Tuesday evening sink into violence. On Friday, protesters and two police officers caught them hanging in Al-Baida, 1 200 km east of Tripoli, the newspaper reported Oea, close to the reformist Seif Al-Islam, son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, on his website.
These abuses are part of the spiral of violence that left at least twenty died since the beginning of the week. Another sign of chaos that pervades the country, protesters torched the headquarters of the local radio station in Benghazi in eastern Libya, after the withdrawal of security forces who ensured the security of the building, witnesses said and an official source at the.
Thousands of anti-government protesters took to the day Friday in the streets of Benghazi, Libya's second city, 1 000 km east of Tripoli, an opposition stronghold. The march occurred a day after a "day of anger" that resulted in deadly clashes with security forces. While the challenge to the regime continued to gain ground, the revolutionary committees, pillars of the Libyan regime had threatened Friday, February 18 the "splinter groups" protesting against Muammar Gaddafi a response "overwhelming." Before the announcement of the new balance in Al-Baida, Human Rights Watch, citing witnesses, estimated that security forces had killed at least twenty-four demonstrators and wounded dozens of others by pulling events " peaceful "against the regime since Tuesday night.
These abuses are part of the spiral of violence that left at least twenty died since the beginning of the week. Another sign of chaos that pervades the country, protesters torched the headquarters of the local radio station in Benghazi in eastern Libya, after the withdrawal of security forces who ensured the security of the building, witnesses said and an official source at the.
Thousands of anti-government protesters took to the day Friday in the streets of Benghazi, Libya's second city, 1 000 km east of Tripoli, an opposition stronghold. The march occurred a day after a "day of anger" that resulted in deadly clashes with security forces. While the challenge to the regime continued to gain ground, the revolutionary committees, pillars of the Libyan regime had threatened Friday, February 18 the "splinter groups" protesting against Muammar Gaddafi a response "overwhelming." Before the announcement of the new balance in Al-Baida, Human Rights Watch, citing witnesses, estimated that security forces had killed at least twenty-four demonstrators and wounded dozens of others by pulling events " peaceful "against the regime since Tuesday night.
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