The Security Council UN called for "immediate end" of violence in Libya and condemned the suppression of demonstrators led by Colonel Muammar Gadhafi regime, during an emergency meeting devoted to the crisis in that country. The 15 Security Council members "condemn the violence and the use of force against civilians, deploring the repression of peaceful demonstrators and expresses its deep regret at the deaths of hundreds of civilians," said Maria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti, Brazil's ambassador at the UN and president of the Council.
"They call an immediate end to violence and to take measures to respond to the legitimate demands of the population," the diplomat said by reading a statement from the Security Council. Viotti said Council members "called on the Government of Libya to take responsibility for protecting the population.
They called on the Libyan authorities to exercise restraint, to respect human rights and international humanitarian law." Council members "called for international assistance for the people of Libya" and "stressed the need for the Libyan government respects freedom of peaceful assembly and expression, including freedom of press," the statement said.
The Security Council also expresses in the words "its deep concern for the safety of foreigners in Libya." It is the first time the Security Council discusses the wave of protests that shook the Middle East and North Africa. In Tripoli, the Libyan leader said he would not leave power, he is "willing to die in Libya" and combat the "rats that create unrest" until the "last drop of his blood.
In a defiant speech from the ruins of their homes in the United States bombed Tripoli in 1986 and now converted into a museum that the scheme called "Casa de la Resistance," Gadhafi urged to meet tonight from the demonstrators to the Libyans that "amen" in time join defections in his government.
"I'm not going to go, I will die as a martyr." Libyan Interior Minister and army general, Abdul Younis Farha, announced his resignation and urged the military to join the people in their struggle for their legitimate demands. They have also waived the Libyan embassy in the United States, Poland, India, Indonesia, Australia, Malaysia, Bangladesh and to the Arab League, based in Cairo.
They have also submitted his resignation on number two from Libya to the UN and other senior diplomat accredited to the Beijing government. After protests against the regime of Libya Muammar Gadhafi, the latter received the support of former President of Cuba Fidel Castro and the president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega.
In his most recent column "Reflection," Castro, who came to power in 1959, 10 years before Gadhafi, and was president until 2008, said that NATO, by order of the United States will intervene in Libya, "perhaps matter of hours or very short days. "" You may agree or disagree with Gadhafi "but" will have to wait long enough to know how much is strictly true or false or a mixture of facts of any kind "as is happening in Libya, says the former Cuban president.
The leader of the Cuban revolution in its text does not mention the product more civilian deaths in the protests. From Managua, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega also reached out to Gadhafi. "I have been communicating by phone with him (Gadhafi), I've been talking to him, we have been talking on the phone, of course he is fighting a great battle again, few battles Gadhafi has had to fight!".
According to Ortega, in the present circumstances Gadhafi is looking for ways to talk ", but (to) defend the national unity that is not going to disintegrate the country, who will not be anarchy in the country." The Sandinista leader described what happens in Libya as a "terrible situation where there is a conspiracy of any kind and fighting, looting of trade, among other situations."
"They call an immediate end to violence and to take measures to respond to the legitimate demands of the population," the diplomat said by reading a statement from the Security Council. Viotti said Council members "called on the Government of Libya to take responsibility for protecting the population.
They called on the Libyan authorities to exercise restraint, to respect human rights and international humanitarian law." Council members "called for international assistance for the people of Libya" and "stressed the need for the Libyan government respects freedom of peaceful assembly and expression, including freedom of press," the statement said.
The Security Council also expresses in the words "its deep concern for the safety of foreigners in Libya." It is the first time the Security Council discusses the wave of protests that shook the Middle East and North Africa. In Tripoli, the Libyan leader said he would not leave power, he is "willing to die in Libya" and combat the "rats that create unrest" until the "last drop of his blood.
In a defiant speech from the ruins of their homes in the United States bombed Tripoli in 1986 and now converted into a museum that the scheme called "Casa de la Resistance," Gadhafi urged to meet tonight from the demonstrators to the Libyans that "amen" in time join defections in his government.
"I'm not going to go, I will die as a martyr." Libyan Interior Minister and army general, Abdul Younis Farha, announced his resignation and urged the military to join the people in their struggle for their legitimate demands. They have also waived the Libyan embassy in the United States, Poland, India, Indonesia, Australia, Malaysia, Bangladesh and to the Arab League, based in Cairo.
They have also submitted his resignation on number two from Libya to the UN and other senior diplomat accredited to the Beijing government. After protests against the regime of Libya Muammar Gadhafi, the latter received the support of former President of Cuba Fidel Castro and the president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega.
In his most recent column "Reflection," Castro, who came to power in 1959, 10 years before Gadhafi, and was president until 2008, said that NATO, by order of the United States will intervene in Libya, "perhaps matter of hours or very short days. "" You may agree or disagree with Gadhafi "but" will have to wait long enough to know how much is strictly true or false or a mixture of facts of any kind "as is happening in Libya, says the former Cuban president.
The leader of the Cuban revolution in its text does not mention the product more civilian deaths in the protests. From Managua, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega also reached out to Gadhafi. "I have been communicating by phone with him (Gadhafi), I've been talking to him, we have been talking on the phone, of course he is fighting a great battle again, few battles Gadhafi has had to fight!".
According to Ortega, in the present circumstances Gadhafi is looking for ways to talk ", but (to) defend the national unity that is not going to disintegrate the country, who will not be anarchy in the country." The Sandinista leader described what happens in Libya as a "terrible situation where there is a conspiracy of any kind and fighting, looting of trade, among other situations."
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