Scores killed in Libya protests

Human Rights Watch says 84 people killed in past three days during rallies 
calling for ousting of Muammar Gaddafi.
Last Modified: 19 Feb 2011 08:23 GMT

Crowds have taken to the streets in Libya demanding more representation and the 
overthrow of Gaddafi

Security forces in Libya have killed scores of pro-democracy protesters in 
demonstrations demanding the ousting of Muammar Gaddafi, the country's long 
time ruler.

Human Rights Watch said on Saturday that 84 people had died over the past three 
days.

A doctor in Benghazi told Al Jazeera that he had seen 70 bodies at the city's 
hospital on Friday in one of the harshest crackdowns against peaceful 
protesters thus far.

"I have seen it on my own eyes: At least 70 bodies at the hospital," said 
Wuwufaq al-Zuwail, a physician.

Al-Zuwail said that security forces had also prevented ambulances reaching the 
site of the protests.

The Libyan government has also blocked Al Jazeera TV signal in the country and 
people have also reported that the network's website is inaccessible from there.

Protesters shot

Marchers mourning dead protesters in Benghazi, Libya's second-largest city, 
reportedly come under fire from security forces, as protests in the 
oil-exporting North African nation entered their fifth day on Friday.
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Mohamed el-Berqawy, an engineer in Benghazi, told Al Jazeera that the city was 
the scene of a "massacre," and that four demonstrators had been killed.

"Where is the United Nations ... where is (US president Barack) Obama, where is 
the rest of the world, people are dying on the streets," he said. "We are ready 
to die for our country."

Verifying news from Libya has been difficult since protests began, thanks to 
restrictions on journalists entering the country, as well as internet and 
mobile phone black outs imposed by the government.

Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters seeking to oust Gaddafi took to 
the streets across Libya on Thursday in what organisers called a "day of rage" 
modelled after similar protests in Tunisia and Egypt that ousted longtime 
leaders there. Gaddafi has ruled Libya since 1969.

Pro-government supporters also were out on the streets on Friday, according to 
the Libyan state television, which broadcasted images labelled "live" that 
showed men chanting slogans in support of Gaddafi.

The pro-Gaddafi crowd was seen singing as it surrounded his limousine as it 
crept along a road in the capital, Tripoli, packed with people carrying his 
portrait.

Deadly clashes

Deadly clashes broke out in several towns on Thursday after the opposition 
called for protests in a rare show of defiance inspired by uprisings in other 
Arab states and the toppling of Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and Tunisia's Zine El 
Abidine Ben Ali.

Twitter Reaction
Libya Protests
Solilibya profile

Solilibya RT @AliLePointe: TEMPLATE TO EMAIL #OBAMA! JUST ADD YOUR NAME!!! 
http://tiny.cc/9qiqz #libya #feb17 #gaddafi #gaddaficrime #benghazi #tripoli 
#egypt #tunisia about 1 minute ago · reply
Solilibya profile

Solilibya RT @Tripolitanian: #Gaddafi knows Libyans won't fight Libyans - he is 
shipping in hundreds of African mercenaries to kill protesters #Libya #Feb17 
about 1 minute ago · reply
marwame profile

marwame GO #Libya! RT @libyan4life: #Gaddafi made a massive error in 
calculating how to break up protests, he didn't factor in our will! #Feb17 55 
minutes ago · reply
HanenB profile

HanenB القذافي: 
اوباما أصله 
بو عمامة!! 
الله يكون في 
عون الشعب 
الليبي #libya #feb17 #gaddafi 
http://t.co/BMKhTz1 about 1 minute ago · reply
FreeLibyanman profile

FreeLibyanman RT @AliLePointe: #NPR interview with a nurse from a #benghazi 
#Libya hospital nurse! Reality on the ground #gaddafi brutality #feb17 
http://tiny.cc/8rpcw 57 minutes ago · reply
Join the conversation

The worst clashes appeared to have taken place in the eastern Cyrenaica region, 
centred on Benghazi, where support for Gaddafi has historically been weaker 
than in other parts of the country.

Libya's Quryna newspaper reported on Thursday that the regional security chief 
had been removed from his post over the deaths of protesters in Bayda.

Libyan opposition groups in exile claimed that Bayda citizens had joined with 
local police forces to take over Bayda and fight against government-backed 
militias, whose ranks are allegedly filled by recruits from other African 
nations.

Political analysts say Libyan oil wealth may give the government the capacity 
to smooth over social problems and
reduce the risk of an Egypt-style revolt.

Gaddafi's opponents say they want political freedoms, respect for human rights 
and an end to corruption.

The government has proposed the doubling of government employees' salaries and 
released 110 suspected anti-government figures who oppose him - tactics similar 
to those adopted by other Arab governments facing recent mass protests.

Gaddafi also has been meeting with tribal leaders to solicit their support



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