Thursday, February 17, 2011


Four dead ahead of Libya 'Day of Anger:' opponents
TRIPOLI — At least four people were killed in clashes with Libyan security forces, opposition websites and NGOs said on Thursday, as the country faced a nationwide "Day of Anger" called by cyber-activists.
The websites and a Libyan rights group based in London said the clashes with demonstrators opposed to the regime of Libya's leader Moamer Kadhafi took place on Wednesday in the eastern town of Al-Baida.
"Internal security forces and militias of the Revolutionary Committees used live ammunition to disperse a peaceful demonstration by the youth of Al-Baida," leaving "at least four dead and several injured," according to Libya Watch.
The scale of Thursday's protests will be a test for Kadhafi, 68, who has been in power since 1969, but whose counterparts in neighouring Egypt and Tunisia have been toppled in uprisings over the past month.
One Facebook group urging a "Day of Anger" in Libya, which had 4,400 members on Monday, had seen that number more than double to 9,600 by Wednesday following the Benghazi unrest.
Quryna newspaper said security forces and demonstrators already clashed late on Tuesday in Benghazi, also eastern Libya, in what it branded the work of "saboteurs" among a small group of protesters.
The director of the city's Al-Jala hospital, Abdelkarim Gubeaili, told AFP that 38 people were treated for light injuries.
Security forces intervened to halt a confrontation between Kadhafi supporters and the demonstrators, said the paper which is close to Kadhafi's son, Seif al-Islam.
Both Britain and the European Union called for restraint by the authorities in Libya, whose relations with the West have improved sharply over the past decade after years of virtual pariah status.
The European Union urged Libya to allow "free expression". "We also call for calm and for all violence to be avoided," said a spokeswoman for the bloc's foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.
British Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said: "I call on the Libyan government to respect the right of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression, and on all sides to exercise restraint and refrain from violence.
"We are concerned by reports of the arrest of Libyans who have called for demonstrations or spoken to the media and of violent incidents during demonstrations in Benghazi," he added.
In the aftermath of the Benghazi protests, activists were rounded up in the opposition stronghold on Wednesday, an informed source said.
Amid rivalry on the streets, pro-Kadhafi demonstrations were held in the capital late on Wednesday, on the eve of Thursday's protests to mark the deaths of 14 protesters in an Islamist rally in Benghazi in 2006.

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