Thursday, September 22, 2011

Bingkisan dari Libya



GHADAFFI LIHATLAH APA YANG KAU TELAH BUAT PADA BUMI KELAHIRANMU DAN RAKYAT MU LIBYA? SEDIH KAN LIHAT SEBUAH LAGI NEGARA ISLAM TUMBANG! SUBAHANAALLAH!!!

“We will never forget you. The victory is absolutely coming.”
A woman displays her solidarity with protesters in Libya and Syria during an anti-Saleh demonstration in Taiz, Yemen on June 21, 2011. The writing on her hand reads, ”We will never forget you. The victory is absolutely coming.”
adakah ini kekejaman gadaffi @ propa barat?

mass grave that was found in Tajoura, Tripoli



Libya rebels seize Gaddafi compound
Triumphant rebels seized Muammar Gaddafi’s compound in Tripoli on Tuesday after a fierce battle with a loyalist rearguard but there was no word on the fate of the Libyan leader who vowed again to fight “to the end.”


Reuters journalists watched rebel fighters stream through the sprawling Bab al-Aziziya headquarters compound, firing in the air in celebration after hours of heavy clashes. But it was unclear whether the “Brother Leader” or his sons were still somewhere in the complex’s maze of buildings and bunkers.


Defensive fire died away and hundreds of jubilant rebels poured in. Some smashed a statue of Gaddafi. Others hunted through dozens of buildings, unchallenged, seizing weaponry and vehicles. The rebels’ envoy to the United Nations said the area was “totally in the hands of the revolutionaries.”


One man shouted: “It’s over. Gaddafi is finished.”


SPOILS OF WAR   A rebel celebrates while wearing a hat, necklace and scepter thought to be taken from Col. Moammar Qaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound, in Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 23, 2011.  Qaddafi’s whereabouts remain unknown; in a radio address, the dictator called his withdrawal “tactical” and vowed “martyrdom” or victory against the rebels and NATO forces.  (Photo: Bryan Denton / The New York Times via Redux / MSNBC.com; caption via MSNBC and the Times)

Tripoli, Libya. Fighters inside Gaddhafi’s Bab Al-Aziziya compound, reveling in their victory. The NTC fighters attacked the large compound from four angles, finally over-running it. The event was broadcast on a number of channels, with the jubilation evident from the raucous honking, shouting and celebratory gunfire. Some triumphant fighters came out with Gaddhafi’s clothes, another with a gold-plated automatic weapon. This was all in all, a pretty amazing thing to happen.
Check out a full collection of photographs from Bab Al-Aziziya on The Atlantic’s In Focus blog.
In 1969, 27-year-old Capt. Muammar Gaddafi overthrew the king of Libya in a bloodless coup, promoted himself to Colonel, and declared the country a socialist state. Ever since, he’s remained one of the world’s most controversial leaders, and a man of profound contradictions. He describes Libya as a popular democracy, but his word is law. He has sponsored terrorists and violent revolutionaries, but has frequently acknowledged his actions while avidly courting Western approval.
Game over..?
A religious leader, left, and hundreds of Benghazi residents prayed Friday over the body of a rebel fighter killed at the front the previous day.

Children in Benghazi, the rebel stronghold, studied the Quran at a mosque as part of the holy month of Ramadan. (AP Photo)

Libya. August 6. A fighter loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is captured by rebel forces as they advance on the town of Bir Ghanam, which according to the rebel commanders was eventually captured, 50 miles south of Tripoli. [Photo: Florent Marcie/AFP/Getty Images]
Libyan rebel forces are pushing west, continuing the fight to take control of cities and towns controlled by Moammar Gadhafi’s forces.
Rebel commander Col. Jumma Ibrahim told Karin Laub of the AP:
Now he can only defend himself against us. Our main destination is Tripoli, but we cannot jump directly to Tripoli. We go one by one.

Members of the Obeidi tribesmen mourn at the news and funeral for the assassinated tribal leader Gen Abdul Fattah Younes. 
Members of the rebel fighting force killed the top rebel military commander in Libya, Gen Abdul Fattah Younes, in Benghazi this last Thursday. Gen Abdul Fattah Younes was a former commander in the Kaddafi regime, and although he had defected to the rebel side, many questioned his true loyalty. In fact, his assassination took place as the General traveled to a meeting with the National Transitional Council, who had summoned him to inquire about any lingering connections he may have had with the Kaddafi government.
Yet the National Transitional Council is going to great lengths to veil any words of condemnation and have taken to calling the general a martyr, despite his alleged treasonous acts. That’s because Gen Abdul Fattah Younes was a leading member in the Obeidi tribe, one of the largest and most well armed Tribal groups in the East, whose loyalties he commanded.
His assassination was followed by a day of chaotic violence in the rebel capital, Benghazi, where members of the Obeidi tribe fired guns into the air, and in one case, stormed a hotel. The violence sheds a spotlight on the fissures within the rebel alliance, and the outbreak of tribal animosities seems to undermine the sense of national unity the ruling council has tried to exude, especially to its international patrons.
What’s more, the specter of tribal warfare is discouraging the Western nations who have supported the NATO operation in Libya, and have formally recognized the NTC. The possibility that civil war could erupt following the deposition of Kaddafi has always lingered in the minds of Western Leaders. Indeed, the United States hesitation in recognizing the NTC may have been due to a lack of faith in the organizational capacity the rebels have to unite the nation’s disparate groups under a single banner. It seems their fears may not have been unfounded.  
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THE REVOLUTIONARY WOMEN OF LIBYA: Mother and 17 year old daughter who are an example of the masses of Libyan women who have volunteered to take up the government weapons training and government issued weapons on offer and to run one of the very few checkpoints in Tripoli. Masses of women are also fighting on the frontline.
Supporters of Muammar Gaddafi participate in a demonstration in Tripoli, Libya, 28 July 2011. Photograph: Hamza Turkia/XinHua/Xinhua Press/Corbis
Images by Jeremy R. Young from Monday’s episode, “The US and the New Middle East: Libya,” airing 2230 GMT on Al Jazeera English.

Libyan rebels prayed near a truck with a mounted weapon on the frontline south of the town of Bir al-Ghanim. Rebels at Bir al-Ghanim hold the high ground on the outskirts of the town, their closest position to Tripoli, about 50 miles away.

Zintan, Libya. July 14. Libyan citizens mourn over the bodies of eight rebels killed by loyalist troops Wednesday, during a funeral in Zintan. [Photo: Ammar Awad/Reuters]

Things Are Not “Normal” In Benghazi
Libyan protesters carry a 100-meters (yard) rebellion flag through the streets of the rebel-held Benghazi during a demonstration against Moammar Gadhafi, Libya, Friday, July 1, 2011. 
Rebel fighters also demonstrated other skills at their graduation ceremony.

Tearful Libyans celebrated in Benghazi after learning that the International Criminal Court in The Hague had issued an arrest warrant for Muammar el-Qaddafi, one of his sons and his intelligence chief, accusing them of crimes against humanity. (Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters)

“We will never forget you. The victory is absolutely coming.”
A woman displays her solidarity with protesters in Libya and Syria during an anti-Saleh demonstration in Taiz, Yemen on June 21, 2011. The writing on her hand reads, ”We will never forget you. The victory is absolutely coming.”
[Photo: Suhaib Salem/Reuters]
 A Libyan woman holding a Kingdom of Libya flag walks past a caricature of Muammar Gaddafi near the court house in Benghazi June 8, 2011.

Artist Salhen Obaidi cleans his hands after painting a mural in downtown Benghazi on May 15. Hundreds of new paintings and graffiti decorate the city of Benghazi since the rebels took control of the city. (Rodrigo Abd/AP)
From a great piece by Rory Mulholland over at The Guardian, The Libyan artists driving Gaddafi to the wall:
A Libyan volunteer jumps over comrades during a military training course in Benghazi before going to the front line. After three weeks of intense training, the volunteers are ready to fight forces loyal to Col. Muammar Gaddafi, rebel authorities say. (AP Photo)


Men gathered outside a casino converted into a makeshift mosque on the a passenger ferry during a trip from Misurata to Benghazi.


Libyan Muslims performed their evening prayer at Benghazi’s Revolution Square.

Children in Misurata, Libya watch a cultural event put on by rebels from atop a tank. Photo Credit: Rodrigo Abd/AP via the Guardian

A family walking on Tripoli Street in Misurata
A Libyan girl looks at pictures of people killed or missing since the uprising began three months ago on the wall of court house in Benghazi’s Revolution Square on May 15.
Libya: rebellion continues - The Big Picture - Boston.com

The general situation in Libya remains extremely tense and uncertain, and the situation in a number of locations is particularly volatile, creating ever-greater health care needs.
Flying the Rebel Flag on the Way to the Eastern City of Ajdabiya, March 20.

A group of people pose on a rooftop in Misurata, Libya, where a shell crashed through during a recent bombardment by Gaddafi forces. Photo courtesy of a citizen journalist in Misurata. (Taken with instagram)

featured in todays Guardian, are photographs from Saeed Khan, a photo-journalist documenting the children of Benghazi who are occupying the roles left vacant by adults as they fight in the rebel forces against Gaddafi’s troops.
Mindblowing captures….
Rebel forces celebrate upon returning to liberated territory following the NATO bombing of Gaddafi forces in Ajdabiya (Reuters)

A Libyan refugee who fled unrest in Libya stands at a refugee camp near the southern Libyan and Tunisian border crossing of Dehiba. (Reuters)

Ajdabiya, Libya: Little rebels pose with ammo belts during Friday’s prayers. Photo Credit: Rodrigo Abd/AP via the Guardian

This is Samar Hassan, now 12 years old. She was the screaming 5-year old girlin the striking photo taken by the late Chris Hondros, a photo that has become emblematic of the Iraq war.  She had never seen the famous photo of her, blood-spattered, the  night her parents were killed by American soldiers in Tal Afar in 2005.  She now lives in Mosul, with her older sister and her sister’s husband.  
The photograph of Samar is frozen in history, but her life moved on, across a trajectory that is emblematic of what so many Iraqis have endured. In a country whose health care system has almost no ability to treat the psychological aspects of trauma, thousands of Iraqis are left alone with their torment.
Read more at the New York Times

Girls pose for a photograph next to a tank used by other children to play during an anti Moammar Gadhafi march in Benghazi, Libya, Tuesday, May 3, 2011. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd) (via Pictures of the Week: May 6, 2011 | Plog — World, National Photos, Photography and Reportage — The Denver Post)

ManaKedai.com - aku akan updatekan lagi gambar2 Libya bila kelapangan..insyaAllah...

Jom lihat PHOTO GLOBAL YANG LAIN DI SINI- KLIK!

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