More than 1,000 people have died in Misrata since protests began in February, but its volunteer fighters remain defiant The slight, smooth-cheeked young man sat patiently in the hospital reception as gurneys rushed by carrying the dead and wounded from the frontline. He had two crutches at his side. He had one leg. His name was Hassan Ibrahim, he said. Born in 1992 in Misrata, Libya’s third biggest city, home to more than 300,000 people. A first-year engineering student. What had happened? He flipped open a laptop, and called up a picture taken on 18 March, a month after the uprising began, and the day when Muammar Gaddafi sent in five brigades to crush it once and for all. Ibrahim had been walking along a street near the city centre with several friends when a column of tanks suddenly advanced, firing. A shell exploded close to them. The photograph showed his torso, his right leg, and mangled flesh where his left thigh used to be. Bleeding heavily, he was brought to the private clinic that now serves as a trauma hospital. Doctors who just a few weeks earlier had barely even seen a bullet wound had to make a quick decision. They amputated his left leg just below the hip to save his life. Ibrahim grimaced slightly as he stood up, and then said: “What happened to me is nothing compared to others who have given their lives.” This is the spirit of Misrata, a besieged city that has resisted everything that Gaddafi has thrown at it for more than two months, thanks to the solidarity and fierce determination of its people. On Friday night the Libyan government admitted that its military solution in Misrata was not working, with deputy foreign minister Khaled Kaim saying local pro-Gaddafi tribes might be sent into the city to end the rebellion. The rebels even claimed that the tables had been turned on Gaddafi’s forces. “Misrata is free, the rebels have won. Of Gaddafi’s forces, some are killed and others are running away,” rebel spokesman Gemal Salem said. But heavy fighting continued on Saturday, with street battles in the area around the technical college, close to where Gaddafi’s forces have a base. By noon at least 14 rebel fighters had been killed. But each day of anguish only appears to strengthen the people’s resolve. Many thousands of men who had never held a gun before have taken up arms and fight street by street against an enemy with far superior firepower. Other volunteers drive bulldozers or trucks, bringing sand from the beach to stop Gaddafi’s tanks rolling down the streets. Families forced to flee from the outskirts of the city, or the city centre, where the fighting has been heaviest, have been welcomed into strangers’ homes in safer areas. “People who never knew each other are now living together in the same home,” said Ibrahim Amer, 21. “In a big house, you can find 50 or 60 people living together.” Committees have been set up to help the poor and the displaced, who collect free food from warehouses and $10 in cash daily. Women prepare meals, which are sent out to the hundreds of checkpoints manned by young volunteers. The cost of the resistance has been huge. At least 1,000 people have died, picked off by Gaddafi’s snipers, who set up base in the city’s tallest buildings, or by indiscriminate shelling. Thousands more have been injured. “We have done too many amputations here, arms, legs, both legs,” said Dr Khalid Abu Falgha, a member of Misrata’s medical committee. “When this is over we are going to need so many prosthetic limbs.” No one knows when that will be. But this much is certain: nobody in Misrata can contemplate life under Gaddafi again. They will win, or they will die. “If people put their guns down, Gaddafi is going to kill us all,” said Haythem Ibrahim, who runs a large company importing goods from China. He has a US passport, but has never contemplated leaving the city by boat, as he could have. Instead, he spends most days at the hospital with his brother Suleiman, archiving footage of the revolution – and the war. The brothers’ younger twin siblings, 24, a dentist and trainee doctor, are also at the hospital, working 18-hour days, sleeping on the premises. “The people of Misrata are all in this together – this revolution has brought us together,” said Haythem, 31. “I have lost so much of my business because of this. But it’s only money. People are sacrificing much more.” The uprising began on 19 February, a small demonstration called in support of the people of Benghazi in the east, whose own protests had been crushed by the government. For 14 days the people of Misrata controlled the city. Some say it was the greatest time of their lives. People flooded the streets, crying with joy. But they knew Gaddafi’s forces would come back. And they were prepared. When a large convoy of Gaddafi tanks and armoured vehicles reached the city on 6 March, they met no resistance and were drawn into the city centre. Hundreds of young men were waiting on the roofs of buildings, armed with petrol bombs and “gelatinas”, tiny bombs made with TNT, which they had been instructed to prepare. The mobile network was still working then, and once the order was given the homemade bombs rained down on the convoy. Gaddafi’s forces were humbled. Many died, others retreated. Inside some of the destroyed tanks rebels found cakes and juice; the troops had been so convinced that they would retake the city they had prepared for a party. On 18 March, a day after Nato instituted the no-fly zone, Gaddafi’s forces launched a furious attack on Misrata. For two days they pounded it, but again the rebels rode out the attack. Gaddafi’s troops were unable to take control of the city, and remain on its southern side. Last week many of the snipers in the tallest buildings were killed, captured or chased away by the rebels. But the shelling by Gaddafi’s forces continued. On Wednesday night, Ibrahim was in the hospital again. He had an inch-long wound on his neck. “I was sleeping at home with my family when I heard shells falling nearby,” he said. “I went to wake up my brother and tell him to move. Then the shell came through the roof.” A piece of shrapnel nicked his neck. When he looked at the wall behind him, he saw a big piece of metal. If it had landed a few inches closer, he would have been dead. He shrugged, and half-smiled. Then he excused himself, took hold of his crutches and hopped away towards his car, which he has already learned to drive with one leg. On the back of his jersey was sewn a small flag, black, red, and green, with a star and crescent in the middle – the Libyan flag before Gaddafi took over. ■ The British government will face pressure to explain its strategy in Libya this week amid growing concerns that a “stalemate” has been reached. Writing for the Observer , shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander has said the government needs a “clearer and better articulated strategy” and that “strategic, tactical and operational matters” had become “worryingly confused”. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Stokes Croft group who were raided by riot police say ‘we have nothing to do with the anti-Tesco protest’ The squatters whose treatment by police sparked an anti-Tesco riot near the centre of Bristol have denied any connection with activists campaigning against the supermarket giant. Speaking in the aftermath of one of the most serious outbreaks of disorder in Bristol since the St Pauls riots in 1980, the four occupants of “Telepathic Heights”, which was raided by police on Thursday night, also denied they had been manufacturing Molotov cocktails in the squat. “We had no intention of attacking Tesco whatsoever,” said Gavin Houghton, 28. “It was never on the cards – we have nothing to do with the anti-Tesco protest. They’re a separate group. “This is a nice building and it would be suicide if we started throwing petrol bombs off the roof. We would never do that. It’s not what we’re about.” Avon and Somerset police maintain that the operation was justified and said its officers had found petrol bombs on the roof of the building which had been taken away for tests. A spokesman said its forensic experts were trying to establish who made the bombs. He added: “We need to try and link it to the actual people involved because there are a number of people at the address.” Around 160 police officers in riot gear raided the squat in the Stokes Croft area to arrest a number of people they said posed “a real threat to the local community”. But the operation sparked violent protests amid allegations of heavy-handed tactics. Eight police officers were injured and recently opened Tesco store was badly damaged. Nine protesters were arrested, four of whom appeared before Bristol magistrateson Saturday. None of the four squatters remaining in the building were arrested. Houghton and Salim Noormohammad, also 28, told the Observer that the police raid had been violent and unwarranted. According to the squatters, the night the police arrived most of those living in the house had already moved out. The group had been in contact with Bristol city council’s empty homes agency and were removing the last of their stuff. “We were working on tidying the place up, as you do – it’s a house, so it’s got to be tidy,” says Houghton. “Then Salim said the police were trying to get in the front door, so I stopped painting. My first instincts were that there were going to be a few police to tell us that we were going to be evicted. But when I looked out the window it was a completely different story. “There were 30 to 40 police officers all dressed up in riot gear and they stormed the building.” Noormohammad said that after the officers broke through the door they tipped over the sofas and ripped them open, before emptying the squatters’ recycling box over the floor. “Then,” claimed Houghton, “one of the officers barged me in the face with his shield and pushed me across the room and told me to sit down on the floor. Whilst he was pushing me I said, ‘Leave me alone, I’m not doing anything to you.’ Then he started shouting, ‘Sit there, don’t move.’ “I think once they realised there were only four of us in the building, they calmed down.” Houghton said the police officers told him that they were looking for petrol bombs. According to witnesses the operation to clear the squat attracted a large crowd of people which blocked Cheltenham Road, one of the main routes into the city centre. By 1am on Friday there was serious trouble outside the Tesco store. Barricades were erected, bottle banks were emptied and their contents hurled at police, rubbish bins were set alight and a concrete slab was thrown at an officer who was knocked to the ground. Lewis Clapham, 22, a customer services worker, got caught up in the violence which lasted for several hours. He said: “I wasn’t involved in the protest or the squat. I just happened to be down there and I went up to the police and said I was just passing through, but one of them came and hit me really hard with a baton. I’ve got bruising all down my side now with massive swelling on my elbow.” Squatters Noormohammed and Philip Pezard have degrees in English and photography respectively. Noormohammad and Houghton are unemployed and Pezard works as a chef, but said he still didn’t have enough money to rent a home. They said that none of them imagined squatting after university and all claimed to be busy trying to find jobs rather than mounting a campaign against the supermarket chain. “This thing against Tesco,” said Pezard, “it’s the last thing on my mind.” The general mood in Stokes Croft is somewhat different. Hostility towards Tesco is apparent almost everywhere you look. For more than a year the residents have run a noisy campaign to stop the chain from opening one of its Express stores on the busy road. “No Tesco” graffiti dots walls up and down the road for a mile. Most prominent is a giant mural which gives a clear message to those entering the area: “Think Local, Boycott Tesco.” People have also held sit-down protests outside the store every day since its opening less than a fortnight ago. But, amid fears that violence could continue in Bristol over the bank wholiday weekend, the last residents of Telepathic Heights remained adamant that the police were looking in the wrong place for anti-supermarket activists. Police Protest Tesco Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Stokes Croft group who were raided by riot police say ‘we have nothing to do with the anti-Tesco protest’ The squatters whose treatment by police sparked an anti-Tesco riot near the centre of Bristol have denied any connection with activists campaigning against the supermarket giant. Speaking in the aftermath of one of the most serious outbreaks of disorder in Bristol since the St Pauls riots in 1980, the four occupants of “Telepathic Heights”, which was raided by police on Thursday night, also denied they had been manufacturing Molotov cocktails in the squat. “We had no intention of attacking Tesco whatsoever,” said Gavin Houghton, 28. “It was never on the cards – we have nothing to do with the anti-Tesco protest. They’re a separate group. “This is a nice building and it would be suicide if we started throwing petrol bombs off the roof. We would never do that. It’s not what we’re about.” Avon and Somerset police maintain that the operation was justified and said its officers had found petrol bombs on the roof of the building which had been taken away for tests. A spokesman said its forensic experts were trying to establish who made the bombs. He added: “We need to try and link it to the actual people involved because there are a number of people at the address.” Around 160 police officers in riot gear raided the squat in the Stokes Croft area to arrest a number of people they said posed “a real threat to the local community”. But the operation sparked violent protests amid allegations of heavy-handed tactics. Eight police officers were injured and recently opened Tesco store was badly damaged. Nine protesters were arrested, four of whom appeared before Bristol magistrateson Saturday. None of the four squatters remaining in the building were arrested. Houghton and Salim Noormohammad, also 28, told the Observer that the police raid had been violent and unwarranted. According to the squatters, the night the police arrived most of those living in the house had already moved out. The group had been in contact with Bristol city council’s empty homes agency and were removing the last of their stuff. “We were working on tidying the place up, as you do – it’s a house, so it’s got to be tidy,” says Houghton. “Then Salim said the police were trying to get in the front door, so I stopped painting. My first instincts were that there were going to be a few police to tell us that we were going to be evicted. But when I looked out the window it was a completely different story. “There were 30 to 40 police officers all dressed up in riot gear and they stormed the building.” Noormohammad said that after the officers broke through the door they tipped over the sofas and ripped them open, before emptying the squatters’ recycling box over the floor. “Then,” claimed Houghton, “one of the officers barged me in the face with his shield and pushed me across the room and told me to sit down on the floor. Whilst he was pushing me I said, ‘Leave me alone, I’m not doing anything to you.’ Then he started shouting, ‘Sit there, don’t move.’ “I think once they realised there were only four of us in the building, they calmed down.” Houghton said the police officers told him that they were looking for petrol bombs. According to witnesses the operation to clear the squat attracted a large crowd of people which blocked Cheltenham Road, one of the main routes into the city centre. By 1am on Friday there was serious trouble outside the Tesco store. Barricades were erected, bottle banks were emptied and their contents hurled at police, rubbish bins were set alight and a concrete slab was thrown at an officer who was knocked to the ground. Lewis Clapham, 22, a customer services worker, got caught up in the violence which lasted for several hours. He said: “I wasn’t involved in the protest or the squat. I just happened to be down there and I went up to the police and said I was just passing through, but one of them came and hit me really hard with a baton. I’ve got bruising all down my side now with massive swelling on my elbow.” Squatters Noormohammed and Philip Pezard have degrees in English and photography respectively. Noormohammad and Houghton are unemployed and Pezard works as a chef, but said he still didn’t have enough money to rent a home. They said that none of them imagined squatting after university and all claimed to be busy trying to find jobs rather than mounting a campaign against the supermarket chain. “This thing against Tesco,” said Pezard, “it’s the last thing on my mind.” The general mood in Stokes Croft is somewhat different. Hostility towards Tesco is apparent almost everywhere you look. For more than a year the residents have run a noisy campaign to stop the chain from opening one of its Express stores on the busy road. “No Tesco” graffiti dots walls up and down the road for a mile. Most prominent is a giant mural which gives a clear message to those entering the area: “Think Local, Boycott Tesco.” People have also held sit-down protests outside the store every day since its opening less than a fortnight ago. But, amid fears that violence could continue in Bristol over the bank wholiday weekend, the last residents of Telepathic Heights remained adamant that the police were looking in the wrong place for anti-supermarket activists. Police Protest Tesco Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rev. Franklin Graham, the son of Rev. Bill Graham, told ABC’s Christiane Amanpour that he could see himself supporting Donald Trump for president. “Donald Trump, when I first saw that he was getting in, I thought, well, this has got to be a joke,” Graham explained. “But the more you listen to him, the more you say to yourself, you know, maybe this guy’s right.” “So, he might be your candidate of choice?” Amanpour asked. “Sure, yes,” Graham replied. Trump has gotten a lot of attention in recent days for suggesting that President Barack Obama is not a natural born U.S. citizen. Amanpour’s full interview with Graham is set to air Sunday.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rev. Franklin Graham, the son of Rev. Bill Graham, told ABC’s Christiane Amanpour that he could see himself supporting Donald Trump for president. “Donald Trump, when I first saw that he was getting in, I thought, well, this has got to be a joke,” Graham explained. “But the more you listen to him, the more you say to yourself, you know, maybe this guy’s right.” “So, he might be your candidate of choice?” Amanpour asked. “Sure, yes,” Graham replied. Trump has gotten a lot of attention in recent days for suggesting that President Barack Obama is not a natural born U.S. citizen. Amanpour’s full interview with Graham is set to air Sunday.
Continue reading …Can you imagine liberal media members in 2007 or 2008 blaming George W. Bush's sagging poll numbers on the public's dismal view of the Democrat Congress? On Friday, the Huffington Post's Howard Fineman actually told MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell “the fact the Republicans and Congress are so poorly regarded, that the whole system is so poorly regarded, drags everybody down, including the president” (video follows with transcript and commentary):
Continue reading …Confrontation at Kirti monastery reportedly occurred during raid in which police took away 300 monks Two people have reportedly died in a clash with Chinese police during a raid on a Tibetan Buddhist monastery where tensions have run high over the recent suicide of a monk. The incident marks some of the worst violence in the ongoing troubles at Kirti monastery high in the Himalayan foothills in a Tibetan area of Sichuan province. Police who have blockaded the monastery and restricted the movements of its 2,500 residents launched a raid on Thursday night, according to the US-based International Campaign for Tibet . Police took 300 monks to an unknown location and two villagers trying to block the monks’ removal were killed, it said. The dead were named by the group as 60-year-old Dongko, and a 65-year-old woman, Sherkyi. The area has since been closed off to outside visitors, it said. Tensions in Kirti were heightened by the suicide on 16 March of 21-year-old monk, Phuntsog, who set himself on fire in a protest against government controls of Tibetan Buddhism, which recognizes the exiled Dalai Lama as its leader. China occupied Tibet in 1950 and claims the region has been part of its territory for centuries, although many Tibetans, who are linguistically and ethnically distinct from Chinese, say they were in effect independent. Information from the remote region is extremely limited, and it was not immediately possible to confirm the incident. Without mentioning the clash, the state-run Xinhua News Agency said authorities had ordered residents of Kirti to attend a course of legal education, a form of political indoctrination deeply resented by monks. China Tibet Buddhism Religion Human rights David Batty guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Intelligence officials say dissidents are capable of mounting mainland attack, as fears grow of ‘Easter offensive’ in Ulster Dissident republicans have developed the capability to mount an attack on the British mainland, according to the latest security assessment. Senior counter-terrorism sources confirmed the threat from dissidents attacking the mainland “now goes beyond an aspiration” and that they now possess the means to mount an attack across the Irish Sea. Amid rising tension in the province and fears of an “Easter offensive” by dissident groups, police in Northern Ireland also warned that anti-ceasefire republicans were plotting to kill more police officers. The increased threat from republican dissidents is certain to heighten security concerns during the build-up to the royal wedding on Friday, although there is no intelligence suggesting a specific plot related to the event. On Friday another dissident grouping, styling itself “the IRA”, issued a public statement claiming responsibility for the murder of PC Ronan Kerr in Omagh this month. The group, comprising former members of the Provisional IRA, vowed to embark on a bombing campaign. It is understood that the new group includes veteran paramilitaries who were involved in transporting and later detonating the bomb that exploded at London’s Canary Wharf in 1996. Intelligence officials monitoring dissident activity point to a growing sophistication in bomb-making techniques and a widening range of attack techniques as evidence of expanding capability. A senior intelligence source told the Observer : “We feel there is capability to attempt some form of an attack on Britain. Based on our assessment, it goes beyond an aspiration.” Dissident groups have recently deployed command-wire explosive devices, van-mounted weaponry, car bombs and vehicle booby traps, as well as more orthodox military equipment such as hand-grenades. Several individuals are believed to be under surveillance. The mainland has not experienced an Irish republican attack since car bombs exploded at the BBC Television Centre and Ealing Broadway station in London in 2001. The head of MI5, Jonathan Evans, said last September, however, that dissidents posed a “real and increasing security challenge in Northern Ireland” and could be planning attacks elsewhere. According to MI5′s Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre, the official threat level is “substantial”, meaning an attack is a “strong possibility”. On Saturday a man appeared in court facing charges in connection with the murder of Kerr. Gavin Coyle, 33, from Omagh was charged with possession of explosives, firearms and articles likely to be of use to terrorists. He was remanded in custody. The court heard he was linked to a footprint found at a major dissident republican arms dump in Coalisland during investigations into Kerr’s murder. Police have also revealed details of a substantial haul of guns and ammunition found in a vehicle stopped by officers in Keady, near the Irish border, on Friday. Attention has concentrated upon the Real IRA and the smaller but technically able Oglaigh na hEireann, which has improved its explosives technology over the past two years. Analysis suggests that the explosives material being used by dissidents may have originated from a onetime Provisional IRA stockpile whose whereabouts were known by former quartermaster general Michael McKevitt – who formed the Real IRA. Police in Northern Ireland said yesterday that fresh violence was expected. “Dissident terrorist groups are continuing to identify officers and target them with the single objective of killing them,” a spokesman said. In further evidence of growing confidence among extremist republican groups, a leading figure in one of the dissident groups’ political wings announced that the Queen should be considered a “legitimate target” during her visit to Ireland in May. The general secretary of the hardline Republican Sinn Féin party, Josephine Hayden, said she would have no problem with a sniper targeting the Queen. “You might say that she is just a little old grandmother,” said Hayden, “but it is what she represents, what she symbolises that counts. She is a legitimate target.” The Observer has learned that a radical republican group known as Eirígí: for a Socialist Republic is planning to occupy Dublin’s Garden of Remembrance 48 hours before the Queen is scheduled to attend a reconciliation ceremony there. Republicans in Dublin say the splinter group plans to establish a tented camp on the Sunday prior to the visit, creating the possibility that the Garda Siochána will have to forcibly remove protesters before the royal tour begins on 17 May. On 5 May, Northern Ireland is braced for trouble to mark assembly elections and the 30th anniversary of the death of IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands. Future trouble could depend on the reaction from the loyalist community, described by sources as “relatively restrained” until now. A 40-year-old Belfast man was, however, arrested on Saturday in connection with loyalist terrorist activity. UK security and terrorism Northern Ireland Real IRA IRA Royal wedding Mark Townsend Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rep. Pat Meehan (PA-7) is the suburban Philadelphia Republican who won the seat Joe Sestak left for his unsuccessful Senate run. Following in the footsteps of Crazy Curt Weldon, who held the seat before Sestak, Meehan is a complete creation of the Delaware County GOP machine and typifies their arrogance. Despite promising not to support the privatization of Medicare, he just voted for Paul Ryan’s voucher plan — and his constituents aren’t too happy with him. (By the way, town halls across America are heating up over this very issue .) First-term Rep. Pat Meehan (R-Pa.) has been the recipient of sharp questions from constituents this week about the House Republican budget and its proposed changes to Medicare. According to CNN, Meehan was pressed at town-hall events about whether the plan from House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) would eliminate Medicare for people in their fifties. “Did you not vote for Paul Ryan’s bill?” one attendee asked Meehan at a town hall on Wednesday. “Well, that is to abolish Medicare and give people some money. It will not be the Medicare that we know.” “I said if you voted to abolish Medicare, how will you explain that to people who are in their fifties who are out of work, that they will have not the Medicare that I have?” the woman asked. Meehan denied that he voted to abolish Medicare. “No ma’am, I did not vote to abolish Medicare,” Meehan said. “And that is factually untrue.” But he stood by his vote for the Ryan plan. “I voted for the Ryan plan, let’s be clear from the outset, to talk about what was in the proposal. Now this is a blueprint,” Meehan said. “What Paul Ryan has put out is a blueprint. A sense of what we’d like to do, a direction that we’d like to go in.” Courtesy of the Meehan Report , here’s the campaign press release Meehan put out for last fall’s election, in which he strongly denied he would do what he just did: “Lentz charged that Meehan supports privatization of Social Security and Medicare, stating ‘Pat…wants to fix the debt by privatizing Medicare, which essentially ends Medicare, [and] privatizing Social Security…that ends Social Security.’ Meehan has repeatedly gone on record opposing any privatization of Social Security and Medicare.” [1] Here’s the video taken when he was running against Democrat Bryan Lentz, and he promised not to vote for Ryan’s voucher program:
Continue reading …Well, at least he wasn’t complaining about
Continue reading …