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Peti oktobar na bliskom istoku i arapskom svetu


Gandalf

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Sarkozy voli da prica svasta a realno Francuska diplomacija je u qrcu narocito od kada su pocela ova desavanja u sjevernoj africi. Kada je padao Ben Ali (to jest dva dana pred njegov pad) francska ministarka inostranih poslova je predlozila u parlamentu francusku asistenciju u suzbijanju demonstracija :isuse: Ta ministarka jos nije podnijela otkaz :isuse:

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Jedina preostala briga je nekonvencionalno oružje koje možda planira da upotrebi.
Briga nije mala. Nadam se da neće imati vremena da to uradi. Edited by Anonymous
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njih nema ko da evakuise.

Tens of thousands of workers from Asia's poorest countries have been left to fend for themselves in riot-torn Libya, as their governments struggle to bring them home, labour groups said Friday. Terrifying reports are emerging from the north African country of migrant workers being abandoned by their employers and being forced to bunker down as looters, bandits and mercenaries rampage. An estimated 100,000 workers from the Philippines and Bangladesh remain stuck in Libya more than a week after the violence erupted, with their governments unable to mount quick or extensive evacuation programmes for them. "The protesters shoot people on sight, it's not safe to go out. We don't have food and money. We are almost starving. Nobody can imagine how dangerous the situation is," Bangladeshi worker Kabir Hossain told AFP by telephone. Hossain, 24, said he and 17 other Bangladeshi construction workers were trapped inside a Libyan desert work site after their employers abandoned them. "They told us we would have to find our own way out of the country," he said via a scratchy mobile-phone connection. Garry Martinez, chairman of Migrante International, a support group for Philippine workers abroad, said he had received similar reports of hundreds of Filipinos being abandoned by employers across Libya. "They are very afraid, very hungry, very tired," Martinez told AFP. "They are panicking. They can hear gunfire. They are calling on the government to send some help to them." Martinez said he had been in contact with 145 Filipinos who had been abandoned by their South Korean construction company employers along the Libyan border with Tunisia. And he said some Filipina nurses in Tripoli were carrying their national flag above their heads when they ventured outside to buy food, in an attempt to distinguish themselves from armed Libyan groups. A frantic exodus of foreigners began this week as strongman Moamer Kadhafi unleashed his security forces in a brutal effort to crush a revolution. Many nations have chartered boats and planes to get their nationals out of Libya. But some cash-strapped governments, particularly those of the Philippines and Bangladesh, have not had the resources or networks to mount similar efforts. "There are severe limitations on what we can do. Perhaps if we were as rich a country as America then we could have consulates anywhere and everywhere," Philippine President Benigno Aquino said on Thursday. Nevertheless, Aquino insisted his government was doing all it could to help the roughly 30,000 Filipinos in Libya performing a wide range of jobs, from low-paid labouring work to skilled professional employment such as engineering. His government on Friday announced plans to evacuate 13,000 Filipinos by boat and plane, however it was unable to say when this would occur. "We are very frustrated and alarmed at the way our government has handled this," Migrante's Martinez told AFP. "The response of our government has come too late. For nine days the violence has escalated and we haven't seen a blueprint for evacuations." The plight of the estimated 60,000 Bangladeshis in Libya appeared even bleaker with the government in Dhaka saying it had no firm evacuation plans for them. "It is still not clear what measure we will be able to take to evacuate them, we are hoping to move them to safety," foreign ministry spokesman Syed Masud Khandker told AFP on Thursday. In Thailand, relatives of the 23,000 Thais working in Libya lobbied local employment offices this week demanding help for their loved ones, amid reports those stranded were running low on food and water. The Thai government reported it had begun evacuation efforts, with a ship expected to collect around 2,000 people from worker camps in Tripoli late on Friday. William Gois, Manila-based regional co-ordinator for labour rights group Migrants Forum in Asia, said rich governments should help evacuate all vulnerable workers in Libya and not just their own citizens. "At times of crisis, this is not when you should discriminate against nationality," Gois said.
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link ka detaljnoj google mapi tripolijahttp://twitpic.com/43m0j9/fulls desna na levo se siri protest tj. s desna na levo gadafi sve manje kontrolise tripoli u ovom trenutku.

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Da, cudilo bi me. I ne znam zasto uopste predpostavljas da je VS puna ljudi koji bi rado bili placenici. Kao sto rece neko pre, ti placenici su verovatno iz raznoraznih JSOova i slicnih bivsih paravojnih fomracija, a ima i dosta ratnih veterana iz BiH (ja upozno jednog jedanput, koji je dolazio iz Iraka - a taj je postao placenik jer je jedino drugo zaposlenje koje je nasao posle rata bilo kelnerisanje za 200 maraka mesecno, dakle nije bio oficir VRS).
ne znam zasto uopste predpostavljas da ja nesto predpostavljam. koncentrisi se na podvuceni deo.
sad procitah sta je lilic izjavio pred odlazak u tripoli:isuse:
stoka Edited by ToniAdams
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Ovo je možda i najbitniji izveštaj od početka ustanka. Ako je tačan, onda su se stvari značajno promenile i oformljen je međunarodni front protiv pukovnika koji više nema nikakve šanse. Jedina preostala briga je nekonvencionalno oružje koje možda planira da upotrebi.
A zamisli kad za jedno 30-50 godina Uciteljica zivota pokaze da se nisu iskracli 24. februara, nego nekoliko nedelja ranije. Ti i ja cemo odavno biti opojani, narod Libije ce biti tamo gde je danas svaka od zemalja gde su instruktori dolazili da pomognu (Salvador, Vijetnam, Afganistan, Irak, Kosovo i Metohija), Gadafija ce izucavati na katedrama za istoriju mediterana, a slicna prica ce se ponavljati u nekoj drugoj svetskoj zabiti. Ko je od nas dvojice bio u pravu? Koga ce to zanimati...Sta me muci? Pa ne mogu da verujem, na primer, da je ovaj covek* tek pre 10 dana shvatio da je Gadafi diktator...*

ima naravno cela kolekcija Srdacnih™ pozdrava, zar ne, pa je asrkozi samo los primer

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recap petka

LIBYA: Loyalists of Moamer Kadhafi killed several people in shooting that was spreading through Tripoli as French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the embattled Libyan leader "must go." - EU nations agreed to slap an arms embargo, assets freezes and travel bans on Libya. - Seif al-Islam Kadhafi said his family will stay in Libya at all costs despite a bloody uprising shaking his father's regime. - Euphoria in Libya's second city Benghazi gave way to growing concern that it remains vulnerable to a counter-attack by Moamer Kadhafi's forces. BAHRAIN: Tens of thousands of Shiite protesters thronged Manama to demand the end of the ruling Sunni regime, as visiting US military officer Mike Mullen reaffirmed Washington's commitment to embattled King Hamad. YEMEN: Tens of thousands took to streets across Yemen to demand veteran President Ali Abdullah Saleh step down. Police shot dead one protester in the southern city of Aden and clashes injured another 20 people. EGYPT: Thousands of Egyptians rallied in Cairo to celebrate the success of a revolution that brought down president Hosni Mubarak and to call for a new government of technocrats purged of old regime remnants. IRAQ: Angry protesters hurled stones in Baghdad as thousands of demonstrators flooded streets across Iraq for a "Day of Rage" that left seven people dead in clashes with police. JORDAN: Thousands of people demonstrated in the capital Amman calling for political reforms in a "Day of Anger" organised by the powerful Islamist opposition and other parties. TUNISIA: Tens of thousands of Tunisians rallied to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's transitional government, in the biggest demonstration since last month's ouster of Zine el Abidine Ben Ali. ALGERIA: US President Barack Obama has praised Algeria for lifting a 19-year state of emergency, following unprecedented protests that threatened President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's regime. MOROCCO: A sixth Moroccan has died following demonstrations as one of the biggest parties in the ruling coalition, the Socialist Union of Popular Forces, called for a timetable for implementing political reforms.
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A zamisli kad za jedno 30-50 godina Uciteljica zivota pokaze da se nisu iskracli 24. februara, nego nekoliko nedelja ranije.
u pitanju je DebkaFile, zaboga. izraelska drzavna propaganda. :lol:
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