Libya first four days

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The First Four Days of Libyan Revolution By Simon Assaf Feb 22, 2011 The first indication that anti government protests had become an uprising emerged on the afternoon of Friday 18 February in Benghazi, Libya's second city some 650km east of the capital Tripoli. On the day before, Thursday 17 February, small groups of Benghazi youths had answered the call to join peaceful protests calling for reforms. They set up tents in the city square and began painting signs, anticipating that riot police would attempt, at some point, to move them on. Instead regime thugs appeared and fired into the protesters, killing scores of peaceful activists. The next morning large crowds turned out for the funerals of the young people. As the procession passed security buildings regime loyalists opened fire again. And the cycle of killings, funerals and more killings began. On the Friday the days of protest turned into a day of rage. Huge funerals turned into mass angry demonstrations that swept the city disarming police and setting alight state security buildings. Demonstrators seized a radio station and immediately began broadcasting instructions to the youth fighting the state security forces. Reports flooded in to the station on the progress of the uprising. Over the next hours the station broadcast reports, appeals to other regions, and discussions on the strategy of the revolution. What was striking were the number of women involved in the on-air discussions. At one point a voice interrupted with a desperate appeal: “Citizens take control of the airport and block the airport runway, they are trying to land troops.� Messages sent from outlying areas also warned that regime forces under the command of Gadaffi's clan were closing in. "Any citizen with a truck or 4by4 block the road near the airport. Fill the cars with sand," the announcer begged. Then he made a plea to soldiers garrisoned in the city. "Now is your time to stop this criminal, this tyrant. Come over to the people. First Tunisia, then Egypt, now us. Come back to the people" Another urged all citizens to join the uprising, "Today we can have victory. What is victory? Our freedom, our rights, our dignity. Libya is returning to the people." With all mobile phones cuts, the station became the centre for the coordination of the uprising. Delegations appeared from neighbourhoods to declare for the revolution, and after realising that landlines were still working, the rebels began contacting other villages and towns. Word began to spread that the nearby city of el-Baydah had joined the revolt, then towns along the Mediterranean coast also declared for the revolution. It became clear that there were now desperate and uneven battles in many cities in Libya. A Tunisian revolutionary called in. "Don't have fear. We are with you. The people of Egypt are with you. The whole Umma is with you, urging your victory."

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Libya first four days by Revolutionary Socialists Organisation (Pakistan) [انقلابی سوشلسٹ] - Issuu