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UN lauds Libya’s mediation efforts by neighbouring countries – africanews


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UN lauds Libya's mediation efforts by neighbouring countries
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Speaking on Wednesday during a press conference in Tunis, the head of United Nations Support Mission in Libya, Martin Kobler, welcomed the move by Tunisia, Algeria and Egypt to ease tension among rival groups. Foreign ministers from the four countries ...

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UN lauds Libya's mediation efforts by neighbouring countries - africanews

News Roundup – Thu, Feb 23, 2017 – The Libya Observer

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Libyan Mufti, Al-Sadiq Al-Gharyani, said whoever wants to strike an agreement among the Libyan factions must be fair, adding that the mediators who are trying to stabilize Libya currently are not serious in their efforts. The Mufti described the UN envoy to Libya as biased to one party over the others and the Skhirat agreement as a conspiracy that is dragging Libya into nothingness.

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UNSMIL Head, Martin Kobler, said the Tunisian initiative, which aims at resolving Libyas crisis and bring consensus among all factions, is excellent. Kobler added, in a meeting with Tunisian Foreign Minister, that the initiative of the Tunisian President is acceptable to all Libyan parties.

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The UN-proposed governments Local Governing Minister, Badad Gansu, urged the ministrys authorities not to travel abroad unless they have obtained a permit, warning Wednesday all mayors and other authorities that violating this new decision will have legal consequences.

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Italy has sent two tons of medical aids to the Misrata Central Hospital. The aids arrived on Thursday in Misrata Airport.

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Special Deterrent Force said it had arrested a thieves gang headed by Jebril Al-Dabea (A.K.A. Jebril Abiya). SDF wrote on Facebook Wednesday that the gang conducts armed robberies in Tripoli, especially against foreign workers.

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Delegations from Zliten and Misrata agreed on Wednesday to reopen the coastal road after the withdrawal of all the armed forces of Misrata to outside Zlitens administrative borders and after they hand in the culprits to the Public Prosecution.

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The Turkish IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation provided food aids for 700 displaced families from Benghazi in cooperation with the crisis committee at the Tripoli Municipality. IHH official told Anadolu Agency that they will launch a big relief campaign in southern Libya in the coming days.

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Sabratha Municipality condemned the attack on its building on Wednesday by a brigade from the Interior Ministrys forces. It urged in a statement the citys national security department to work properly and make sure security prevails in Sabratha.

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Sources from Shahat city said the former member of the General National Congress Fawzi Al-Oqab, and his companion, Khalid Al-Mukhtar, were released on Wednesday. The two were kidnapped in the beginning of February when they were returning from the farm of the High Council of States member Abdeljalil Al-Zahi in northern Shahat.

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News Roundup - Thu, Feb 23, 2017 - The Libya Observer

Black Lives Matter leader goes airborne on live TV to grab …

This guy definitely does not want the South to rise again.

A Black Lives Matter leader was arrested Wednesday after he did a Superman dive over a police barrier and attempted to snatch a Confederate flag away from a protester on live television.

Muhiyidin dBaha, 31, of South Carolina, was slapped with disorderly conduct charges as a result of the on-air incident, according to The Post and Courier.

He had been standing with a group of BLM demonstrators, outside the Sottile Theatre at the College of Charleston, before his dramatic leap was caught on camera, the local newspaper reports.

The video has since gone viral racking up thousands of retweets and mentions on Twitter.

Activist Bree Newsome, who famously climbed the South Carolina capitol flagpole to remove its Confederate flag in 2015, had been set to speak at the school Wednesday night. The event was titled, Tearing Hatred from the Sky.

Numerous demonstrators gathered at the venue in the days leading up to her lecture to protest against her. Members of the the South Carolina Secessionist Party, who were on hand, repeatedly called for the event to be canceled and even relocated their weekly Confederate flag-flying rally from their normal location to the College of Charleston, the Courier reports.

The protesters were met with several counter-demonstrations, from members of the BLM movement, Southerners on New Ground, Indivisible Charleston and Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ).

Before Newsomes lecture Wednesday, a man was spotted standing outside the theater, proudly waving a Confederate flag.

DBaha, whose legal name is Muhiyidin Elamin Moye, apparently became enraged by the display and made his move just as the television cameras were rolling.

Um, you can see whats happening right now. It looks like both sides of the crowd are fighting one another, a frightened WCSC reporter can be heard saying, moments after Moye leaps over a line of police tape and tries to grab the mans flag in midair.

Police are arresting this guy, right now, she adds.

Members of the SURJ group in Charleston have been raising money online for Moyes bail. As of early Thursday, they had raised more than $3,500.

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Black Lives Matter leader goes airborne on live TV to grab ...

Black Lives Matter protester vaults police barricade to grab man’s Confederate flag in live TV broadcast – The Independent

A Black Lives Matter protester was arrested after trying to grab a Confederate flag from a man outside a lecture on direct action.

The incident was captured during a live TV broadcastin Charleston, South Carolina, as the man pushed through a barricade to snatch the flag, seen by activists as a symbol of racism and a relic of America's past.

Bree Newsome, the woman who was arrested for removing the Confederate flag from South Carolina's state house before it was taken down permanently in 2015, was due to give the talk on Wednesday.

Footage shows the protester, named locally as Muhiyidin Moye, dashing across a street to rip the flag from the other man's hands.

But he fails to take it and is tackled by police. ABC4 reported he was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.

Last year the US Department of Veterans Affairs bannedthe large-scale display of Confederate flags in cemeteries it oversees, after members of Congress voted for the move.

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Black Lives Matter protester vaults police barricade to grab man's Confederate flag in live TV broadcast - The Independent

SA Spotlight highlights origins of Black Lives Matter – Binghamton University Pipe Dream

Campus News

Michael West, sociology department chair, discusses signficance, origins of the movement

By Erica Prush - February 23, 2017

Donning a Snoop Dogg 92 T-shirt and a flat-brim cap, Binghamton University sociology department chair Michael West addressed a room of about 80 students in a discussion about the African American struggle, the evolution of black liberation and the Black Lives Matter movement on Monday evening in Lecture Hall 9.

The talk, titled A Discussion of the History of Black Liberation and the Emergence of the Movement for Black Lives in Culture Events, was part of the revitalized Student Association (SA) Spotlights series. Hosted by the SA Programming Board and the Vice President of Academic Affairs (VPAA) office, SA Spotlights aims to highlight distinguished faculty members and their research.

Wests talk focused on the global black struggle, the fight for equality and the current direction of the Black Lives Matter movement.

It is a radical and transformative vision, West said. It is an anti-racist vision, an anti-war vision, an anti-capitalist vision. It is a vision for black lives.

West spoke about the internationalist perspective of black liberation and drew connections from colonial slavery to the global Black Power movement as a necessary background for understanding Black Lives Matter. West cited the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution as roots of racial inequality in the United States.

The American creed the American social contract was originally constructed in opposition to black liberation, West said. Black people in the United States have had to conceive their liberation in global terms, in international terms.

Ann Merriwether, a professor of psychology, was scheduled to be the first faculty member spotlighted back in September but the program fell through with former SA VPAA Adam Wilkes resignation.

Max Maurice, SA vice president for programming and a senior majoring in electrical engineering, said he revived the program with Raul Cepin, the current VPAA and a senior majoring in Latin American and Caribbean Area studies. According to them, West was the perfect faculty member to spotlight next.

When looking into professors to host, it was hard to ignore the positive reviews of Dr. West, Cepin said. It is an honor to have him present and educate the campus community, but particularly during Black History Month.

According to Cepin, he and half of the SA Executive Board are currently enrolled in BUs Black Lives Matter course.

Jessica Dunn, a senior triple-majoring in sociology, Africana studies and Latin American and Caribbean Area studies, said West is her favorite professor at BU because of his engaging and insightful lectures.

[West] showed how different, seemingly unrelated periods of time are tied together by this common vision that has yet to be realized, even today, Dunn said.

Hannah Pollick, a senior double-majoring in psychology and sociology, said she appreciated Wests ability to paint the history of the black struggle clearly. She said it is important that students are constantly reminded that black people have never been able to stop fighting for their liberation.

The struggle for black freedom is seemingly unending, and that is profoundly sad, Pollick said.

West was positive about the future of the Black Lives Matter movement but emphasized the need for social action, especially in the era of Donald Trumps presidency.

Black faces in high places do not equate to black power, West said, when reflecting on Barack Obamas former presidency. It is a mirage of black power. A mirage that is not even in evidence here at Binghamton University.

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SA Spotlight highlights origins of Black Lives Matter - Binghamton University Pipe Dream