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Fighting in Libya curbs flow at major oil terminals

The flow of crude oil to and from Libyas two biggest oil terminals slowed to a trickle Monday after fighting between militias intensified in the turbulent North African countrys energy-rich east.

Even before the latest outbreak of strife, the Libyan state had teetered on the brink of collapse. Months of fighting between militias loyal to two competing governments one in the capital, Tripoli, and one in the eastern city of Tobruk has largely resulted in a standoff.

The United Nations has been trying to broker an accord between the factions, and a second round of talks was to take place this week. But the fresh fighting was likely to cloud that effort.

Over the weekend, militias allied with the Islamist-leaning Libyan Dawn movement, which controls Tripoli and much of the countrys west, attacked the two oil facilities, confronting forces loyal to the internationally recognized Tobruk-based government. The Libyan Dawn ground advance drew retaliatory airstrikes near the contested terminals, and Libyan news reports said at least five people died in the fighting.

Oil officials said only minimal staff remained at the Ras Lanuf and Sidra terminals southwest of Benghazi after the declaration Sunday of a state of force majeure, a legal designation that allows the state-run National Oil Co. to renege on its international commercial commitments. Together, the two terminals account for more than half of Libyas output of crude oil.

The country has been swept by turmoil since the 2011 ouster of Moammar Kadafi amid the regionwide uprisings known collectively as the Arab Spring. Armed groups that worked toward the common goal of overthrowing the longtime dictator swiftly turned on one another, carving up the country into what amount to fiefdoms.

In the interim, regional powers have thrown their weight behind armed factions competing for political influence and oil wealth. Neighboring Egypt and economic powerhouses such as the United Arab Emirates support the Tobruk administration, while wealthy Qatar has lent support to Islamist armed factions that overran the capital in August and sought to reinstate a parliament whose mandate had expired.

Energy production has long been the linchpin of Libyas economy, which has been battered by continuing unrest and more recently by plummeting oil prices.

Libyas main eastern oil ports had reopened only over the summer after a separate power bid by an eastern-based militia leader who shut them down for nearly a year as he sought to wrest a greater share of oil revenue from the then-government in Tripoli.

In addition to the struggle for eastern oil ports, confrontations have erupted near Libyas western border with Tunisia. Despite the fighting, foreign laborers have continued to enter and exit Libya from the Ras Ajdir crossing with Tunisia, and Egypts Foreign Ministry warned its nationals to avoid the area after two Egyptians were reported killed Sunday.

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Fighting in Libya curbs flow at major oil terminals

Attorney General Eric Holder Addresses a My Brother’s Keeper Community Challenge Event – Video


Attorney General Eric Holder Addresses a My Brother #39;s Keeper Community Challenge Event
Attorney General Eric Holder delivers remarks at the My Brother #39;s Keeper Communities Challenge event at the Hattiloo Theatre, where he discusses the need to ...

By: The White House

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Attorney General Eric Holder Addresses a My Brother's Keeper Community Challenge Event - Video

Sheriff David Clarke blasts Eric Holder – Video


Sheriff David Clarke blasts Eric Holder

By: DD B

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Sheriff David Clarke blasts Eric Holder - Video

Holder praises NBA stars for 'I can't breathe' shirts

Attorney General Eric Holder said he thought was a good thing that NBA players were protesting the death of Staten Island resident Eric Garner by wearing I Cant Breathe T-shirts during the warm-ups before games.

For them to get out there and to express in that way a social conscience, I think goes back to maybe people that these guys dont even know or my son has a vague awareness of, to Jackie Robinson, who is seen as not only a great athlete, but as an involved, thinking, caring black man, Holder told the Chicago Sun-Times.

And to have LeBron [James], Derrick Rose and others who wore those I Cant Breathe shirts, that shows a level of involvement. It shows a depth to them beyond just being great ballplayers.

Holder also said that, for many people, including his own teenage son, top athletes were more important than political figures.

NBA stars began wearing the shirts after a grand jury opted against indicting police officers who put Garner, an unarmed black man, into a chokehold as they were attempting to arrest him. The decision coupled with a grand jurys decision not to indict a Ferguson, Mo., police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenager have sparked mass protests around the country.

Holder has pledged a federal civil rights investigation.

His comments expanded on those of President Obama, who told ESPN Radio last week that he saw athletes expressions of political views as important.

Obama noted the legacy of athletes like Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell and Arthur Ashe, who "spoke out on issues that matter at pretty critical times."

"They're citizens as well as entertainers, and they've got a voice that is legitimate," Obama said.

Holder said in the article published Monday he believed there was just no need for police departments to continue using chokeholds during arrests.

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Holder praises NBA stars for 'I can't breathe' shirts

One-Party Democratic Rule Stifles Connecticut

Does one-party rule exist in Connecticut? Some, including Democrat state Sen. Beth Bye of West Hartford, say it does not. As someone who has witnessed the results of Democrat majority rule over the past four years, I respectfully disagree.

With the Democrats controlling the General Assembly and the governor's seat, we have seen one-sided policy decisions pushed into law and Republican alternatives pushed aside. As a result, Connecticut has not only been led down a path that heads straight toward "permanent fiscal crisis" in the words of the governor's budget director our state has also lost sight of many valid policy solutions.

It is true that about 80 percent of the time, Republicans and Democrats vote similarly on bills that make it to the floor of the Senate. This number is accurate, but it is also misleading. Here's why:

This percentage omits the hundreds of Republican proposals that Democrats never call for a vote to avoid taking a stand on difficult issues.

This percentage doesn't tell us how many Republican bills are killed while in the committee stage of the legislative review process.

This percentage does not include the 259 Republican amendments that have been rejected by the majority at a rate of 99 percent over the past four years.

This percentage also fails to acknowledge what happens when a Republican idea does manage to garner Democrat support it gets taken over by Democrats who slap their own names on what was once a Republican amendment.

In the current system, the bills that make it to the floor of the Senate are usually bills that are sensible updates to the law, so we vote similarly most of the time. The ideas that differ vastly from the majority are the ones that never make it that far.

The high percentage of on-the-floor agreements also fails to shed light on the stark differences in policy between Republicans and Democrats represented by the remaining 20 percent. What does that 20 percent include?

Republican votes against the Democratic majority when the governor wanted to implement the largest tax increase in state history.

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One-Party Democratic Rule Stifles Connecticut