- published: 17 Sep 2011
- views: 16072
Libya (Arabic: ليبيا Lībiyā) is a country in the Maghreb region of North Africa bordered by the Mediterranean Sea to the north, Egypt to the east, Sudan to the southeast, Chad and Niger to the south, and Algeria and Tunisia to the west. The three traditional parts of the country are Tripolitania, Fezzan and Cyrenaica. With an area of almost 1.8 million square kilometres (700,000 sq mi), Libya is the fourth largest country in Africa, and is the 16th largest country in the world. Libya has the 10th-largest proven oil reserves of any country in the world.
The largest city and capital, Tripoli, is located in western Libya and contains over one million of Libya's six million people. The other large city is Benghazi, which is located in eastern Libya.
Libya has been inhabited by Berbers since the late Bronze Age. The Phoenicians established trading posts in western Libya, and Ancient Greek colonists established city-states in eastern Libya. Libya was variously ruled by Persians, Egyptians and Greeks before becoming a part of the Roman Empire. Libya was an early center of Christianity. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the area of Libya was mostly occupied by the Vandals until the 7th century, when invasions brought Islam and Arab colonization. In the sixteenth century, the Spanish Empire and the Knights of St John occupied Tripoli, until Ottoman rule began in 1551. Libya was involved in the Barbary Wars of the 18th and 19th centuries. Ottoman rule continued until the Italian occupation of Libya resulted in the temporary Italian Libya colony from 1911 to 1943. During the Second World War Libya was an important area of warfare in the North African Campaign. The Italian population then went into decline. Libya became an independent kingdom in 1951.
Tourism in Libya is an industry still in its infancy but one that will gradually start growing. The country is best known for its ancient Greek and Roman ruins and Sahara desert landscapes. There are five UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the country, three of which are classical ruins. The Roman cities of Sabratha and Leptis Magna in Western Libya and the Greek ruins of Cyrene in the East are big tourist attractions. One of the attractions of Libya's archeological sites, is that they are not as heavily populated by tourists as are other ancient sites in North Africa and southern Europe. Unravel Travel TV http://www.unraveltravel.eu Unravel Travel TV Twitter http://www.twitter.com/UnravelTravelTV Unravel Travel TV on You Tube http://www.youtube.com/UnravelTravelTV
Travel video about destination Libya. Libya is one of the most interesting desert countries and it is gradually opening its doors to the outside world. It is a veritable treasure trove of history. Ancient art and culture of various epochs as well as the fascinating exotic flair of the Orient make Libya a wonderful and fascinating holiday destination. The capital, Tripoli, awakes early in the morning as fishermen return from their nocturnal work at sea along with their catch which is fresh and tasty and ready for market. In antiquity Tripoli was called Oea and was one of the three cities of Tripolitania. Seventy kilometres west of Tripoli and also located on the Mediterranean coast are the remains of the ancient trading town of Sabratha. Its Theatre has been rebuilt and is an impressive...
Thank you so much to my hosts in Libya for providing me with a unique and eclectic experience during my brief stay. The Ministry of Tourism meeting was truly informative and I look forward to furthering the development of tourism in Libya back to what it was before. *This video is my own personal experience in that I had in Tripoli, Liberia and only Tripoli. I stayed with a family who's home was surrounded with a tall concrete fence and barbed wire, for safety. Two of the friends who showed me around were equipped with hand guns for my safety, which made me feel very comfortable since we were out until 9pm exploring Tripoli and it's dangerous to be out at night. I did not travel around anywhere else in Libya due to the current situation and can not speak for other places. Please take thi...
While the Lybian town of Bani Walid is still struggling to heal the scars of the siege, which took place less than a month ago, Libya's being promoted as a new travel hotspot. RT's Sarah Firth visited the World Travel Market in London to find out why tour operators remain silent on the tragedy. RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.
Travel video about destination Tripoli in Libya. Tripoli is the capital of the desert state of Libya. The old town is known as the Medina and with its narrow lanes and squat buildings it is a combination of Arabian, North African and Mediterranean cultures. The joie de vivre of the local people is obvious and music and dance are part of their daily life. In antiquity the city was called Oea that was one of the three cities of Tripolitania and in Roman times this section of the coast contained the trading towns of Leptis Magna and Sabratha. Since 1963 Tripoli has been the capital of the Great Socialist Libyan-Arab People’s Republic. The old town contains a souk that was almost fully abandoned following the Great Revolution as private trading was then forbidden but when the law was abolis...
Subscribe to France 24 now : http://f24.my/youtubeEN FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 http://f24.my/YTliveEN The Libyan port city of Sirte, on the Mediterranean Sea, was in the grip of the Islamic State organisation for an entire year. It was a strategic stronghold for the terrorist group, with access to the sea and nearby oil refineries. But since May, a coalition of militias and forces loyal to Libya's UN-backed unity government (GNA) have been retaking the city and the remaining jihadists are now cornered in one last district. Our colleagues at France 2 report from Sirte. A programme prepared by Patrick Lovett, Elom Marcel Toble and Claire Pryde. Visit our website : http://www.france24.com Subscribe to our YouTube channel : http://f24.my/youtubeEN Like us on Fac...
Five years after the fall of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the country still remains trapped in a spiral of deteriorating security, economic crisis, and political deadlock. But will things look up in the future? Follow PressTV Documentaries on: Website @ http://presstvdoc.com/ Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/PressTVdocum... Twitter @ https://twitter.com/presstvdocs Vimeo @ https://vimeo.com/user10253502 Soundcloud @ https://soundcloud.com/presstv-doc Instagram @ https://www.instagram.com/presstvdoc/
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News Three years after the Libyan revolution and the subsequent downfall of its dictator Muammar Qaddafi, the country has descended further into chaos and insecurity. Rebel militias, radical Islamists and former Qaddafi commander Khalifa Haftar are among the different groups vying for power and oil wealth, creating a vacuum in which violence and militancy reign supreme. VICE News filmmaker Medyan Dairieh was in Libya in 2011 to witness the revolution. This year, he returned to follow members of the 17th February battalion, a rebel group fighting against Haftar’s forces. Dairieh witnessed first-hand how life after the Libyan revolution has devolved into lawlessness and Islamic State-linked extremism. Watch “VICE News Archives: ...
In Sabha, Libya, there has been a multi-day battle between two tribes that is called the "Monkey War" over the fact a trained monkey grabbed a hijab off of a schoolgirl as a mean prank. Since then over 15 people have died, and many others injured from gunfire, indiscriminiate mortar rounds, and tanks. http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-sabha-idUSKBN13F0PD ► PATREON - http://patreon.com/MundaneMatt ► Buy a PS4 Pro (Amazon Affiliate) http://amzn.to/2glrwc0 ► PAYPAL Donation - https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted;_button_id=DYJ3WP46USJJE Subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/user/mundanematt?sub_confirmation=1 Got a great news tip? Submit here: http://mundanematt.com/submit Website: http://mundanematt.com Email: themundanematt@gmail.com Twitter: ht...
Is the post-intervention transition in Libya a failure? The Democratic presidential frontrunner responds at the Fox News Democratic presidential town hall in Detroit #DemTownHall
Libya plunged into chaos following the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime dictator, Muammar Gaddafi. The ouster gave rise to heavily-armed militias and led to deep political division. The country has been witnessing numerous clashes between forces loyal to former army general Khalifa Haftar and militia groups that keep refusing to lay down their arms. Press TV’s Homa Lezgee tells us more about the situation in the country. Live @ http://www.presstv.ir/live.html Twitter @ http://twitter.com/PressTV LiveLeak @ http://www.liveleak.com/c/PressTV Facebook @ http://www.facebook.com/PRESSTV Google+ @ http://plus.google.com/+VideosPTV Instagram @ http://instagram.com/presstvchannel
In remote southwest Sahara, the indigenous Tuareg tribe — variously used and discriminated against by former strongman Muammar Qaddafi — fight for their place in a post-revolutionary Libya. Living deep in Libya’s desert near large oil fields and lucrative smuggling routes, hundreds of miles from Libya’s capital, the Tuareg find themselves impoverished and isolated on this prized land. Nowhere is this felt more than in the oasis town of Ubari. Here the Tuareg are pitted against former neighbors in a proxy battle for assets and power, backed by government and international interests. VICE News travels to meet the Tuareg on the front lines of Ubari and the border town of Ghat, to find out what is really happening in this rarely visited land. Read "In a Southern Libya Oasis, a Proxy War En...
New intense battle footage from Libya shows an RT crew caught in the midst of heavy fighting between government forces and Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) militants as the journalists venture to report, risking their lives from the frontline in Sirte. READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/7oio RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com Follow us on Instagram http://instagram.com/rt Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion ...
As the world assesses the political implications for Libya following the death of Muammar Gaddafi, the business world is questioning how long it will take the oil rich nation to get back on its feet.
Libya's economy is on its knees because of volatile oil prices, a slump in reserves and a civil war that is just holding as a United Nations truce holds.The country is currently producing a paltry 400,000 barrels of oil per day, compared to its 2011 levels of 1.5 million barrels per day. Economic systems are slow or not working at all as attacks on oil fields increase and oil production shrinks. The Central Bank, moreover, is part of the tug-of-war between rival the governments and Libyan banks do not have foreign currencies forcing many traders and visitors to exhorbitant black market dealers. The Director of Information at the country's Central Bank admits that that the bank has reached an extreme financial crisis
Libya's economy is in the midst of a post-revolution boom that the International Monetary Fund says should see economic activity double this year, compared to last year with its eight months of war. That would push Libya's economic activity well above 2010, the last full year of Moammar Gadhafi's reign. VOA's Al Pessin spoke to Libyans in Tripoli about their nation's economy and their daily lives.
Al Qarra - Concerts horns, singing and dancing. Libyans expressed their joy in the streets of the capital on February 17, 2013, two years after the beginning of the revolution. With the revolution came many expectations, as well as many economic projects. Two years later, what's happening with these?
As America's recession deepens the biggest business America has is war selling weapons of mass destruction while using the zionist media as a weapon of mass persuation, will the american public sit by and watch american gladiators while the zionist government use their taxes to fund yet another illegal war based on lies. Many Americas have woken up to the scam the big sell the boogy man of terror and have realised that the real terorist is in the White House. However millions of Americans are still too fat and dependant on the mind control to let it go and will once again show the world they lack the capacity to think out of the zionist controlled box. The last ones into the FEMA camps will be the fat lazy dumb retards that have kept the war machine going.
For the new rulers of Libya, relaunching the country's oil-export based economy is the priority. To pressure Gaddafi sanctions were imposed and assets frozen by western governments, a process that is now being reversed and those same Western countries are likely to benefit economically. Libya has appreciating assets: an estimated 46.4 billion barrels of high quality light sweet crude oil. The World Gold Council says in July Tripoli had reserves of almost 143.8 tonnes ... http://www.euronews.net/
The aftershocks from the violence in Libya are being felt in the Maltese economy. The island's exports to the North African nation totalled 85 million euros last year. Malta's GDP amounts to some 5.6 billion euros As the unrest shutters Libyan businesses and banks, one local Maltese entrepreneur explained how its impact was being felt across the Mediterranean. ... http://www.euronews.net/
Libya is in the grip of the worst factional fighting since its civil war three years ago. The economy in recovery mode for a short term is now crumbling once again. International staff have been evacuated as militias battling for control of the shattered country bring their conflict to the capital, Tripoli. CCTV America's Owen Fairclough has more.
Marcopolis.net Video Interview with Khalil Masoud Mahfud, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Tripoli Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture, also available here http://www.marcopolis.net/doing-business-in-libya-main-challenges-2305.htm Apart from the security issues, Khalil Masoud Mahfud, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Tripoli Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture, discusses some of the major challenges when doing business in Libya. To read the full transcript of the MarcoPolis interview with Khalil Masoud Mahfud, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Tripoli Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture, visit Marcopolis.net http://www.marcopolis.net/libya-new-laws-bilateral-agreements-and-the-economy-2705.htm
Marcopolis.net Video Interview with Dr. Mohamed Abdulmalik Elfigih, Chairman of LISCO (Libyan Iron & Steel Company), also available here http://www.marcopolis.net/business-climate-in-libya-1507.htm Chairman of Libyan Iron & Steel Company (LISCO) Dr. Mohamed Abdulmalik Elfigih discusses the business climate in Libya. According to Dr. Elfigih, "The Libyan economy is an oil based economy. The other sectors' share in very limited. On the other hand, the Libyan market is really big. The population of Libya is about 6.5 million plus another 3 million or so of foreigners who are working here. So that's about 10 million people inhabiting a huge territory in a big geographical area , which means that the market is very broad. Libya is a promising and emerging market." To read the full transcript ...
Travel video about destination Libya. Libya is one of the most interesting desert countries and it is gradually opening its doors to the outside world. It is a veritable treasure trove of history. Ancient art and culture of various epochs as well as the fascinating exotic flair of the Orient make Libya a wonderful and fascinating holiday destination. The capital, Tripoli, awakes early in the morning as fishermen return from their nocturnal work at sea along with their catch which is fresh and tasty and ready for market. In antiquity Tripoli was called Oea and was one of the three cities of Tripolitania. Seventy kilometres west of Tripoli and also located on the Mediterranean coast are the remains of the ancient trading town of Sabratha. Its Theatre has been rebuilt and is an impressive...
I recorded this video in 2007, this performance was on the Green mountain. The performance is one of the Libyan traditional dance & music. It describes the agriculture "planting & harvest seasons". The performance was a part of a tour provided for the participants of the 10th International Chemistry Conference and Exhibition in Africa (10ICCA). The conference was hosted by the University of Benghazi and the tour was sponsored and organised by the Omar Al-Mukhtar University.
Mohammad Bin Lamin Was Born in Libya in 1969. He is completely self-taught as an artist and works with several expressive mediums including painting, sculpture, digital art and photography. Bin Lamin has over the years developed signature painting methods and secret techniques for other works that are yet to be unraveled. His pieces are inspired by Libya’s rich cultural and artistic heritage and draws upon its history, going as far back as the ancient cave paintings in the southern mountains and the surreal identities that the country has had to endure over the centuries. His mix of colours, shapes and forms reflect on Libya’s landscapes; and, in particular, the Sahara desert, the Mediterranean Sea as well as the country’s more modern urban and rural fabrics. One of his most celebra...
مقطع العرض الخاص باليوم الثقافي الليبي في مالبورن لسنة 2013 والذي كان تحت اشراف الجالية الليبية في ولاية فكتوريا لتعريف بتاريخ ليبيا والثقافة والمعالم الاثرية والفنون الشعبية ،،، بارك الله في كل من ساهم في انجاح هذا الاحتفال على امل ان يعاد في السنة القادمة وقد عمّا الامن والامان بلادنا. ملاحظة :: مدة العرض حوالي 30 دقيقة استخدم فيها اكثر من 1000 صورة وفلم ومقطع موسيقي الاخوة الذين قاموا بإعداده : عبدالناصر مبروك ، سليمان صقر ، رياض المقدمي
Since Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's ouster last year, many citizens are reverting to practices banned under his rule, including restoring the Koran and holding folklore exhibitions. VOA's Ndimyake Mwakalyelye reports.
Footage given exclusively to the Guardian shows Médecins Sans Frontières’ (MSF) search and rescue boat Dignity I assist in a rescue operation after a boat capsized on Wednesday 5 August in the waters north of Libya. Subscribe to Guardian Wires ► http://bit.ly/guardianwiressub MSF say there could have been up to 700 people on board at the time of the incident. MSF’s two other search and rescue vessels – the MY Phoenix (in collaboration with the NGO MOAS) and the Bourbon Argos also moved to the zone of the shipwreck to offer assistance. MSF have confirmed that there are many confirmed deaths at the scene. The Guardian ► http://is.gd/guardianyt Watch Me Date ► http://is.gd/watchmedate Guardian Football ► http://is.gd/guardianfootball Guardian Music ► http://is.gd/guardianYTmusic Guardian Au...
Edinburgh Arab Festival, EdArabFest, forms part of the world famous Edinubrgh Fringe Festival and is a celebration of culture and the diversity of the arab world. The two day conference has a range of activities from keynote speaches, food tasting, authentic marketplace and various arts and language exibitions.
This video has been selected as an Official Honoree of the 16th Annual Webby Awards: http://www.webbyawards.com/webbys/current_honorees.php?media_id=97&category;_id=134&season;=16 This unique footage, shot in Libya earlier this year by independent photojournalist Andre Liohn, starkly reveals the danger that health-care workers are exposed to as they treat the war-wounded close to the frontline. More infos: http://goo.gl/QPJ0Y
The World Health Organization says about half of Libya's 159 hospitals are either closed or barely delivering services due to the ongoing fighting and the country's weak economic status. Faced with a political turmoil, the new unity government also has to deal with the mammoth task of resuscitating the country's collapsed hospital sector, as healthcare givers are increasingly becoming more desperate. "Our surgical unit is now limited to emergency and cancer surgery. We don't have enough anesth… READ MORE : http://www.africanews.com/2016/07/25/libya-s-health-sector-crumbling-as-hospitals-face-unprecedented-crisis Africanews is a new pan-African media pioneering multilingual and independent news telling expertise in Sub-Saharan Africa. Subscribe on ourYoutube channel : https://www.youtube...
Subscribe to France 24 now : http://f24.my/youtubeEN FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 http://f24.my/YTliveEN In this edition: Libya asks the World Health Organization for extra funds. Also, we look ahead to former Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo's trial at the ICC. And we look at Uganda's growing coffee culture. Libya asks the World Health Organization to give it access to extra funds by raising it into the top category for health emergencies. There are fears that the political and security crisis risks bringing medical services to a halt. Meanwhile, on the eve of the start of the crimes against humanity trial of Ivory Coast's former leader Laurent Gbagbo, we hear from those who hold him responsible for fatal post-electoral violence and those who think he's being ma...
Medical staff at a hospital in Sabha in Libya spoke on Saturday about the struggles they face in meeting the needs of their patients due to difficult living conditions. They also faced difficulties in their work during the rule of Muammar Qaddafi and have been under intense pressure since the start of the conflict. a doctor at the hospital said, "Sabha Hospital is like any other hospital in Libya. All hospitals in the country have collapsed. Unfortunately the former regime did not care for law and order so if a hospital couldn't function in normal circumstances how can it expected to do so in a war?" Injured fighters in Libya's conflict are among those being treated in the wards alongside innocent civilians including newborns. The United Nations has identified healthcare as a pri...
A good friend of mine died in Libya, and how he was buried in the desert.
Dr. A. Omar Abubaker earned a Bachelor of Dental Surgery degree (BDS) from the Faculty of Dentistry, University of Alexandria, Alexandria, Egypt in 1975. After working as a teaching assistant at the University of Benghazi, Libya for two years, he enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh in 1978. In 1984 he earned a Ph.D. in Anatomical Sciences and in 1990 earned a Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) degree. Between 1984 and1990 he also participated in a residency in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and one-year research fellowship at the Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh. Dr. Abubaker was appointed to the faculty of the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in the School of Dentistry, Virginia Commonwealth University in July 1991 with the rank of assistant professor. Since...
Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe Country questions alleged bogus medical treatments billed to NTC during bloody revolution. Al Jazeera's Omar al Saleh reports. At Al Jazeera English, we focus on people and events that affect people's lives. We bring topics to light that often go under-reported, listening to all sides of the story and giving a 'voice to the voiceless.' Reaching more than 270 million households in over 140 countries across the globe, our viewers trust Al Jazeera English to keep them informed, inspired, and entertained. Our impartial, fact-based reporting wins worldwide praise and respect. It is our unique brand of journalism that the world has come to rely on. We are reshaping global media and constantl...
Walking in heavy rain & brisk winds seniors and peace activists demanded that Obama stop his blood thirsty war bombardment of the independent nation of Libya. Health care is free in Libya School is free in Libya, but religious men in Libya do not want women to be educated, so they want to split Libya & make a religious state with the oil, so the men can enslave the women. Obama is a war criminal for attacking Libya. Most Americans oppose the US attack on the Libyan civil war over oil.
Taking a stand for women’s health, the Pink Movement is educating Libyan women about breast cancer prevention and awareness. Whether in mosques and health clubs or walking in pink hijabs and carrying pink banners, the movement fights breast cancer head on.
Where? Libya is a country in North Africa close to the Mediterranean sea. It is the largest oil producer in Africa, and was a stable country with free education, healthcare and a good per capita income. Now? But now its surrounded by chaos and bloodshed and wars, and it is partly because of NATO and USA. Long ago? In 1969, when Muammar Gaddafi led a coupe against King Idris - I and forced him to flee. Then Libyan Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) headed by Gaddafi proclaimed a new Libyan African Republic. His reforms made health care and education free for all, and tried to provide houses for all citizens. A secular society was imposed where women enjoyed equal rights, economy also grew, with best per capita figures in Africa. But his idea of cold nationalism and 42 years o...
This unique footage, shot in Libya earlier this year by photojournalist André Liohn, starkly reveals the danger that health-care workers are exposed to as they treat the war-wounded close to the front line. The project is an ICRC initiative that aims to address the widespread and severe impact of illegal and sometimes violent acts that obstruct the delivery of health care, damage or destroy facilities and vehicles, and injure or kill health-care workers and patients, in armed conflicts and other situations of violence. credits: André Liohn ICRC International Commitee of the Red Cross
Grahame Russell of Rights Action joins us for a 30 minute interview about the health, environmental and other heinous human rights violations caused by Canadian mining companies in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador -- and about the impunity with which they operate. While our lying politicians and media tell us we are fighting for democracy in Libya and Afghanistan, we find out that really, Canadian Corporations are terrorists. This program is a shocking eye-opener. ©2011 Lazarus Productions
Our Month in Focus videos give you a chance to visit some of MSF's projects around the world. This month our teams treated war wounded in Libya as fierce fighting continued in Sirte. In Somalia, millions of people need healthcare and MSF has been working with displaced people in Mogadishu. Over in Haiti, MSF is working to control a cholera epidemic. And teams in the Central African Republic are tackling many health problems.
"DEAR" BRAINWASHINGTON PPL,THIS MUST BE CLEAR... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L6vA0OIITc GADAFFI DID NOT ATTACK HIS PEOPLE CONFIRMED BY SATELLITE SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS *-Gaddafi is innocent! There were no bombardments of civilians by Gaddafi orders >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDt92tR2YnA *-And the "rebels" are the worst kind of scum - they kill civilians who support Gaddafi and mutilate their bodies >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33C93rMfoYY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9bipg8M8Dc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56svwflSEh0 *-NATO airstrikes does kill civilians and children's also >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HQ50zruGA4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyGgfURZJN8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LmDwPFZxZoE *-Unlike western media channels Russian main state TV s...
Tuesday, March 11, 2014 USC Global Health Lecture Series 2013-2014 University of Southern California Working on the frontlines of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters, International Medical Corps President and CEO Nancy Aossey and her colleagues were in Rwanda as the genocide unfolded, treating patients amid unimaginable brutality; in Somalia at the height of the civil war and famine, training local health workers amid the chaos; and in the Balkans during the ethnic cleansing, establishing emergency medicine and ambulance infrastructure. In recent years, International Medical Corps has been a first-responder to the Indian Ocean tsunami, Haiti earthquake and Japan earthquake and tsunami. Today it is one of the few organizations working inside Syria and Libya. Aossey shared stories and ...
Obama and Co. at War against Democracies with Saudi Arabia - Nobody is going to vote for al-qeada.. for ISIS.. for wahhabism.. The TV is lying to US. Assad is democratically elected.. And all your TV lies, without a stitch of evidence to lay a criminal charge will never change the reality.. These TV whores of evil, are hiding that Obama and Saudi Arabia are at war against a Democracy, mass murdering everyday, ourselves, as the innocent forsaken. These TV demons speak no words for Obama bombing the nation's civilians, like too in Libya 68,0000 times, while boycotting all fair elections. Who's going to vote for al-Qeada? or to be enslaved for Saudi Arabia? The person who produces these most evil of TV war crime propaganda does obviously.. Having NO CARE TRULY for all the innocent bombing ...
Yugoslavia 1999-2001, (Having sunk in blood and darkness Yugoslavia, the shadow has gone extending, spreading narcosis and death.) Iraq 1977-2003, (Peter Arnett, the legendary CNN correspondent, fired on two feet on the third day of apocalypses bombers, for providing a version of events is not compatible with the needs of the Pentagon have installed controllers in US newsrooms. 12 years deadly embargo, with constant bombing Clinton of power stations, stores of food and medicines, hospitals, schools, residential areas, factories, palm trees (food base of Iraqis), for the sole purpose of advancing the creeping genocide, through the destruction of principals and health and food means, of water purification systems, triggered by uranium.) Venezuela, Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador 2002-2006, Cuba ...
This LOVELAND MAGAZINE HD VIDEO is from the September 17 campaign rally held in Seasongood Pavilion of Cincinnati's Eden Park by President Barak Obama. Ricky Mulvey reports from the rally and conducted interviews with Loveland area residents, and an interview with former U. S. Sixth Court District Judge Nathaniel Jones. Jones said it was personal to him, "He's like family. It's very personal."He also said that he (Obama) is clear headed and has complete command of the issues. "I am fully in support of his approach to the solutions to the problems we face." Speaking of the crisis in Libya with an American Ambassador and four consulate workers recently killed, and unrest in Northern Africa and the Middle East Jones said, "Well, it is hard for anyone that is not in the position he is in, t...
This panel is inspired by the Refinery 29 interview with Alaa Murabit and Céline Semaan: “Is Fashion’s Embrace Of The Hijab Reappropriating Muslim Women?” How can the complexities of our values be depicted and critiqued through design? We will discuss the role design plays in the media, in religion, fashion and human rights, and how women’s bodies aren’t just used as borders of nations, but borders of industries as well. With a diverse panel of women and man guided by juxtaposed contradictory images and cultural references, the conversation will be transparent and honest opening doors we usually leave close. Panelists Alaa Murabit Alaa is a physician and one of the Global Sustainable Development Goals Advocates appointed by the UN Secretary General and a UN High-Level Commissioner on Hea...
Young boxers in Libya are starting to dream big. The sport was virtually non-existent in the North African country for nearly forty years due to a ban, but has since been reinstated with promising talent now hoping to follow in the footsteps of previous Libyan boxers. Celestine Karoney tells us more.
Despite a raging internal conflict, the unifying factor of sport has not been eroded. A beach handball tournament was held there recently. As CCTV's Leslie Mirungu reports, hopes remain high that sport could play a vital role in Libya's reconcilitation process.
Part of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSDb2b4J1jWDywoENBwnnTX97ZYiuxtP2
Travel video about destination Libya. Libya is one of the most interesting desert countries and it is gradually opening its doors to the outside world. It is a veritable treasure trove of history. Ancient art and culture of various epochs as well as the fascinating exotic flair of the Orient make Libya a wonderful and fascinating holiday destination. The capital, Tripoli, awakes early in the morning as fishermen return from their nocturnal work at sea along with their catch which is fresh and tasty and ready for market. In antiquity Tripoli was called Oea and was one of the three cities of Tripolitania. Seventy kilometres west of Tripoli and also located on the Mediterranean coast are the remains of the ancient trading town of Sabratha. Its Theatre has been rebuilt and is an impressive...
Travel video about destination Tripoli in Libya. Tripoli is the capital of the desert state of Libya. The old town is known as the Medina and with its narrow lanes and squat buildings it is a combination of Arabian, North African and Mediterranean cultures. The joie de vivre of the local people is obvious and music and dance are part of their daily life. In antiquity the city was called Oea that was one of the three cities of Tripolitania and in Roman times this section of the coast contained the trading towns of Leptis Magna and Sabratha. Since 1963 Tripoli has been the capital of the Great Socialist Libyan-Arab People’s Republic. The old town contains a souk that was almost fully abandoned following the Great Revolution as private trading was then forbidden but when the law was abolis...
Travel video about destination Tripolitania in Libya. Tripolitania: at first sight there are few traces of this ancient and legendary place in northwest Libya but it once had three great cities, Sabratha, Leptis Magna And Oea, Tripoli, once named Oea, dates back to the 7th century B.C. when Tripoli was an important trading centre for the Carthaginians. As much as anything else it is the local plants, majestic palm trees and impressive cacti that give Tripoli its Mediterranean atmosphere. Clearly, the influence of the sea is only present close to the coast as a few kilometres inland is endless desert. An eye-catching landmark that dates back to the time of the corsairs is the Citadel in Tripoli’s harbour. The Arabs enlarged the original Byzantine complex to a fortress and for a short sp...
Thank you so much to my hosts in Libya for providing me with a unique and eclectic experience during my brief stay. The Ministry of Tourism meeting was truly informative and I look forward to furthering the development of tourism in Libya back to what it was before. *This video is my own personal experience in that I had in Tripoli, Liberia and only Tripoli. I stayed with a family who's home was surrounded with a tall concrete fence and barbed wire, for safety. Two of the friends who showed me around were equipped with hand guns for my safety, which made me feel very comfortable since we were out until 9pm exploring Tripoli and it's dangerous to be out at night. I did not travel around anywhere else in Libya due to the current situation and can not speak for other places. Please take thi...
Travel video about nature park Akakus in Libya. Mighty, jagged silhouettes announce the entrance to an enchanting world of rock and sandstone. Akakus is not only a mountain range in South West Libya it is also an almost fairytale-like region, a place of silence and contemplation. However, the landscape does not embrace visitors with open arms as the mountains can only be explored with four-wheel drive vehicles and experienced local drivers.The leg of the journey through the Wadi Taschunt travels past a magnificent natural arch of which there are many more in the Akakus. The Tadrat Akakus area is around fifty kilometres long and up to fifty kilometres wide and is a mighty rock and endless desert landscape that forms a natural border between Libya and Algeria. Scattered artefacts and magnif...
Tourism in Libya is an industry still in its infancy but one that will gradually start growing. The country is best known for its ancient Greek and Roman ruins and Sahara desert landscapes. There are five UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the country, three of which are classical ruins. The Roman cities of Sabratha and Leptis Magna in Western Libya and the Greek ruins of Cyrene in the East are big tourist attractions. One of the attractions of Libya's archeological sites, is that they are not as heavily populated by tourists as are other ancient sites in North Africa and southern Europe. Unravel Travel TV http://www.unraveltravel.eu Unravel Travel TV Twitter http://www.twitter.com/UnravelTravelTV Unravel Travel TV on You Tube http://www.youtube.com/UnravelTravelTV
http://www.RealVacationCareers.com Travel Guide to Libya: Leptis Magna Perfa Tripolitanii created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
Travel video about destination Tunisia. Tunis is a North African city with a long history. After the Hasfides and Osmans, the Spanish Moors came but then had to give way to French colonial rule until present day Independence. In the old town, there are more than 700 historic monuments which include 200 palaces, a colourful variety of buildings and numerous mosques.Among shoreline lava rock is the entrance to the Ghar El-Kebir, a collection of sandstone grottos. During Roman times, thousands of slaves were forced to bring building material for Carthage and El Djem from subterranean shafts. In Sousse, the simple fort of Ribat is probably the oldest Islamic building in North Africa, in which Muslim soldiers lived in monastery-like isolation and in the town’s Archaeological Museum there is a f...
The book of Acts was written by Luke, a medical doctor who took an interest in the teachings of Jesus through his mentor, Peter. He’s examined the evidence for Jesus’ life in his earlier letter, the Gospel of Luke, and this time he’s looking at what happened to those who decided to continue following Jesus. Jesus has given his followers a huge mission – we learned this last week – to share his good news with the entire world. To the ends of the earth! He gave this mission to twelve central disciples and a hundred or so people who may have gathered around them in this story. It would be hugely daunting, with no modern communications, travel options. They were in uncharted territory, and needed a guide. Jesus promised them the Holy Spirit, and said to wait for him to arrive. Here’s ...
This is the May, 17, 2017, FULL EPISODE of VICE News Tonight on HBO. Fighting and chaos in Libya could pave the way for an ISIS comeback in the country. President Donald Trump's scandal is taking its toll on the GOP --and fueling talk of impeachment. Plus, a look at the move to overturn Obama-era net neutrality rules. And, at Frieze Art Fair, 20-year old art collector Michael Xufu Huang talks to VICE News about opening his own contemporary art museum at age 20, and his plans for his upcoming college graduation. Check out more Full Episodes of VICE News Tonight here: http://bit.ly/2qXDbC3 Watch VICE News Tonight Mondays through Thursdays at 7:30 PM ET on HBO. Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com Follo...
Six years after Muammar Gaddafi’s fall in 2011, fighting between rival government and militias has plunged Libya into anarchy, creating a vacuum for groups like ISIS to move into. Last year, ISIS took control of the port city of Sirte, Gaddafi’s former hometown and the largest ISIS stronghold outside Iraq and Syria. But local militias, backed by U.S. airstrikes, recaptured Sirte after a seven month-long battle that ended in December. Yet the fractious local militias guarding Sirte still have no real control over the territory. And ISIS is regrouping nearby, raising fears that Libya’s new slide toward anarchy could pave the way for an ISIS comeback. VICE News reports from Sirte. Read: "Manchester bomber traveled to Syria and Libya and had links to ISIS" - http://bit.ly/2qcF2UK WATCH NE...
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News Three years after the Libyan revolution and the subsequent downfall of its dictator Muammar Qaddafi, the country has descended further into chaos and insecurity. Rebel militias, radical Islamists and former Qaddafi commander Khalifa Haftar are among the different groups vying for power and oil wealth, creating a vacuum in which violence and militancy reign supreme. VICE News filmmaker Medyan Dairieh was in Libya in 2011 to witness the revolution. This year, he returned to follow members of the 17th February battalion, a rebel group fighting against Haftar’s forces. Dairieh witnessed first-hand how life after the Libyan revolution has devolved into lawlessness and Islamic State-linked extremism. Watch “VICE News Archives: ...
Five years after the fall of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the country still remains trapped in a spiral of deteriorating security, economic crisis, and political deadlock. But will things look up in the future? Follow PressTV Documentaries on: Website @ http://presstvdoc.com/ Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/PressTVdocum... Twitter @ https://twitter.com/presstvdocs Vimeo @ https://vimeo.com/user10253502 Soundcloud @ https://soundcloud.com/presstv-doc Instagram @ https://www.instagram.com/presstvdoc/
Subscribe to France 24 now: http://f24.my/youtubeEN FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 http://f24.my/YTliveEN Six years have passed since the outbreak of the revolution that led to the ouster and killing of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi. With the country divided between rival clans, some are beginning to miss the old regime, however despised it was at the time. Our reporter Charles Emptaz went to Zintan, near Tripoli, which was the scene of fierce fighting between revolutionaries and pro-Gaddafi loyalists. Zintan is a city like no other. Perched high in Libya’s north-western Nafusa Mountains, near the capital Tripoli, it played a key role in the revolution. It was here that Gaddafi’s first missiles fell in the west of the country. It was also in Zintan that Saif al-I...
Gaddafi's 25 Years In Power (1994): An honest portrayal of life in Libya after 25 years under Gaddafi. For similar stories, see: Libya's Descent Into Immigration Chaos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0vtLspGbmg Libya's Struggle To Cope With Surge In Migrant Smuggling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrM64lMEFfI On The Front Line Of Benghazi's Battle With ISIS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTSPCYRuUKs Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpictures For downloads and more information visit: https://www.journeyman.tv/film/88/gaddafis-25-years-in-power Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/journeymanpictures Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/JourneymanVOD https://twitter.com/JourneymanNews Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram....
For the first time in 42 years, a camera enters Southern Libya in what was forbidden territory under the Gaddafi regime. Shortly after Gaddafi’s demise, we accompany members of the disgraced Tabu tribe along the road to their impoverished desert territory near the Algeria-Niger-Chad borders 1000 Km from Tripoli. Want to watch more full-length Documentaries? Click here: http://bit.ly/1GOzpIu Follow us on Twitter for more - https://twitter.com/realstoriesdocs Instagram - @realstoriesdocs Content licensed from Sideways Film. Any queries, please contact us at: realstories@littledotstudios.com
Libya's UN-backed government says it is working with British authorities to identify what it describes as terrorist networks behind a bombing in the English city of Manchester. UK officials say the attack was carried out by British-born Salman Abedi, whose family has roots in Libya. Al Jazeera’s Mahmoud AbdelWahed reports from Tripoli. - Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe - Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish - Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera - Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/
Embeera embi, emisolo n’omusaala omutono byebimu ku nsoga ezinokoddwayo, eziwaliriza abasawo okwabulira emirimu kuno nebaddukira ku kyeeyo. Olwaleero, ku lunaku olw’okubiri nga beewandiisa okugenda e Libya okukola, abasawo baweze 1500. Abalala abali mu bitaano bakyateekeddwa ebbali lwa nsonga nti tebannafuna pasipooti. Abasawo abeetaagibwa bali 1200 nga okwewandiisa kukomekkereza nkya. For more news visit http://www.ntv.co.ug Follow us on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/ntvuganda Like our Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/NTVUganda
Read the profile: http://to.pbs.org/fudCZe Photographer John Moore is no stranger to combat. As a member of an Associated Press team in 2005, he shared a Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography for coverage of the war in Iraq and he's done extended stints in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, South Africa, Mexico and Nicaragua and elsewhere in the last 20 years. Yet despite his relative comfort with being on the frontlines, Moore told the NewsHour from his hotel room in Cairo that his latest assignment -a six-week trip that took him to the uprisings in Egypt, Bahrain and Libya - might have been his most dangerous. Moore recorded the interview for us after sneaking out of Benghazi, Libya en route back to his home in Denver.
http://www.safelibya.org Scenario, design, animation, sound: Grzegorz Nowiński http://www.novinastudio.pl Safe Libya is a non profit organisation with the aim of helping Libya with the mass amount of arms still under the control of splinter groups, gangs and civilian people. Eight Eight was commissioned to create a campaign that would engage the public and speak out to those Libyan people who do have weapons in their possession. From something so tiny, a chain reaction can be caused that creates mass chaos, but when the people decide they have had enough, and have decided that this should stop, all arms will be collected, and this will then create a Safer Libya, without guns.
Short title sequince created for Aljazeera channel Libya coverage Software:3ds max, After Effects, photo shop Concept and Graphics Animation by MAGED HELBA Music by : Al jazeera music department. Client : ALJAZEERA NETWORK Working time : 4 days
The logbook from my trip to Libya, we stayed in Tripoli 6 days and Cyrène 5 days. We were a group of 15 french students on our way to discoverng the country :) dianesagnier.com dianesagnier.blogspot.com
A film by Nick Francis (www.speak-it.org) & Marc Silver (www.marcsilver.net) An intimate portrait of Omar, a 17 year old stranded in a refugee camp since the 2011 war in Libya. The film offers a unique perspective of one person amongst thousands waiting for a chance to start their life again in a safe country. When war broke out earlier this year in Libya, thousands of refugees from countries such as Somalia, Sudan, and Eritrea, who were living in or transiting through the country at the time, were forced to flee for their lives yet again. They are now waiting in refugee camps along the Tunisian and Egyptian borders - unable to return home due to war or persecution, unable to return to Libya due to ongoing violence and discrimination, and unable to stay in Tunisia or Egypt, countries bot...
By: twana www.twanawali.com
Libya is contaminated with hundreds of thousands of explosive remnants of war that threaten the safety of civilians and aid workers. If these bombs are not properly managed, they could end up in the wrong hands, jeopardizing Libya's recovery and international security. The United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) is currently on the ground to help clear this threat.
Condition ONE is a mobile media technology company developing the tools and platform to combine filmmaking, photojournalism and mobile devices to pioneer powerful immersive experiences. facebook.com/ConditionOne1 twitter.com/danfung --- The Libyan desert near Ras Lanouf March, 2011 Demonstrations have given way to bloody conflict. Battle lines sway back and forth as the Benghazi-centered ragtag rebels combat Tripoli's mercenaries and loyalists. Pro-Gaddafi forces mount their first coordinated offensive, exposing the rebels as woefully untrained and unorganized. Defiance turns to anguish when casualties mount. Slivers of hope rest on defecting army generals and foreign intervention. Photojournalist Patrick Chauvel brings us this immersive video from the rebels' front lines. "It's a very...
A video introducing the new Gree Air Conditioner, and the ability to condition the hottest weather like in Libya. Behance : https://www.behance.net/gallery/27281165/Gree-Libya Credits Client : Gree Studio : Umbrella Communications Account Manager : Mohamed Ragheb Art Director : Hesham Talha Script Writer : Hussin Kamal Concept art : El Hag Sayed Anchovy illustrations : El Hag Sayed Anchovy Animation : Yusuf Eltelbany - Hesham Talha Sound Design : Mohamed El Sayed
Camera : GoPro Hero HD Music : La Caution - Thé à la menthe By Galipette Prod
I know she's gone again
I saw her walking up the track
God only knows when she will be back
The only thing I know as sure as
Morning starts the day
When she comes home again
This is what they'll all say.
Recycle Sally coming round again
Recycle Sally we all know where you've been
Recycle Sally why can't the fools see
Recycle Sally Recycle Sally Recycle Sally
That you recycle to me.
Now Sally ain't about to start to get settled down
She likes to circulate herself all around town
She might get abused and crushed all out of shape