It’s not been a great few months for the government in Libya.

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It’s not been a great few months for the government in Libya.
New Post has been published on Voice of Arewa
New Post has been published on http://www.voiceofarewa.com/libya-crisis-deepens-as-rebels-expand-demands/
Libya crisis deepens as rebels expand demands
Additional demands include PM’s resignation and the freezing of a recently released state budget.
Rival coalition that supports the government warns those stationed at the ministries to use force to dislodge them [AFP]
Libya’s political crisis has deepened as armed groups surrounding two ministries in the capital said they had formed an alliance to present an expanded list of six demands that included the resignation of Prime Minister Ali Zeidan.
The armed groups initially demanded that parliament pass the “political isolation law” banning senior officials, who held a senior position under late Muammar Gaddafi, from office, and members had hoped the vote would be enough to dislodge the gunmen from their positions at the government ministries.
Instead, the groups have settled in and expanded their list of demands, which they presented to Reuters news agency on a printed notice late on Wednesday.
The additional demands included Zeidan’s resignation, the freezing of a recently released state budget and the right to form a committee to take charge of the Foreign Ministry.
Rival warning
In a separate development, a rival coalition that said it supported the government warned those stationed at the ministries it was prepared to use force to dislodge them.
“If you do not respond to our demands, we will form a common national force from all the cities of Libya to handle this situation,” the group said on Wednesday.
Its members included federalists in eastern Cyrenaica and leaders of former rebel groups in a number of towns including Benghazi in the east.
Zeidan, for his part, promised the government would stick to plans to bar anyone who held a senior position under Gaddafi and said some ministers would have to be replaced under legislation passed on Sunday.
Zeidan defended the armed groups, saying they had a right to express their views as they saw fit.
“We don’t have militias in Libya, we have revolutionaries,” he told a news conference.
The prime minister also denied that parliament had bowed to their pressure, insisting the new law was necessary to protect the ideals of the revolution, adding he hoped the world would appreciate Libya’s exceptional circumstances.
“With any law passed, there are some positive and some negative aspects, and we need to accept the negatives,” he said.
Source: Al Jazeera
They told us that they planned to shift control of a few prisons this week, but it has not happened. … The government has to take over the prisons one by one by negotiating with the people who run it. It is not uniformly or automatically done.
A United Nations official, based in Tripoli • Discussing the situation with Libyan prisons, where conditions in the post-Gaddafi era have gotten quite bad, as rebel-sympathizing prison runners are using the prisons to exact revenge on people who supported the former Libyan leader during the revolution. Prison owners have tried to tell a different story, but some humanitarian groups have stopped helping Libyan prisons due to torture allegations. The United Nations has complained about the problem for months, noting that the government should be in control of the prisons to ensure fair treatment, not former rebels. Roughly 8,500 detainees, many sub-Saharan Africans suspected of fighting for Gaddafi, are being held in detention centers nationwide. source (via • follow)
Like all great revoluntions the rebels apply for government jobs
Like all great revoluntions the rebels apply for government jobs 2011-12-28 www.streetroachpics.com Staff Writter
We all have heard the joke about protesters are the first to take government jobs. The ironic part of the joke is all people want to do from day to day is survive or provided a better way of life for themselves and their family.
In Libya, the rebels that were fighting are few months ago are now applying for government jobs
source http://www.streetroachpics.com/4402/4402.html tags: libya rebels,libya war,
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Hella News #7 - August 29, 2011
Video shows rebels storming Gaddafi compound
Breaching the walls: Scenes from Tripoli earlier today, as rebel forces successfully breached the compound of Muammar Gaddafi. source
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Libya rebels cheer in Tripoli, Gadhafi's sons held - World news
"Libyan rebels raced into Tripoli Sunday and met little resistance as Muammar Qaddafi's defenders melted away and his 42-year rule rapidly crumbled. The euphoric fighters celebrated with residents of the capital in Green Square, the symbolic heart of the regime."