Protestors overtake Islamist radical groups headquarters in Libya

Dr. Fauci

All Star
Joined
Jun 19, 2012
Messages
3,925
Reputation
-105
Daps
4,875
Reppin
NULL
Benghazi, Libya (CNN) -- Ten days after four Americans were killed in their Libyan city, hundreds marched in Benghazi and took over the headquarters of a radical Islamist group tied to the attack.

Thousands of protesters had taken to the street earlier Friday, loudly declaring that they -- and not those behind last week's deadly attack -- represent the real sentiments of the Libyan people.

"I am sorry, America," one man said. "This is the real Libya."

In the evening, an offshoot of several hundred people then headed toward the headquarters for Ansar al-Sharia, a loosely connected radical Islamist group.
Libyans target Islamist militia base

As militia members fled, the protesters torched a vehicle and took over the group's building without firing a single shot. Some of those involved claimed to have freed at least 20 captives held inside, and expressed their intent to assume control over other Ansar al-Sharia buildings.

Army General Naji al-Shuaibi said the citizens, whom he referred to as "revolutionaries of the February 17 uprising," later asked that the Ansar al-Sharia headquarters be handed over to the Libyan army.

"Indeed, we rushed here and we will now take it over," said the general. "There are also other places that we intend to take over (which belong to armed groups) if the revolutionaries and the people allow us to do so."

Mohamed al-Magariaf, president of Libya's General National Congress, thanked the protesters for helping evict "armed groups."

But some of the protesters gathered at locations that house forces loyal to the national authority, he said, including the headquarters of the Rufallah al-Sihati battalion. Gunfire could be heard at the headquarters, but it was not initially clear who was responsible. Al-Magariaf asked the demonstrators to stop their activities and go home.

There was widespread speculation that anti-national authority groups capitalized on the euphoria after the takeover of the Ansar al-Sharia headquarters and pushed protesters to move toward locations under the control of the army and the police force.

On the night of September 11, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens was one of four Americans slain after a group assaulted the U.S. Consulate in the eastern Libyan city.

Seen as the birthplace of the revolution that led to the death of longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, Benghazi has in recent months been beset by security issues.

Initial reports indicated that, ahead of the consular attack, Ansar al-Sharia had organized a protest to decry an inflammatory film that mocks the Prophet Mohammed and also protest the United States, where the film was privately produced.

On Thursday, Libyan Prime Minister Mustafa Abushagur said eight detained in connection with that assault include members of Ansar al-Sharia, though he added that not all the attackers came from one specific group.

Responding to the report from Benghazi, U.S. Sen. John McCain applauded the citizens' efforts Friday and said it represented the true, freedom-loving Libya that he and other U.S. officials involved in the country knew.

"Somewhere Chris Stevens is smiling," the Arizona Republican said. "This is what we knew ... about Libya."
 

IGSaint12

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
14,456
Reputation
2,350
Daps
39,404
Reppin
NULL
Where are the gaddafi dikk riders like reincar? I thought he said they would all be crying in the streets for the return of their dictator? They better get in this thread and explain this shyt.
 

zerozero

Superstar
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
6,866
Reputation
1,250
Daps
13,494
I'd be very hesitant about stuff like this, thousands of people going down handing a building over to a general

what if they rallied against something you were for to evict a group you supported? it's the same exact system playing out with a different viewpoint

specifically it shows that many people are willing to demonstrate pro-america, but it doesn't show the security situation actually stabilizing
 

IGSaint12

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
14,456
Reputation
2,350
Daps
39,404
Reppin
NULL
I'd be very hesitant about stuff like this, thousands of people going down handing a building over to a general

what if they rallied against something you were for to evict a group you supported? it's the same exact system playing out with a different viewpoint

specifically it shows that many people are willing to demonstrate pro-america, but it doesn't show the security situation actually stabilizing

Obviously they are still forming their own democracy it's not going to be fixed over night. Going from a dictator to a democracy is never easy, they still don't know who they are as a nation.
 

zerozero

Superstar
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
6,866
Reputation
1,250
Daps
13,494
Obviously they are still forming their own democracy it's not going to be fixed over night. Going from a dictator to a democracy is never easy, they still don't know who they are as a nation.

As a democracy they won't necessarily be pro american is what I'm saying, if you accept the structural change as valuable you have to accept the content of the structure as acceptable

specifically, John McCain likes what happened here, but what he's reacting to is their opinion. if their opinion swung the other way he'd be horrified
 

IGSaint12

Superstar
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
14,456
Reputation
2,350
Daps
39,404
Reppin
NULL
As a democracy they won't necessarily be pro american is what I'm saying, if you accept the structural change as valuable you have to accept the content of the structure as acceptable

specifically, John McCain likes what happened here, but what he's reacting to is their opinion. if their opinion swung the other way he'd be horrified

Their goverment may or may not be pro american we just don't know that's how democracy works. However what we do know is that the average libyan person has a high respect for the U.S ambassador and americans and what they did for libya. The people who killed the ambassador were terrorist and have nothing to do with the average libyan citizen especially considering the backlash the militias who were responsible for the attack on the ambassador received from pro-american libyans.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/22/world/africa/pro-american-libyans-besiege-militant-group-in-benghazi.html?pagewanted=all&_moc.semityn.www
 

mbewane

Knicks: 93 til infinity
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
18,624
Reputation
3,871
Daps
52,968
Reppin
Brussels, Belgium
From I read they overtake that building without firing shots, so it's actually different than what islamists groups do.

I think this is not to be understimated, from what I remember in all these post 9-11 years this is the first time I've seen arab/maghrebian muslims actually ACT against islamists. It's rare that they say something against them, let alone DO something about those they say "misrepresent" them. But I might be wrong or just misinformed.

That moment when Egyptian muslims protected some Egyptian christians last year against attacks was also big. Hopefully more moments like these will happen in the future, my stance has always been that radical islamism can onlt be fought from within, any attempts to do so from outside only reinforces it IMO.
 
Top