Monday, August 15, 2011

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Mubarak on trial: Egypt, Syria, Libya and Middle East live updates

• Mubarak trial adjourned until 5 September
• Judge bans TV broadcasting from the court
• Syria: Latakia under attack for third day
• Libyan interior minister heads to Cairo; defection suspected
• Read a summary of today's key events

Hosni Mubarak on trial in Cairo today. Photograph: AP

5.07pm: Here is an evening summary.


Egypt

• Former Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak appeared in court again charged with corruption and the unlawful killing of protesters amid somewhat chaotic scenes. His trial was postponed until 5 September and the televising of proceedings was banned by the judge (see 12.33pm), a move criticised by activists (see 1.51pm). Ramadan Ahmed, whose 16-year-old son was killed during the Egyptian uprising, said: "This is not correct. How can I be reassured and feel the justice? I want to see justice realised before my eyes." However, lawyers seemed to back the move, with one saying it would ensure Mubarak faced "a legal case, not a show". There were scuffles between pro- and anti-Mubarak activists outside the courtroom again, with 30 reportedly injured (see 2.05pm).

• A new alliance of liberal parties called the Egyptian Bloc was launched in Cairo to run in the upcoming parliamentary elections (see 12.41pm).


Syria

• The western port city of Latakia has come under attack from government forces for the third day (see 12.34pm). Activists say troops called for residents to leave their homes; residents were worried the security forces would then destroy the houses. Many people have been trying to flee the city, with some being arrested as they did so (see 10.58am). Around 30 people are estimated to have been killed in the city since Saturday, at least two today (see 2.43pm). There are reports a Palestinian refugee camp has been targeted by Syrian forces in Latakia (see 3.12pm) and that thousands of people are being rounded up in the city's sports stadium (see 2.14pm). Gunfire has also been reported in al-Hawla, close to Homs.

• Germany called for more EU sanctions against Syria and for the UN security council to discuss the issue again (see 4.25pm). Jordan's prime minister, Marouf al-Bakhit, told Bashar al-Assad, Syria's president, to "quickly end" military operations and implement political reforms.


Libya

• The Libyan interior minister, Nassr al-Mabrouk Abdullah, has arrived in Cairo with members of his family, apparently as a tourist, although it is suspected he has actually defected (see 12.43pm).

• Muammar Gaddafi spoke out on state TV, although with audio only, to urge his people to "liberate Libya" from Nato (see 12.27pm), as reports claimed his government was holding talks in Tunisia with the rebels (Tripoli denies it). A UN envoy arrived in Tunisia for talks with both sides (see 4.24pm).

• Gaddafi's forces are counterattacking after the rebels took Zawiya, which is only half an hour's drive from Tripoli. The rebels have reportedly also taken Ghariyan, about 45 miles (75km) south of the capital (see 4.24pm).


Tunisia

• Security forces used tear gas and truncheons to disperse a crowd of protesters in the capital today who were demanding that the government step down. The caretaker authorities running the country since Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was ousted in January have struggled to restore stability with protests and strikes breaking out regularly.


Yemen

• A prominent opposition leader is the main suspect in the attempt to assassinate Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh, a member of the ruling party said in comments published today. Saleh has been in Saudi Arabia receiving medical treatment since the attack in June. He said last week he would cooperate with Yemen's opposition and international powers to revive a plan to ease him from office brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council, a bloc of Yemen's wealthier Gulf neighbours. His renewed interest in the plan, which he previously agreed to only to back out three times, followed prodding from US envoys to hand over power.

That's it from me today. Thanks very much for all your comments and see you tomorrow.

4.25pm: Germany has called today for more EU sanctions against Syria and urged the UN security council to discuss the government crackdown there again this week, following the attack on Latakia by gunboats. Around 30 people are estimated to have been killed in the city since Saturday. "The current use of violence cannot be justified morally or under international law in any way," said Andreas Peschke, a spokesman for the foreign ministry. Serious UN sanctions remain likely to be vetoed by Russia and China, who both hold veto rights on the security council.

4.24pm: The Libyan rebels are claiming to have now taken the Western Mountains town of Ghariyan, about 45 miles (75km) south of Tripoli, according to Reuters.

Abdulrahman, identified by the news agency as a rebel spokesman, said:

Ghariyan is fully in the hands of the revolutionaries. They crushed the Sahban Brigade, the main command centre for [Muammar] Gaddafi in the Western Mountains. They took the brigade's heavy and light weapons. Gaddafi has been isolated. He has been cut off from the outside world after the revolutionaries managed to cut road linking Tripoli to Tunisia.

This map shows where Ghariyan is in relation to Tripoli.

A spokesman for David Cameron, the British prime minister, said today that "we think the Nato operation is proving successful in eroding Gaddafi's ability to wage war against his own people".

The Associated Press is reporting today that Gaddafi's forces have pushed the rebels back from the centre of Zawiya in "fierce fighting". The rebels were running low on ammunition and waiting for supplies, the news agency said. It reported cars fleeing Tripoli in fear of the civil war reaching the capital. Mohammed Bilkheir, an accountant, was quoted as saying: "We are afraid of whatever is coming."

Meanwhile a UN envoy trying to find a way to end the conflict in Libya has arrived in Tunisia for talks, the Tunisian foreign ministry said. A ministry spokesman said Abdel Elah al-Khatib will meet the Tunisian foreign minister tomorrow "and after that we don't know but certainly he will meet the Libyan parties".

Reports that the Libyan government and the rebels are holding talks in Tunisia have been denied by Tripoli.

Al-Khatib has met on several occasions with representatives of Muammar Gaddafi and the rebels. He has so far been unable to persuade the two sides to adopt his ceasefire plan.

3.49pm: My colleague Martin Chulov has written a piece about the importance of taking Zawiya for the Libyan rebels, and how difficult it will be for the rebels to try to invade Tripoli.

3.43pm: WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT. My colleague Nour Ali (a pseudonym) sends links to several videos purporting to be from Syria. The first one, which is very upsetting, purports to show Ola Yasser Jablawi, a two-year-old girl shot to death through her eye by Syrian security forces or the Shabiha ("ghosts") militia in Latakia, which has now been under attack by Syrian forces for three days. The video was uploaded yesterday. According to the caption, Yasser Zahlawi took his daughter and left the neighbourhood of Raml before the attacks started. At a checkpoint, the security forces and Shabiha fired at the car, killing the girl and shooting her father. He was arrested "and no one knows anything about him at all".

This video, uploaded yesterday, purports to show the body of Jamal Mahmood Alfatwa, who according to the caption was tortured to death by the Syrian security forces in Homs after being arrested on 1 August. According to the caption, Alfatwa, a 33-year-old pharmacist, was "one of the most prominent activists in Homs" and was a "popular figure" in the city. The caption states that one can see the effect of torture through electric shocks on his body.

This video also purports to be of Latakia. It was uploaded yesterday. Heavy smoke can be seen and gunfire can be heard.

This video purports to be from Deir Ezzor and was uploaded yesterday. It seems to show a number of people attempting to erase Bashar al-Assad's name from a wall. Gunfire is suddenly heard and people begin running. A man is then seen lying in the road, shot in the stomach and gravely injured.

This video purporting to be from Arbin, Damascus, uploaded last week seems to show an unarmed man being shot in the head by a sniper.

This video purports to show damage to buildings in Hama, which came under heavy attack by Syrian troops last week. It was uploaded yesterday.

None of these videos can be independently verified.

This map shows where all these places are.


3.12pm: Haroon Siddique just spoke to Chris Gunness of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees about reports that a refugee camp has been targeted by Syrian security forces in Latakia (apologies for the audio quality):

We have disturbing reports that more than half of the camp have fled. They were told to leave, some by the Syrian security forces. Others fled because there was firing into the camp from gunboats from the sea and also from the land …

We believe that between 5,000 and 10,000 people are on the move. We have no idea where they are, what situation they are in. We have no idea how many are wounded, how many are dying, how many need medical attention, how many women, how many children, how many elderly [there are] and it's an extremely worrying situation …

We have called on the Syrian authorities to give us access; we have called on the guns to fall silent so that humanitarian access can be obtained …to help the sick, the needy, the dying and to administer to women and children.

3.03pm: This is an interesting piece from the EU Observer on how Nato airstrikes could "disable" the Syrian army.

Nato member countries would begin by using satellite technology to spot Syrian air defences. A few days later, warplanes, in larger numbers than Libya, would take off from the UK base in Cyprus and spend some 48 hours destroying Syrian surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) and jets. Alliance aircraft would then start an open-ended bombardment of Syrian tanks and ground troops.

As the article points out, "action is highly unlikely because Russia would veto a UN mandate, Nato assets are stretched in Afghanistan and Libya and Nato countries are in financial crisis".

2.43pm: Syrian troops have killed at least at least two people today, one in Latakia and one in Homs, the Associated Press reports, citing witnesses:

The military assault in the port city of Latakia was in its third day today after gunboats joined ground troops yesterday for the first time in the uprising. Nearly 30 people, and possibly more, have been killed in the city since Saturday, activists say.

Soldiers also stormed the area of Houla [near] the central city of Homs, which has seen massive protests in recent months. A sniper killed an elderly man, according to the London-based Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists on the ground in Syria ...

The Observatory said troops opened fire today as a group of fleeing residents approached a checkpoint in the Ein Tamra district of Latakia. One person was shot dead and five were wounded. A Latakia resident confirmed the account, saying troops fired as scores of people, many of them women and children, were fleeing. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

The Local Coordination Committees, an activist group, also confirmed troops fired at fleeing families. It said random gunfire erupted today in addition to a campaign of raids and house-to-house arrests. Troops later entered small neighbourhoods in the al-Ramel Palestinian refugee camp, warning people to leave or risk their houses being destroyed, it said ...

A Syrian military official on Monday denied as "completely untrue" reports that gunboats had fired on Latakia. The official, whose comments were carried by state-run news agency Sana, said the gunboats were patrolling the coast "on a routine mission to prevent weapons smuggling into the country".

2.28pm: Spain could offer asylum to the Syrian president if he stands down, El Pais reports. But it looks like Madrid's attempts to bring an end to the bloodshed in Spain were given short shrift. From El Pais:

Prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero last June sent Spanish diplomat Bernardino León on an unofficial visit to Damascus in hopes of convincing Syrian president Bashar al-Assad to accept a plan that would put an end to the violence that, according the UN, has claimed more than 2,000 civilian lives since March ...

Until June, Zapatero maintained telephone contact with Assad, whom Spain may be willing to provide with asylum if the regime falls.

Zapatero's three-point plan included the immediate cessation of all state repression, the holding of a transitional conference in Madrid with all the parties involved in the conflict, and the formation of a new government with widespread representation. Upon León's return, however, he explained that his efforts had fallen on deaf ears. "My audience was disconnected from reality," he reportedly said.

2.14pm: Thousands of people are being rounded up by Syrian security services in the sports stadium in Latakia, al-Jazeera is reporting. It says it hears people are being brought in in buses.

Gunfire can be heard in the video above, purportedly filmed in Latakia this morning.

2.05pm: The Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry al-Youm reports that 30 people were injured in the clashes outside the court in Cairo where the Mubarak case was being heard today:

Adel al-Adawy, the deputy health minister, said 20 of those injured received treatment on the spot. Seven were taken to the National Bank of Egypt's hospital and three to New Cairo hospital.

1.51pm: Mohamed El Dahshan in Cairo has been gathering reaction to today's Mubarak court hearing, which focus primarily on the judge's decision to discontinue the television broadcast of the trial.

Galal Faissal Aly, who lost his brother Nasser during the revolution, told the Guardian:

The prime minister is reneging on his demands one by one. We [the families of victims] met with him and the minister of justice, and they assured us that the public broadcast wouldn't be limited to just a first session.

That the decision came from the judiciary, which is formally independent from the executive, is not much of an argument, he added:

Where was this independence then when we held this meeting with the government? We didn't meet any judges. We met the prime minister and the minister of justice, and they are the ones who made those promises to us.

Essam Sultan, vice-president of the Wasat (centre) party, said that "stopping the broadcast is in favour of the case - so that witnesses won't hear each other's testimonies but also to weed out the lawyers who are only seeking fame [by appearing on television]".

But the most immediate response came from activists condemning the decision. A number suggested, both online and on television, that, since the television broadcast was one of the gains of the three-week long July sit-in in Tahrir Square, going back to the street was a potential strategic decision. It was a sentiment echoed by Aly:

Resuming the sit-in is a possibility. I will hold a meeting with other families of martyrs, and we'll probably hold a stand by the prime minister's office to object his reneging. Then we'll see.

Activist Mona Seif, who leads the No to Military Trial group, was more stoical. She said:

I focus less on the Mubarak trial than I do on the fact that there are no less than 38 young people facing military trial today in Cairo, and at least 10 others in Alexandria. It is ironic that most were grabbed from sit-ins around the country that pushed for this trial to be held promptly and publicly. They are paying the price for one of the leading gains we have acquired. And which we're seeing being taken away.

1.14pm: Here is a lunchtime summary.

***

Comments in chronological order (Total 220 comments)


BrownMoses
15 August 2011 8:37AM
Here's some stuff of interest that was posted since the last live blog:
Brega
Video of rebels in Brega
A map of the route taken in the above video

Another video of rebels in the Brega residential area
A map of the route taken in the above video

Captured Gaddafi troops and equipment near Brega

Tawergha
Makeshift prison cells in Tawergha
Another video near Tawergha
And another
And another
And another with captured vehicles
Keep an eye out for yellow and red markings on vehicles, it was reported that the rebels were told to use those markings so they could be ID'd by NATO. It would be interesting to see if the rebels from Nafusa were told the same thing.

AJE Video Libyan rebels capture Tawurgha in the north - This is of interest to people who wonder what happens to civilians when the rebels attack a town.

BBC Video report, Rebel fighters take Libyan town of Tawargha

Andrews Simmons of AJE was Tweeting from Tawergha as it was captured


Just back from Tawergha, south east of Misrata. Town has been taken after major opposition offensive. Some fighting continues.
Civilians evacuated from Tawergha under care of Red Crescent in Misrata. Large numbers.
At least 9 Libyan opposition fighters dead in the 2 day old operation to take Tawergha. More than 70 injured.
Libyan opposition force push out of Misrata East front included six tanks captured earlier from GF. One destroyed.
One Libyan opposition commander injured Thurs in offensive on Tawergha shot dead Fri trying to negotiate surrender of remaining GF.
As reported earlier .. hundreds of civilians now in Red Crescent camp in Misrata. We witnessed no looting in 4 hours on ground.

These two videos are apparently of a pro-rebel doctor captured in Tawergha, if someone knows Arabic and could translate I think that would be very interesting
Capture of Dr.Ali Dorath in Tawirgha part 1
Capture of Dr.Ali Dorath in Tawirgha part 2

Zliten
Rebels fighting Gaddafi forces

Nafusa
AJE Video Fleeing Libyans say Gaddafi regime crumbling

Other articles and videos
NATO arming of Libyan rebels on the rise?
Dental records for Hana Gaddafi reopen mystery of Libyan leader's daughter
Reading the Rebels in Misurata, Libya by CJ Chivers - Excellent article, well worth a read.



ObviousEggs
15 August 2011 8:48AM
After yet another murdering of children and other Libyans by NATO forces, after 6 months of systematic killing and country plundering and demolition, it is time to remind to all these NATO generals and politicians that they should expect war crime tribunal.

Don't expect to sell to anybody your lies about protecting civilians. Don't expect even your children will believe that bullshit. You know what you are going very well, as indeed Nazi new that their concentration camps were not about protecting civilians. No UN resolution will help you, as no references to orders help Nazi war criminals escape justice.

Teaching third world leaders responsibility isn't a one way street - western politicians and generals must learn their bit too! Justice is very slow thing, much slower than NATO killing and propaganda machines, but it will work eventually. Think about G.W.Bush afraid visiting Switzerland now, Rumsfeld and Cheney nearly expecting a trial in their home country.

And of course so called 'journalists' concealing NATO and their 'freedom fighters' atrocities from public, essentially acting as NATO evil propaganda machine will learn what is karma about as well.



LuisGaia
15 August 2011 8:50AM
"Let us zoom and replay".
He stops. Looks and drives away.



BrownMoses
15 August 2011 9:00AM
Here's some links that are relevant to the situation in Zawiyah:
Situation map as of August 14th

AJE Video, 'Tripoli Brigade' trains to take capital

Libya rebels and govt hold talks in Tunisia:source

Rebels say capture another town west of Tripoli

Libyan rebels hope to cut 2 Tripoli supply routes

Libya: Tripoli braces for Gaddaf's final curtain

Apparently this is the road bridge journalists in Zawiyah are being stopped at, to give you an idea where they are in Zawiyah



LauraOliver
15 August 2011 9:18AM
Wow thanks for all the links @BrownMoses - just looking through them now



LordThanos
15 August 2011 9:25AM
How long do we give Gaddafi now - 7 days???



BrownMoses
15 August 2011 9:28AM
This video on Facebook is apparently of rebels heading to Surman. It includes what appears to be captured Gaddafi forces, and other non-uniformed individuals who have been tied up. Again, it would be useful if anyone knew Arabic.

Speaking of which, this video is apparently the leader of the Gharyan miiltary council giving a statement, but it's also in Arabic, so he could be reading the lottery results for all I know.



BrownMoses
15 August 2011 9:43AM
@LordThanos I think the conflict is entering what could be described as a "very fluid" stage, and the longer the rebels can hold onto their gains in Zawiyah the more uncertain things will become. I think there's several factors that will play an important part of what happens next:
- The ability for the rebels to keep the coastal road close, and deny Tripoli supplies from Tunisia. That doesn't necessarily require the rebels to capture Zawiyah.
- Whether or not the rebels can capture and control cities west of Zawiyah. It'll be interesting to see if those cities stay loyal to Gaddafi, or the rebels need to spend resources keeping them under control. If they side with the rebels it'll make it even harder for the Gaddafi regime to open the coastal road to Tunisia.
- If the regime can mount an effective conterattack and break the rebel lines. This one is really hard to know, especially if NATO is bombing anything heading towards the rebel frontlines.
- If the rebels try to capture Tarhuna, and move onto Al Khums and Zliten. If they manage that then Tripoli is totally surrounded.

It's a lot of big ifs, so I think the next couple of weeks will be very interesting.



BrownMoses
15 August 2011 9:43AM
Zeina Khodr of AJE has tweeted a few things in the last 30 minutes


Mortars landing in #Zawiyah ... #Gaddafi forces still putting up a fight for coastal city
Dozens of families continue to arrive to rebel held areas in west fleeing from #Tripoli
Families from #Tripoli say #Gaddafi massed his forces in suburbs of capital particularly near #Zawiyah,


BrownMoses
15 August 2011 9:47AM
Oh, one thing I forgot to mention about this video from outside of Surman is unlike the rebels in Tawergha none of the vehicles have the yellow and red markings NATO told the Tawergha rebels to use, so if you see a video that claims to be at a certain location then you can tell if it's from Tawergha or not. I noticed Al Jazeera Arabic used footage from Tawergha in the background of a interview with a reporter in Nafusa.



fripouille
15 August 2011 9:59AM
How long do we give Gaddafi now - 7 days???

It's difficult to say, but many predictions of his imminent departure - made by myself on one occasion I willingly admit - have been proved wrong. There are rumours that the government is negotiating his departure with rebels in Djerba being reported (see ATL), and I read somewhere else (but forget where) that there has been a flurry of speculation in Lebanese press circles that he is to leave Libya within a week...

All this against what are being reported everywhere as substantial rebel military advances which may soon cut Tripoli off from interior supply routes.

Thanks for the links BrownMoses, am wading throught them patiently.:)


Santinox
15 August 2011 10:14AM
The western and eastern 'enabler' regimes that propped up Hosni and his Ilk in the middle east, turning a blind eye to the the wholesale theft and subjugation of the population are just as culpable as any tin-pot dictator. Funny how few of them have any comment to make on Mubarak's trial...



Santinox
15 August 2011 10:14AM
The western and eastern 'enabler' regimes that propped up Hosni and his Ilk in the middle east, turning a blind eye to the the wholesale theft and subjugation of the population are just as culpable as any tin-pot dictator. Funny how few of them have any comment to make on Mubarak's trial...

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Link BrownMoses
15 August 2011 10:17AM
This video is apparently the rebels fighting towards Surman, and they appear to reach a built up area that could be Surman at the end of the video.



LordThanos
15 August 2011 10:18AM
All this is very interesting.

I'm all for the 'survival of the fittest' mantra ....but I think this 'revolution' is false. It has been completely hijacked by NATO and the West - that will always be a stain on Libya and a source of contention for those who take the reins of power once Gaddafi has gone.

@fripouille

You speak of speculation about Gaddafi departing - but where would he go. His presence in any country would create instability and resentment ...eventually he would be arrested and hauled before the ICJ.

Personally I hope he is killed and therefore spared the humiliation of a show trial for yet another African leader who dared to defy the West.

This whole business has been shameful - I wish NATO would just finish the job - it's now their war - they must finish it.



littleriver
15 August 2011 10:19AM
http://www.france24.com/en/20110814-jordan-king-unveils-constitutional-reform-proposals

JORDAN
King Abdullah unveiled constitutional reform proposals yesterday.

Clips :
"Amending the constitution will proceed in accordance with the appropriate constitutional processes and within a timeframe we hope would not exceed one month...," the king said.
"We assert that the roadmap of political reform will be achieved within a timeframe that observes institutional processes and the existing constitutional channels, and no later than the fourth quarter of this year."

"To reinforce the role of youth in public and parliamentary life, the minimum age of candidacy for the Lower House has been lowered to 25 years...," the king said.

"One of the major proposals is the establishment of a constitutional court to rule on the constitutionality of legislation and consolidate the judiciary's role as the authority that safeguards the constitutionality of legislation," the king told statesmen and journalists at an iftar meal to break the Ramadan fast, a palace statement said.

Does the Guardian have a fuller account of the proposals put forward by King Abdullah yesterday ? is there any reaction from opposition spokespeople in Jordan ?



GloriousMonster
15 August 2011 10:25AM
The brutalities that have been carried out by Mubarak (I should say "allegedly carried out", but there is plenty of evidence which shows this man has committed human rights abuses and ordered the killing of anyone who dares go against his megalomaniac views) are disgusting, and, for the sake of those who have suffered at his hands, I am hoping that he will pay the price for his actions.



BrownMoses
15 August 2011 10:26AM
Today's NATO report is interesting:

Sorties conducted 14 AUGUST: 119
Strike sorties conducted 14 AUGUST: 26
Key Hits 14 AUGUST:
In the Vicinity of Al Zawiyan: 1 Anti Aircraft Gun.
In the vicinity of :Garyan: 1 Military Facility.
In the vicinity of Tripoli: 11 Surface to Surface Missile Trans/Loader Vehicles, 1 Surface to Surface Missile Trailer, 3 Radars.
In the vicinity of Zlitan: 4 Military Facilities, 1 Command and Control Node, 1 Artillery Piece, 1 Armed Vehicle.



That's the lowest amount of strikes sorties I can remember seeing in a very long time, and it doesn't seem like the Nafusa rebels are getting much help from NATO.



davthekat
15 August 2011 10:27AM
Here is a map showing the current positions in Western Libya as of this morning.

According to some reports, the FLF have taken Gharyan (where there was some information tweeted over the weekend that half the Gadaffi brigade stationed there actually joined the FLF rather than fight them) and Mizdah further to the south, so it appears to be already out of date.

@BrownMoses - also thanks for the many links - I understand that Surman is fully under the control of the FLF as of yesterday, but that fighting continues within parts of Zawiyah.



littleriver
15 August 2011 10:28AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FeVa3WP0QLQ&feature=youtu.be

BAHRAIN
The Stream-Bahrain : (The battle over Bahrain's future is raging online between government loyalists and opposition supporters.) Following on from the Al Jazeera documentary Shouting in The Dark,The Stream has hosted a debate (via Skype) between Zainab Al-Khawaja and Suhail Algosaibi. Zainab Al Khawaja is very outspoken during the debate and I sincerely hope she will not face punishment for her comments, particularly those pertaining to her claims that certain (named) members of the AL Khalifa family are directly involved in the torture of detainees.To view the discussion follow the link.(starts 3.20mins into the report).

Also on Bahrain :

http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/bahrain-to-sack-23-health-workers-over-protests

(DUBAI, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Bahrain's health ministry will sack 23 workers and temporarily re-instate 200 who were suspended during a crackdown on anti-government protests early this year, state news agency BNA said on Thursday.
Preliminary findings of the committees tasked with looking into "staff violations" indicate 23 health ministry workers will lose their jobs, a spokesman was quoted by BNA as saying. He put the total number facing investigation at 428.)



FerventPixel
15 August 2011 10:36AM
Look at Mubarak - trying to hide on his stretcher, stripping himself of dignity. Stand up and be a man.


_____________

What do you think ?

Các anh chị nghĩ thế nào, có ý kiến phê bình gì qua bài viết "Mubarak on trial: Egypt, Syria, Libya and Middle East live updates" và 20 trong số "220 Comments" của đọc giả ?

Các anh chị nghĩ thế nào về ý kiến chia sẻ của đọc giả với nick GloriousMonster về Mubarak : "The brutalities that have been carried out by Mubarak (I should say "allegedly carried out", but there is plenty of evidence which shows this man has committed human rights abuses and ordered the killing of anyone who dares go against his megalomaniac views) are disgusting, and, for the sake of those who have suffered at his hands, I am hoping that he will pay the price for his actions." ?

Và các anh chị nghĩ thế nào qua ý kiến của đọc giả với nick FerventPixel : "Look at Mubarak - trying to hide on his stretcher, stripping himself of dignity. Stand up and be a man." ?

Phải chăng khi những tên độc tài bạo ác từng giết người hàng lọat, từng nhúng tay vào MÁU của những người vô tội bị chúng cai trị, chà đạp, khi đối diện với TỘI ÁC chúng đã làm, chúng trở thành những bị thịt đáng ghê tởm trước kết cuộc Ô NHỤC mà khi còn quyền lực trong tay, khi chúng giết người chúng không hề nghĩ những nạn nhân của chúng cũng MUỐN SỐNG, chúng không hề nghĩ sẽ có một ngày chúng trở thành những bị thịt hèn nhược đáng ghê tởm và SỢ CHẾT.

Chúng đã TƯỚC ĐỌAT SỰ SỐNG của nhiều người, có lẽ chúng cũng nên "nếm" qua cho biết những điều chúng đã làm cho người khác vậy .

Còn nữa, TỘI ÁC của bè lũ phản quốc CƯỚP NƯỚC DIỆT CHỦNG BÁN NƯỚC Việt gian cộng sản VN còn cao hơn nhiều, còn sâu hơn nhiều, còn thâm hơn nhiều so với TỘI ÁC của Mubarak hay bất cứ tên độc tài nào khác trên thế giới này .

Chừng nào dân tộc VN mới đồng lọat đứng lên lôi đầu bè lũ phản quốc diệt chủng bán nước ĐỘC tài ĐỘC đảng Việt gian GIẶC Việt cộng này xuống để xử tội chúng như dân Ai Cập đã và đang xử tội Mubarak, như dân Tunisia đã và đang xử tội Ben Ali, như dân Libya đang sắp xử tội Gadhafi và dân các nước đã và đang đồng lọat đứng lên với NGỌN LỬA CÁCH MẠNG LẬT ĐỔ bè lũ cầm quyền ĐỘC TÀI BẠO ÁC trên tòan thế giới, để GIÀNH LẠI QUYỀN LÀM NGƯỜI ???




Chân thành cám ơn Quý Anh Chị ghé thăm "conbenho Nguyễn Hoài Trang Blog"
Xin được lắng nghe ý kiến chia sẻ của Quý Anh Chị trực tiếp tại Diễn Đàn Paltalk:
1Latdo Tapdoan Vietgian CSVN Phanquoc Bannuoc .

Kính chúc Sức Khỏe Quý Anh Chị .



conbenho
Tiểu Muội quantu
Nguyễn Hoài Trang
16082011

___________
CSVN là TỘI ÁC
Bao che, dung dưỡng TỘI ÁC là đồng lõa với TỘI ÁC




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