ΚΟΛΑΣΗ ΣΤΗΝ ΛΙΒΥΗ – Σφαγές, πληθυσμός σε τρόμο, τσάμπα το πετρέλαιο στον Σόρος.
Δολοφονήθηκε και ο επικεφαλής εσωτερικής ασφάλειας στην Σύρτη.
Ισλαμοφασιστες έχουν στήσει ανενόχλητοι στρατόπεδα σε όλη την χώρα και εκπαιδεύουν στρατιές σφαγέων. Τους στέλνουν στο Μάλι, στην Συρία, στο Ιράκ και όπου τα συμφεροντα των λομπις επιβάλλουν.
Ο λαός; Γενοκτονια Χριστιανών, Σιιτων, Δρούζων και όποιου άλλου δεν ανήκει στο τουρκοκίνητο, σουνίτικο ισλαμ.
Γυναικες και παιδιά, ειναι πλεον αντικείμενα. Βιάζονται, βασανίζονται, πωλούνται, εξοντώνονται.
Η κυβερνηση του εγκληματία Παπανδρέου, έκανε χρυσές μπίζνες με τους δολοφονους, θεραπεύοντας τους μάλιστα σε Ελληνικά ιδιωτικά νοσοκομεία.
Η ανθρωπότητα χρειάζεται μια εξέγερση για να επαναφέρει τον ελληνικό δρόμο του ανθρωπισμού σε όλα αυτά τα ματωμένα χώματα. Και να οδηγήσει σε νέα Νυρεμβεργη τα κτήνη που επανέφεραν στο σκότος.
Armed men killed the head of security on Thursday in the Islamist-held coastal city of Sirte, hometown of slain dictator Muammar al-Gaddafi, a security source said.
Colonel Senussi Kaiba was killed along with his driver when armed men opened fire at their car in a residential area of the city, the source added.
Two days earlier, a local administration official escaped uninjured after armed individuals opened fire at him in a similar attack.
Sirte is in the hands of Islamist militias, including Ansar al-Sharia, which the UN added to its terror list in November over links to al-Qaeda and for running camps for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) jihadist group.
The Fajr Libya (Libya Dawn) alliance of Islamist-backed militias is also present in the city, which lies 500 kilometers (310 miles) east of Tripoli.
Although Fajr Libya had not taken part in the first round of peace talks in Geneva last week, they have declared a ceasefire in light of the agreement on a roadmap to form a unity government.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militant group is also thought to have gained a foothold in eastern Libya, and recently claimed to have executed two Tunisian journalists there.
Jihadists are reported to have set up camps in Libya, including in the remote southern desert, to train militants to fight in Mali, Iraq or Syria
Almost four years after a NATO-backed war ended Gaddafi’s one-man rule in 2011, Libya is struggling with instability as two rival administrations compete for power and warring armed factions skirmish for control of territory, especially oil sites, across the North African state.
Western powers, who backed the military uprising against Gaddafi, fear that extremists, who they armed and trained during the uprising, are seeking to exploit a power vacuum in the oil-producing nation.
The conflict has driven at least 120,000 people from their homes and caused a humanitarian crisis, said a joint report by the UN human rights office and UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) that also documents shelling of civilian areas.
(AFP, Al-Akhbar)