Post Tagged with: "Libya"

28Oct
2011

Criticisms on How We React to a Tyrant’s Death

On October 20th  a dictator, a tyrant, an oppressor was defeated, captured, and killed. His death is not a shock to most of the world, it was inevitable–just as it is for us all. However, the presumed manner of his death, along with the supposed occurrences after his death, cast a sliver of disappointment among some of the supporters of the revolution who consider the circumstances of and the reaction to his death as a faux pas. The revolution can, in [...]

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20Oct
2011

What Muslim Students Think of Gaddafi’s Death

Today, the world heard of Gaddafi’s death. Al-Tailb interviewed UCLA students about their thoughts to this piece of news.

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5Sep
2011

Libyan-American Student Reaction to Gaddafi’s Fall

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28Mar
2011

Pictures from Los Angeles Protest in Support of Movements in Libya and Bahrain

More than one hundred people gathered today in front of the Federal Building in Los Angeles to show solidarity with movements in the Middle East and North Africa, in particular Libya and Bahrain. Speakers at the protest also emphasized the fact that the movement in Bahrain is a matter of an oppressed people seeking freedom and reform, not a sectarian issue, as is claimed by Bahraini as well as other Arab governments.

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12Mar
2011

Arab Dictators: Billions and Billions of Dollars, and still counting…

As Arab dictators in the Middle East are falling one by one like dominoes, it is just mind boggling to see the billions they had tucked away for all these decades. Hosni Mubarak resigned with $70 billion in US and European banks, not including his bank accounts in other countries or real estate.  Former Tunisian President Ben Ali had had approximately $40 billion in just one of many accounts. As I watched the amount of cash and high end jewelry [...]

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6Mar
2011

Limited Horizons: What the Movements We Support Reveal About Us as a Community

200 demonstrators gather outside of the Los Angeles Federal Building, dozens of flags floating in the air, each piece of cloth boldly declaring support for movements in Iran and Libya. As protests go, the one held on February 20th was small compared to one’s held in previous weeks for Egypt and Tunisia, yet it’s sometimes the smallest of events, the moments people tend to overlook, that can impact a community in ground-breaking ways. That is, if its people have enough [...]

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28Feb
2011

Sheikh Qaradawi’s Fatwa Calling for Gaddafi’s Death Will Not Lead to Justice

Last Monday, the head of the International Union for Muslim Scholars, Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, issued a fatwa saying that it is permissible for anyone to kill the Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi because of his mass murders and heinous crimes against the people of Libya. As much as I agree that Gaddafi should be punished for his crimes against humanity, I am deeply disappointed that Sheikh Qaradawi would issue such a fatwa against him. Yes, Gaddafi has committed inhumane crimes against [...]

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28Feb
2011

The Waves of Revolution

February 11, 2011. Crowds in Tahrir Square erupt in celebration. “Egypt is free, Egypt is free,” they exclaim. In Tunisia, it takes one man to douse himself in gasoline to strike the powerful match of revolution. In Egypt, it takes the will power of millions and the brutal dictatorship of one man to ripple in the great floods of freedom. Civil disobedience. People power. Peaceful protest. What was once a risky undertaking has now become a strategy for reform. As [...]

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25Feb
2011

Bringing the Revolution Home: Conquering Our Oppressors

Egypt’s recent success in conquering its oppressors has ignited a wave of realizations that determination mixed with unity and a dash of patience results in one sweet slice of change. Libya, Yemen, Algeria, Bahrain among others have used the mother of the world as an inspiration and an example, and have taken the first steps towards change. So, like a majority of Lakers fans and wearers of over-sized sunglasses, I say jump on the bandwagon people. Although we are not [...]

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