Benghazi begins celebrating Libya revolution day
AFP - Benghazi residents began celebrating Friday's first anniversary of the revolt which ousted Moamer Kadhafi, by letting off firecrackers and and honking their car horns late on Thursday.
Hundreds of men, women and children gathered near the landmark Tahrir (Liberation) Square to chant anti-Kadhafi slogans as loudspeakers played revolutionary songs.
"Curly, we're sorry!" shouted children in a sarcastic reference to Kadhafi as cars drove from the square to the city's main military base which was overrun by protesters in the initial days of the uprising last February.
Libya is marking the first anniversary of the anti-Kadhafi revolution on February 17, the day the first major demonstration against the slain dictator erupted in the eastern city last year.
Flashing "V for victory" signs, the jubilant crowds drove in a procession of vehicles through the city's main avenues.
"I feel blessed. Libya is free," said Yusri Warfelli, a 22-year-old Benghazi resident in a black Mercedes sports car.
On Wednesday a similar celebration was held by the first group of protesters who demonstrated against the ousted regime last February 15.
That crowd was led by the relatives of the victims of the notorious Abu Salim prison massacre of 1996 in Tripoli.
A small rally last February 15 by relatives of the 1996 Abu Salim massacre to secure the release of their lawyer, Fethi Tarbel -- now Libya's sports minister -- turned into a massive anti-Kadhafi uprising from February 17.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Feel free to comment but keep it civil or your comment will be exiled to the voids of cyberspace.