Previous Post: No end in sight for Canada student protests as tuition talks collapse nbsp Next Post: The Coming Cashless Society – PayPal leads mobile payments push
Gaddafi’s Torture Centers Continue
Daily Beast – Najat Taweel’s jet-black eyes fill with tears as she describes seeing her jailed brother, Abdul Taweel, shortly after his arrest. The Libyan mother of three had managed to talk her way into Tripoli’s notorious Ain Zara prison where 29-year-old Abdul was being held, charged with killing a fellow revolutionary this past February. Najat, 41, holds up photographs she says a fellow prisoner took of her brother, using a smuggled mobile phone. Read Article
Tags: Africa, crime law, crimes against humanity, human rights
Related posts:
Spain workers plan anti-austerity demos
After Boris Johnson's lookalike alpaca, David Cameron as a grumpy dog and other political animals
Elisabeth Gruner: Why Not the Fairest?
News Archive In Focus – Human Rights (3,790 articles)
21 Nations Block Effort to Turn Southern Atlantic Into a Giant Whale Sanctuary
A brief history of failed Windows tablets
Views: 0