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Rami Musa marked it as to-read Jun 20, Khawla marked it as to-read Sep 17, Taher marked it as to-read Mar 10, Khaled Alkelani added it May 07, Jamal Al-qeley marked it as to-read Mar 03, Maha Abuzukhar marked it as to-read Sep 19, Kamaldin added it Sep 30, He was a student. It was able to solve our crisis.

This year has proved the opposite. The problem is all the more acute because two in three people in the region are under the age of They all need to find work but the economies do not have the jobs for them. But the fighting this year has given young people a role. Many young people are reluctant to give up their weapons and now there is growing frustration by the public over the number of guns people are carrying and heavy weaponry still on the streets of cities like Tripoli.

But while Abdul Aziz is still holding his gun, there are others who have put theirs down. Adam Mubarit is a Libyan who was brought up in Canada. He returned to Libya when he was 18 to go to medical school in Zawiya, just outside Tripoli. He fought on the frontline and used his medical skills to help the injured. But he has now gone back to school and thinks everyone else should do the same. Reda comes from the city of Misrata, one of the worst-hit cities in the conflict. His pride in his role in the revolution is obvious. He has a surprising knowledge of weaponry for someone who had never handled a gun until last year.

But he stopped going out on the street two months ago and wants to go back to studying. Abdulrahman Alageli is Brought up in Manchester, his parents are from Libya and he returned to the country to fight in the revolution. One of the projects he is working on is an online job centre to match job opportunities to job hunters. With the largest oil reserves in Africa, it produced 1. Economic sanctions against the country kept Libya isolated from foreign investment for years. When sanctions were lifted in and , investment started to flood into the country but nevertheless, Libya still has a very undiversified economy.

They wielded the power to overthrow a regime that stifled their opportunities.

First Issue by snake snake - Issuu

But the challenge for the new leaders will be to meet the expectations of their young population and convince them to lay down their weapons and go back to work. By Katy Watson. Rebyana Oil and Gas Services Co. Job: Autocad Designer Email: office rogsco. Email: career zara. Job: Technician Manpower Email: info addafniya. Attawd Company Job: Secretory Email: info attawd. Job: Medical Representative Email: recruitment quadron. Firstly, I realized I am patient.

My patience is what helped me through the days of horror. Sitting day and night, waiting for any sign as to how or when this revelation going to end, when we were going to be freed, when we get to go and celebrate at Martyr Square, or if we would even live to see the day. The patience we had in Ramadan where there was no electricity for 3 days in a row, where we would spend our days with no air conditioning, no cold water, no TV, no computers, no events, no food, in the hot summer days!

But luckily we survived it with the patience God gave us!

Geography Now! LIBYA

Prior February 17th, we never really appreciated each other, it unfortunately took people to die for our freedom for us to appreciate them, we never appreciated the ability to buy whatever we need whenever we need it until banks had no more money to give and supermarkets were emptied. Water was another thing we always took for granted! Until it was cut off for days and even weeks, we never really appreciated it. I learned to try to be more grateful for every small thing in my life, thank god every chance I get. I guess now we all appreciate more than we ever used to, and for that I say, Alhamdulilah.

I now feel so much more for those who are less fortunate, last Ramadan was the hardest Ramadan I witnessed. Fasting with no electricity, in the hot weather and humidity is a lot easier said than done!


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This was something I only experienced last year, but unfortunately there are so many other people who go through this not only every Ramadan, but every day of the year! Remembering what it felt like to not be able to sleep. I now take every chance I get to read something, download something, see the people I care about, go everywhere I can go to, because you never know when you lose everything you have!

How are we going to represent Libya in the best way? What if the high price of our freedom will go to waste? This revolution brought out courage in me I never thought I had, girls used to get arrested for the silliest reasons such as wearing the colours of the independence flag, and from saying the wrong things on the phone. Not only did I learn to appreciate every little thing and gain patience, and courage, but the most important thing I gained was patriotism.

Muammar killed that in us by brain washing us with his books and channels, we never felt like we belonged to a country that was ours, never really found it right to be represented by him. Despite the hatred we had to the man that took everything we deserved, I was taught never to say a word about it and I should just live with it for god knows how long. I discovered this hidden love I had inside, love for my Libyan brothers and sisters, it brought us all together hand in hand to stand as one, the love for our country is what pushed us to forget all of our differences, a strong love that made dying for it sound ridiculous, for the future I am willing to do everything I possibly can to help build a better country, so future generations are raised in a country they will love, and they will automatically be motivated to do what it is they can to improve Libya, a country that is back to its people!

See a Problem?

Together, we did the impossible and together we will continue doing all we can to make the best out of this beloved country. Concerns Over Elections It seems to be that there are a lot of preparations in excitement for the upcoming elections but is that really so?


  • Libya - Population of Cyrenaica: سكان ليبيا الجزء الثاني - الجزء الخاص ببرقة by Enrico De Agostini.
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The importance of these elections cannot be stressed enough as they are the determining factor in what the new constitution will look like. In anxiousness for these unprecedented elections political parties of all colors of the spectrum are forming. Activists have brought attention to proper logistical procedures they believe should be used during elections.

Libya - Population of Cyrenaica: سكان ليبيا الجزء الثاني - الجزء الخاص ببرقة

Lectures, seminars and workshops are being held by lawyers to help raise awareness about elections. It seems to be that there are a lot of preparations in excitement for the upcoming elections but is that really so? When put these efforts next to the actual task at hand, elections, and considering the given circumstances; are these efforts enough? Facing elections in a country completely new to them poses many obstacles, let alone under such a tight deadline.

Let us touch base on some of these obstacles so that not only do we understand them but so we also realize the patience needed to overcome them. These obstacles can be divided into three types: logistical, political and social. There are some simple things that are needed to make elections possible on the ground and they can be summed up in word: infrastructure. Places are needed to be used as polling stations. That would normally be the case, but when you have areas badly affected by airstrikes such as Zliten; the majority of schools there have been destroyed. There is also Sirte which is basically a city in ruins and other hard hit areas in the Nafusa Mountains.

It may seem like a relatively simple task to set-up polling tents in areas deficient of potential polling stations but it is not a matter of simplicity. The need is for a proper organizing committee that has taken these things into consideration. According to the NTC member Alamin Belhaj, they have gone as far as to take into consideration the hot. So that may be one of the simpler obstacles solved. The second logistical concern is one that needs to be very openly and clearly explained.

Proper registration is essential not only on an individual level but also on the level of elections as a whole.