Sunday, July 8, 2012

political condition of Libya of 2012



Libyan militias from towns throughout the country's west parade through Tripoli,Libya in February 2012


B. Lynn Pascoe (left), Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, speaks with Members of the Security Council, including (from right), Susan Rice of the United States; Gérard Araud of France; Peter Wittig of Germany; and Mark Lyall Grant of the United Kingdom; before the Council’s meeting on the situation in Libya. (29 February 2012)


Ruling party candidate Danilo Medina celebrates with gestures after learning the results of the presidential elections in Santo Domingo May 21, 2012.





US Senator John McCain (C), speaks about Libyan elections, during a press conference, in Tripoli, Libya, 07 July 2012. Voters were to head to the polls across Libya on 07 July to elect a 200-seat National Congress, which will have legislative powers and appoint a new government, amid fears of violence and calls for boycott in eastern cities. Around 2.7 million Libyans have registered to vote to elect the assembly, consisting of 120 directly elected members and 80 for contenders from party lists




Al Watan Islamist party candidate Radya Abu Rawee Muhamed Al Wareemi smiles during an election campaign rally in Tripoli July 2, 2012



A man puts up a poster of Ali Kulaish, a candidate running for Libya's National Congress election in Benghazi July 4, 2012



Man walks past election material as Libya prepares to vote




Election officials work at a polling station in Tripoli on Friday, July 6, 2012. Libya goes to the country's first free election since 1969 on Saturday.



7 Jul 2012: Voter registration has led even the most conservative parties to join the rush to woo the female electorate.


Libya elections: polling station raids mar first vote since Gaddafi's death,7 Jul 2012



Mahmoud Jibril’s National Forces Alliance may secure a landslide victory in Libya’s historic National Conference elections, the Libya Herald reports.




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