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Libya: We Are Not Slave Libya Citizen Cries Out Protest Video

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Libya: We Are Not Slave Libya Citizen Cries Out Protest Video

Libya citizen cries out, as a result of the recent activities perpetrated the rebel groups who have been indulging in selling immigrant people as slaves. has trigger for the demonstrations,   The people of Libya have decided to carry out protect to stop this barbaric act that labels the country one of the most wicked countries in the world. Basta!” the placards read. “We are not slaves.” These are the most popular slogans brandished at the street protests that have been rippling through Libya. The protests, which have seen thousands take to the streets and more than 100 people detained in a government crackdown, Libya since the death of Gaddafi has turned to something else, the European unions are silent and the rest of the world that participate in takedown Gaddafi. They are the one responsible for this atrocity. It’s painful to see this country that was in good harmony before,  has turned to be a country full of evil.

See the video below.

we are not slaves

Posted by Esaja Ekman on Saturday, November 25, 2017

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Humans For Sale In Libya

“How can it be that in the 21st century, we’re selling human beings like merchandise?” one woman at the Paris protest said. “I cannot get my head around that!”

Libyan authorities this week launched a formal investigation into the auctions, overseen by the government’s Anti-Illegal Immigration Agency.
“Priorities of the investigation are not only to convict those responsible for these inhumane acts, but also to identify the location of those who have been sold in order to bring them to safety and return them to their countries of origin,” Anes Alazabi, an official with the agency, told CNN.
During its investigation, CNN witnessed a dozen men being sold at an auction outside of the Libyan capital of Tripoli. Some of them were auctioned off for as little as $400. Ultimately, CNN was told of auctions taking place at nine locations throughout Libya, but much more is believed to take place each month.
A man holds a placard reading &quot;No to slavery in Libya&quot; during Saturday&#39;s march.

Tens of thousands fleeing conflict or searching for economic opportunity cross into Libya each year, looking to be smuggled across the Mediterranean Sea.
The United Nations estimates there are 700,000 migrants in Libya, and for years those who have crossed the Mediterranean have shared stories about beatings, kidnapping and enslavement.
“It’s not about colour,” the woman at the protest said. “This goes beyond colour or religion. This is about humanity.”

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