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The media has played an important role in spreading what happened in Libya.

The Libyan Ambassador Mr.Ali has many of interviews which the following some of them




 
Feb 22, 2011 ABC News - Libyan Ambassador Calls for Gadhafi to go
    
( Ambassador Ali Suleiman Aujali says he supports the people of Libya)
 
       Click on the play button to run the video  

  Feb 21,2011 CNN - Libyan Ambassador to Libyans " Don't compromise"
        Click on the play button to run the video  

  Mar 3, 2011 
PBS News Hour
  Libya's Ambassador Urges Obama to Issue No-Fly Zone, Be Firm With Regime

         Click on the play button to run the video 


    April 16, 2012  ABC News
  Libya's Ambassador I represented Libya , not Gaddafi

       Click on Play to see the interview                 



   Libya's Rebels Reopen Embassy in Washington

  

 Click on the play button to  read the article and run the video  

  Former Libyan Ambassador Ali Aujali Speaks at ISNA about Revolution

                Click on the play button to run the video                    



FAR TOO TIMID in its response to the Arab Spring, the Obama administration lately has shown welcome signs of greater assertiveness. This week the president and secretary of state finally declared Syria’s Bashar al-Assad an illegitimate ruler after the U.S. ambassador  in Damascus made a high-profile visit to the besieged city of Hama.
 White House counterterrorism chief John Brennan traveled to Saudi Arabia last weekend to tell Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh that U.S. aid depends on his agreement to step down.Now the administration is reportedly debating its policy for Libya as a meeting of an international contact group on that crisis nears. Four months after intervening on the side of anti-government rebels, Western governments are expressing  optimism that the regime of Moammar Gaddafi may be close to crumbling. But the dictator has not yet surrendered; the military situation in
 most of the country remains stalemated. Moreover, the rebel government and army face their own critical problems — beginning with a lack  of money to pay salaries and keep essential services running in the cities they control.
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Libya rebels want U.S. recognition to help pay bills
By Paul Richter, Los Angeles Times June 6, 2011

As fellow rebels back in Libya plot fresh attacks against embattled leader Moammar Kadafi, the chief of the Libyan insurgency’s American outpost sits in a tiny, borrowed Washington office and faces a more immediate question: Who will pay the bills?
Ali Aujali, the soft-spoken representative from the rebels’ ruling body, the Transitional National Council, has spent three months in a forlorn effort to persuade the Obama administration to extend diplomatic recognition to his group, a move that would bolster its international standing and could provide access to $34 billion in frozen Libyan assets.
But the White House has shut the door on formal recognition, imperiling the interim council’s ability to pay for its rebellion as well as Aujali’s capacity to keep the lights on in his lonely mission.
Continuing Reading

Benghazi local election results announced woman candidate wins most votes UPDATE

By George Grant.

Benghazi, 21 May:

The results from the first democratic elections to take place in Benghazi for more than four decades were announced this evening by the head of Benghazi’s electoral commission, Suleiman Zubi.   He said that 138,312 people had voted.

Forty-one candidates, from the more than 400 who stood, were elected from 11 electoral districts to serve on Benghazi Local Council.The candidate who received the most votes in each of the districts is due to go on to represent the city at the National Transitional Council (NTC) in Tripoli.

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