While many have hailed the revolt against Muammar Gaddafi's rule in Libya as symptomatic of a nationalistic desire for freedom and equality, there is a dark side to this revolution. Many African migrant workers report that they have been attacked by anti-government protesters, after having been mistaken for mercenaries hired by Gaddafi. They say that their businesses have been attacked, and residents of Benghazi, an opposition stronghold say they are too afraid to even venture out of their houses. Al Jazeera's Jacky Rowland reports from Benghazi, in eastern Libya.
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This video witnesses the amount of hate those calling themselves peaceful protesters have against their black follow citizens. Those dark skin people are from the south of Libya where many have an African origin. They keep hitting and spitting on them even after their death. They tied them by robs and start to pull them by cars on the Streets of Banghazi.
These two killed men are libyans and I will show you another video before killing I will show a video how those criminal protesters were interrogating one of those two killed people before killing him, He was stating in a pure Libyan delicate that he was from the eastern part of Libya. He was under their extreme violence against him that he was not shooting real emanation but false one. They were hitting him and threatening him to say that it is real emanation to find a reason to kill him
The town is to the east of the city Benghazi and is also in the hands of the anti-Gaddafi protesters.
The rights investigator said that what he found there were, in fact, 156 soldiers from the south of Libya and not from another African country. After talking to them he found out that they were all black Libyans of African descent. The soldiers have since been released by the protesters.
Human Rights Watch says it has seen no evidence of mercenaries being used in eastern Libya>.//ww.rnw.nl/africa/article/hrw-no-mercenaries-eastern-libya-0