background preloader

4 Mohammed Nabbous / aka : "MO"

Facebook Twitter

GOODBYE MO AND HIS FRIENDS, DEAD IN BATTLE ... BUT YOU WILL STAY WITH US ... ALL THE TIME ... Keny Arkana - Cinquième Soleil. A bright voice from Libya's darkness. What does grief and courage sound like?

A bright voice from Libya's darkness

It sounds a lot like the voice of Perditta Nabbous, the wife of Libyan citizen journalist Mohammed Nabbous, 27, who was shot and killed last Saturday by forces loyal to Muammar al-Qaddafi. Mohammed was the charismatic voice and face of Libya al-Hurra, the online TV station he set up in the early days of the uprising. Mo, as his many fans and supporters around the world called him, was attacked while trying to record footage from Benghazi. "He got so furious because nobody was taking pictures and videos," Perditta told me, after many Western journalists fled Benghazi ahead of a furious assault by Qaddafi's troops. Mo had been trying to reach the wreckage of a downed Libyan jet -- which later turned out to belong to the rebels -- when his car came under heavy fire. She is 8 months pregnant. Her voice growing stronger, she called for the U.S. "We started this in a pure way, but he turned it bloody. Remembering Mo Nabbous, 'The Face Of Libyan Citizen Journalism' : The Two-Way.

A reporter who lost his life trying to tell the world about what Moammar Gadhafi's forces were doing to the people of Libya is remembered today on All Things Considered.

Remembering Mo Nabbous, 'The Face Of Libyan Citizen Journalism' : The Two-Way

NPR's Andy Carvin talks about Mohammed Nabbous, a man he came to know via the Web in the past month as Nabbous used his Libya al Hurra ("freedom") Livestream news channel to record some remarkable accounts of what was happening in Benghazi and elsewhere in eastern Libya. As Andy tells ATC's Melissa Block, "all of a sudden, as Benghazi was trying to free itself from Gadhafi, you started hearing voices coming over the Internet and one of those first voices to come out was Mo. " Nabbous, Andy says, used Libya al Hurra to become "their local equivalent of Radio Free Europe or Voice of America, where he was trying to get the world to hear their point of view of what was going on. 51278517-mohamed-m-nabbous-press-kit. A Voice from Inside the Libyan Massacre: “I’m Not Sure I’ll Be Alive in Five Minutes” Please watch this video of a young Libyan IT worker speaking to the BBC overnight.

A Voice from Inside the Libyan Massacre: “I’m Not Sure I’ll Be Alive in Five Minutes”

Nothing can quite sum up what’s happening in Libya as this man’s brave testimony can. Or, you can begin to grasp the situation in this from the Guardian: The pro-government Al-Zahf al-Akhdar newspaper warned that the government would “violently and thunderously respond” to the protests, and said those opposing the regime risked “suicide”. Protests in Libya have grown increasingly large and met with increasingly violent response. Most of the protests have been in the Eastern part of the country, particularly the second largest city Benghazi and neighboring Al Bayda, where Quadafi is reported to be using mercenaries from other African countries to attack the protesters. The Independent includes reports that: A Benghazi cleric, Abellah al-Warfali, told al-Jazeera television he had a list of 16 people being buried yesterday, most with bullet wounds. And from the BBC: Libische journalist Mohammed Nabbous overleden. De Nederlandse Publieke Omroep maakt gebruik van cookies.

Libische journalist Mohammed Nabbous overleden

We maken een onderscheid tussen functionele cookies en cookies voor het beheer van webstatistieken, advertenties en social media. De cookies bevatten geen persoonsgegevens en zijn dus niet tot een individu te herleiden. 'TELL THE WORLD WHAT IS HAPPENING TO US!' Frantic Message From Libya. Mohammed Nabbous. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.

Mohammed Nabbous

Il est tué le à Benghazi par un sniper que certains ont supposé être membre des forces pro-Kadhafi alors qu'il filmait les attaques de l'armée libyenne et les destructions des bâtiments civils sous les bombardements pour diffuser des vidéos en direct sur sa chaîne d'information en continu. "Je n'ai pas peur de mourir" (Mohammed Nabbous, révolutionnaire et blogueur lybien, tué le 19/03/2011)

Libye : Mohammed Nabbous, le blogueur de Benghazi, est mort. Libye : Mohammed Nabbous, le blogueur de Benghazi, est mort (mis à jour) Samedi 19 Mars 2011 sur StreetPress. Mohammed Nabbous, le bloggeur avec qui StreetPress était en contact à Benghazi a succombé à ses blessures cet après-midi vers 13h, rapportent les modérateurs du blog Libya Alhurra.

Samedi 19 Mars 2011 sur StreetPress

C’est sa femme qui leur a appris la triste nouvelle. Celui qui se faisait appeler Mo aurait été victime d’un tir de sniper: Sur Libya Alhurra, l’épouse de Mo confirme l’information aux membres du chat: « Je voulais vous dire que Mohamed est mort. La mort du blogueur anti-Kadhafi Mohammed Nabbous - international - toute l'actualité internationale. Libya Alhurra. PM - Libyan journalist killed in Benghazi 21/03/2011. MARK COLVIN: The conflict in Libya has claimed the life of another journalist.

PM - Libyan journalist killed in Benghazi 21/03/2011

A sniper shot Mohammed Nabbous, a resident of Benghazi and founder of its first independent TV news channel Libya Alhurra, on Saturday night. He was out filming Gaddafi attacks in Benghazi when he was shot. It happened not long after the regime claimed that it was honouring a ceasefire. You may have heard Mohammed Nabbous on this program on Friday when he reported an attack on a power station outside Benghazi. People all over the world have been mourning his death.

Jess Hill reports. JESS HILL: When protests against the Gaddafi regime began on February 17th there were virtually no reporters in Benghazi.