09/07/2012 / LIBYA
المرتزقة أصحاب القبعات الصفراء.. شارع شمسة بنغازي

Screen grab of Samar Serguiwa's video from the first days of Libya's popular uprising.
During the first days of the popular uprising against former Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi, Samar Serguiwa filmed as pro-Gaddafi forces
cracked down on protests in the country’s eastern city of Benghazi and
posted the images online. As the country headed out to the polls on Saturday
to vote in the first elections since Gaddafi’s ousting, Serguiwa
returned to the exact spot where she recorded the video to pay homage to
the victims of the uprising.
Contributors
“As if to turn the page on Libya’s past, Serguiwa leaned on the very balcony where she filmed and took a photo of herself holding up an ink-stained finger”
Enas Saddoh is a blogger in Tripoli. She is also taking part in the FRANCE 24 Observers and RFI Media Workshop’s special election project, which deploys teams of citizen journalists to the capital to cover the vote.
Serguiwa filmed what were among the first images to emerge of the
regime’s crackdown on anti-government protests in Benghazi, also known
as the cradle of the Libyan revolution. In it, Serguiwa’s voice can be
heard screaming the now famous words, ‘They want to burn us!’
On the day of the country’s historic parliamentary elections
[Saturday, July 7], Serguiwa returned to the very spot where she stood
and filmed the scenes of violence nearly 17 months ago. She also
published an open letter entitled “Letter to Libya” on her Facebook
page. Below is an excerpt from the text:
‘Hello Dear Libya,
After a long wait, a very anxious wait marked by sacrifice, at last
your day has come my beloved Libya. We are going to pay homage to our
martyrs and the victims of our battle for freedom by going out to vote
and dipping our fingers in the ink of progress […] It is the moment for
every Libyan who loves their country, for every Libyan who cares about
our general wellbeing to head out to the polls so that we might carry
our country toward a more peaceful future. Thank you, my country that
has suffered so, for this gift’.
As if to turn the page
on Libya’s past, Serguiwa leaned on the very balcony where she filmed
the video more than one year ago, and photographed herself holding up an
ink-stained finger.
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen