Sunday, March 27, 2011

A Libyan woman asks for help to journalists after being raped by 15 men Gaddafi

Barcelona. (Writing and agencies) .- A dramatic scene has happened this Saturday before the helpless eyes of the international journalists who are in Tripoli, where a young woman has burst into the hotel where he was desperately screaming econtrar Gaddafi men had been arrested and she had been raped and beaten 15 times, according to various media reported.

"They say we are all Libyans, that we are one people, but look what I have done men Gaddafi" cried the woman named Eman al-Obeidy. The girl had several wounds showed that he had been beaten, wide bruise on his face, scars UNAGRO elmuslosuperiorvariasmarcas dearañazos inthe leg, andthe marks on hands and feet that could be for having been tied.

"I was deteniday defecaronyorinaronsobremí. Violaronmi honor," said women who stated that several of his friends are still detained. "So goes aquíqueseme prontocomosalga of Lacárcel Alleva," he said with conviction. Obeidy said to come from the rebel capital, Benghazi, and had been captured by the forces of Qaddafi outside the city.

After being detained two days, that he escaped and headed for the Hotel Rixos, where the journalists. As journalists listened to his testimony, called hotel workers have pounced on it and have been accused of "traitor", becoming very violent situation, with journalists trying to defend the young and trying to throw assumptions used.

Some journalists were also beaten while trying to help. Finally, the woman was dragged by the security services to a white car mientrasgritaba desperate: "Take me to the slammer." The fate of the young Eman al-Obeidy is uncertain. Asked what happened, said government spokesman explained that women were "fantasies." The new situation has left journalists accredited to the regime of Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi could not corroborate the claims of women.

CNN correspondent Nick Robertson said on his twitter that the Libyan Deputy Foreign Affairs, Khaled Kaim, repeatedly asked by reporters said it would investigate "to know the whereabouts, who the woman and we'll know." Moreover, a spokesman for the British newspaper Financial Times in London confirmed today that the Libyan authorities requested this morning to the correspondent in Tripoli, Charles Clover, who left the country, which complied with the order and is now in Tunisia .

The source said the Libyan Clover output is related to an incident at a hotel in Tripoli, on which gave no further details.

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