In Libya, the primary infrastructure of schools and middle schools has been obliterated. It lacks restauration and maintenance. This results in schooling conditions being below the pedagogical minimum requirements for a proper learning.
The continuous fighting and the ferocious battles for more than a year in the city of"Ubari" between the two tribes "Tuareg" and "Tabu" in the South Libya led to the emerging of a great exodus of local population from the city. According to the latest statistics, the number of people who left the city to escape random missiles and rockets dripping profusely on buildings and houses inhabited by about 80 percent of the total population.
Infrastructure, equipment and drugs problems have been affecting Tobruk Medical Center since the revolution of 17 February. A suffering that citizens and medical staff are sharing. The hospital regularly exceeds its maximum capacity.
In Libya, the primary infrastructure of schools and middle schools has been obliterated. It lacks restauration and maintenance. This results in schooling conditions being below the pedagogical minimum requirements for a proper learning.
"There are periods when I feel scared. I feel I am an easy prey. My movements have become limited. I am afraid to go public places that I used visit in Tripoli to avoid any trouble. I am aware that everything could happen with the proliferation of weapons, chaos and incitement", This is how Souad Salem began to talk about the reality of Libyan women. She is a well-known journalist and a poet who produced several collections of poetry.
Behind the hills in the depth of the Libyan desert there is an unheard voice of a region in the south east of the country. It is Robiyana that is 1700 km south east of the capital Tripoli and about 150 km from the city of Al-Kofra.
The deprivation of his linguistic rights that Axel Bondok had lived through his childhood is the main reason why he has become today one of the most prominent teachers and supervisors of the Amazigh language in his Libyan city, Zuwarah.
Eye witnesses of killings in Libya are developing worrying psychological trauma. Specifically, traumatic risks prevent them to lead normal lives. Among these eye witnesses, some develop a trend to take revenge on society. This trend may not end with war unless they follow a psychological rehabilitation.
Tunisia remains the main destination for wounded Libyans, whatever region they come from. They receive here the treatments which are unavailable in Libya because of the war. Though they entered initially for the same reasons in Tunisia, today’s wounded are treated differently than those of 2011, at the beginning of the revolution...
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