Friday, August 24, 2012

Norway killer given 21-year prison term

Norway killer given 21-year prison term


Oslo, Norway (CNN) -- Anders Behring Breivik, the man who killed 77 people in a bomb attack and gun rampage just over a year ago, was judged to be sane by a Norwegian court Friday, as he was sentenced to 21 years in prison.
Breivik was charged with voluntary homicide and committing acts of terror in the attacks in Oslo and on Utoya Island on July 22, 2011.
The issue of Breivik's sanity, on which mental health experts have given conflicting opinions, was central to the court's ruling.
Breivik, who boasts of being an ultranationalist who killed his victims to fight multiculturalism in Norway, wanted to be ruled sane so that his actions wouldn't be dismissed as those of a lunatic.

Norway shooting survivor watches verdict

Breivik 'looked pleased' with verdict

Alleged mass killer shows no remorse

Prosecution concerned with Breivik sanity

Inside the Norway terror suspect's mind
He says he acted out of "necessity" to prevent the "Islamization" of his country.
But prosecutors had asked that Breivik, 33, be acquitted on the grounds of insanity, in which case he would have been held in a secure mental health unit.
The unanimous verdict was delivered at Oslo district court by a panel of five judges.
Breivik, dressed in a dark suit and tie, had a slight smile on his face as the decision was given.
He was sentenced to the maximum possible term of 21 years and was ordered to serve a minimum of 10 years in prison.
The sentence could be extended, potentially indefinitely, in the future if he is considered still to pose a threat to society. Norway does not have the death penalty.
Breivik has said he won't appeal the verdict. The chief prosecutor also confirmed Friday that the prosecution does not intend to lodge an appeal.
Bjorn Ihler, a survivor of the Utoya Island attack, told CNN he was glad the trial had concluded and that justice had been done.
"It's been an amazingly difficult process. It's been a constant, constant reminder of why we have to fight extremism in every way possible," he said of the trial.
"We have to make sure nothing like this ever happens again."
The court's judgment that Breivik is sane means that the far-right views he espouses can be confronted in Norway without being dismissed as those of a madman, Ihler said.
"There are extremist people around, they are not insane, and we have to be able to take a proper debate with them," he said.
Asked whether the verdict meant closure for him, Ihler said: "This case is going to live strongly with me for the rest of my life probably."
Reading out the court's ruling, Judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen spoke of Breivik's "manifesto," a document published online in which he set out his ultranationalist political views.
Breivik claimed to belong to a far-right group called the Knights Templar but the court found no evidence of its existence, the judge said.
He described his actions as a pre-emptive attack in defense of ethnic Norwegian people and culture, the court heard.
Breivik trained for his attack by working out in the gym, running with a backpack filled with rocks and practicing at a shooting club, the court heard.
He was under the influence of ephedrine, a stimulant, at the time of the attacks, and the possibility that this contributed to his behavior cannot be ruled out, Judge Arne Lyng said. He used meditation techniques to cut off his emotions, Lyng said.
In the course of the 10-week trial, which wrapped up in June, the court heard chilling evidence from some of those who survived Breivik's shooting spree on Utoya Island, in which 69 people died -- most of them teenagers attending a Labour Party summer youth camp.
In his own testimony, given without emotion, Breivik recounted firing more bullets into teenagers who were injured and couldn't escape, killing those who tried to "play dead" and driving others into the sea to drown.
His fertilizer bomb attack against government buildings in Oslo also killed eight people and injured many more.
It was only luck that more people were not killed and hurt in the blast, the court heard.
Breivik blames politicians, and the Labour Party in particular, for promoting multiculturalism in Norway.
He has been held in a "particularly high security" wing of Ila Prison since his detention immediately after the killings.
The prison's governor, Knut Bjarkeid, said Wednesday that the institution was ready to hold Breivik securely whether the court ruled him sane or not. "Our job is to protect the community," Bjarkeid said.
Over the past year, Breivik has had three cells for his use, one for physical exercise and another for reading and writing, as well as a separate outdoor exercise space, he said. Breivik cannot mix with prisoners from other wings, but does have contact with prison staff.
"As of now, we think there is a need to subject Mr. Behring Breivik to a particularly high security regime," Bjarkeid said.
The high security regime "puts a heavy strain on an inmate, especially if it lasts for a longer period," he added, so Breivik's continued detention under these conditions will be kept under constant review.
Defense lawyer Geir Lippestad has previously said it is important to Breivik that people see him as sane so they don't dismiss his views.
The court had to consider conflicting opinions from medical experts in reaching its verdict.
An initial team of psychiatrists found Breivik to be paranoid and schizophrenic, following 36 hours of interviews.
However, a second pair of experts found he was not psychotic at the time of the attacks, does not suffer from a psychiatric condition and is not mentally challenged.
Their report said there is a "high risk for repeated violent actions."
Mark Stephens, a partner at law firm Finers Stephens Innocent, told CNN Friday: "The general public will think only a madman can commit these offenses, but in law madness is defined very narrowly. Basically it requires a doctor to come to court and say this person has a definable medical illness -- in this case the prosecution said he was a paranoid schizophrenic, and that can be treated with drugs and behavioral therapy.
"If, however, he had a personality disorder or was just ... motivated, as in this case, by a misguided political belief that this was the only way to stop the Islamization, as he would have it, of his nation, then in those circumstances he has be found guilty because he understood what he was doing was wrong."
Breivik's rampage, the worst atrocity on Norwegian soil since World War II, prompted much soul-searching.
Norwegians reasserted their commitment to multiculturalism and tolerance at a series of mass public tributes held in the immediate aftermath of the massacre.
And earlier this month, Norway's chief of police stepped down after an independent commission detailed a catalog of police and intelligence failures.
It concluded that those errors cost police 30 minutes in getting to Utoya, and that dozens of lives might have been saved.
Speaking last month on the anniversary of the killings, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg urged Norwegians to "honor the dead by celebrating life," and said Breivik had failed in his attempt to change Norway's values.

Voice of 'Sesame Street's' The Count dies at 78

Voice of 'Sesame Street's' The Count dies at 78

Puppeteer Jerry Nelson, famous for lending his voice to Muppets on “Sesame Street,” “The Muppet Show” and “Fraggle Rock,” died Thursday, according toPeople. He was 78.
The cast and crew of “Sesame Street,” and the staff of Sesame Workshop, released the following statement in memoriam: “A member of the ‘Sesame Street’ family for more than 40 years, [Nelson] will forever be in our hearts and remembered for the artistry in his puppetry, his music, and the laughter he brought to children worldwide…”
Nelson is, perhaps, best recognized as the voice of Count von Count, a friendly vampire with an unmistakable laugh and an affinity for numbers:
Counting floors:
Counting snores:
Counting blocks:
And counting cookies:

Tropical Storm Isaac strengthens as it nears Haiti


Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) -- Tropical Storm Isaac strengthened slightly as it churned toward Haiti on Friday, threatening an already vulnerable nation with gale-force winds, pounding rain and the potential for life-threatening floods.
The storm is expected to make landfall Friday night. As of Friday evening, Isaac had maximum sustained winds of 65 miles per hour, up from 60 mph earlier in the day.
"It's going to be a brutal night," said CNN meteorologist Chad Myers.
As of 8 p.m. ET, Isaac was about 90 miles south-southeast of Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital, and moving northwest at 10 mph, down from 16 mph earlier. The country was under a hurricane watch, according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.
Rainfall accumulations of 8 to 12 inches are expected, with maximum amounts of 20 inches possible over the island of Hispaniola.
"Our experience in Haiti clearly indicates that it is not the storm or the winds, it's the rain that causes the problems," said Sinan Al-Najjar, the Red Cross' deputy country representative in Haiti. "When rain comes, landslides and flash floods do happen in Haiti. We are trying to focus on which are the flood areas, which are the risk areas."

Tropical storm Isaac nears Haiti

Tampa RNC storm scenario

Haiti in hurricane danger
Hundreds of thousands of people left homeless by a devastating 2010 earthquake continue to live in camps.
With floodwater comes the risk of another outbreak of cholera, an infection of the large intestine that causes severe diarrhea.
"After floods, it's going to be almost certain that we see increases in cholera cases," Al-Najjar said. "We already witnessed that with the few weeks of rain we had in April. We had spikes due to daily rain. If a flood comes, we know certainly cholera is going to be an issue."
Many of the Haitians living in camps had no idea that a storm was coming, CNN correspondent Gary Tuchman reported from Port-au-Prince. Not until a translator told them that Isaac was nearing did people in the streets know of the storm's approach or that the government had opened some shelters.
Residents of one tent community said they were staying put with their belongings and would ride out the storm.
Haitian President Michel Martelly told CNN that he and his prime minister were traveling from camp to camp to encourage people to go to shelters, but they acknowledged not everyone would be able get out.
"Those who are very vulnerable, they are moved out of these camps. And the ones who are remaining behind are those who are stronger to fight this situation," he said.
Meanwhile, in Jacmel, a town in southern Haiti, there were no signs of hurricane preparations. The area suffered heavy flooding several years ago during another storm.
"I'm very worried about the water coming off the mountains and that the city fills up like a sink," said Hugues Paul, the mayor.
Large amounts of rainfall will cause mudslides and runoff that can block roads, or worse.
"We watch those storms every single time they come near because Haiti is so vulnerable," said Amy Parodi, a spokeswoman for the Christian humanitarian organization World Vision.
The agency has met with the government in previous summers to discuss contingency plans for major storms, and pre-positioned relief items are available, she said.
The storm is expected to move near or over Cuba on Saturday and approach the Florida Keys on Sunday. Tropical storm warnings and watches were in effect for parts of Cuba, while a tropical storm watch was issued for the Florida Keys.
Officials in Monroe County, in far south Florida, said three shelters would open Saturday for people who did not want to ride out the storm in their homes. They did not order a visitor evacuation as Isaac is forecast to cross the Florida Keys as a tropical storm, not a hurricane.
Isaac, which has already forced airline companies to cancel a couple dozen flights, should weaken as it moves through Haiti and Cuba.
The storm also poses a risk to the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, which is set to start next week. Gov. Rick Scott said it will be up to organizers to decide the fate of the event.
While Isaac's path remains uncertain, the latest tracking information shows it crossing near the western Florida Keys and staying well west of Tampa, and not reaching hurricane strength until sometime Monday. A five-day projection shows Isaac making landfall near Pensacola, Florida, by early Wednesday.
Even though most of the state may catch a break, officials are taking the threat seriously.
"It has been a fortunate seven years since Wilma hit Florida," National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb said, referring to the last hurricane to make landfall in the state. "The luck is going to run out at some point."

'Mama said knock you out': LL Cool J broke burglary suspect's nose, jaw, ribs


Watch this videoLos Angeles (CNN) -- A man charged with breaking into LL Cool J's home Wednesday morning faces a long prison sentence if convicted because of his previous convictions, the prosecutor's spokeswoman said Thursday.
Jonathan Kirby, 56, suffered a broken nose, jaw and ribs when he encountered the muscular rapper-actor inside his Sherman Oaks, California, home, according to Los Angeles County District Attorney spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons.

Only in America: Mama said knock you out
Prosecutors charged Kirby with first degree burglary as a "third striker," which means he could face 38 years to life in prison if convicted, Gibbons said. They are asking that bail for Kirby be set at $1.1 million.
Kirby was previously convicted of voluntary manslaughter in Dallas, Texas, in 1988. He also has auto theft, first degree burglary and a petty theft conviction in Los Angeles on his record, Gibbons said.
Arraignment for the suspect is not yet set, because he is still hospitalized for treatment of injuries inflicted by LL Cool J when he "physically detained" him, she said.
The family was sleeping when their home security alarm sounded at 1 a.m., sending LL Cool J into action, according to a Los Angeles Police statement.
After catching the man, he held him until police arrived, police said.
LL Cool J, whose real name is James Todd Smith, plays Special Agent and former Navy SEAL Sam Hanna on "NCIS: Los Angeles," a CBS crime series.

Lil Wayne Laughed at Chris Brown, Drake Brawl

Lil Wayne Laughed at Chris Brown, Drake Brawl

Drake is still suffering the consequences of his involvement in a club brawl with Chris Brown in June, but luckily for him his label boss and mentor has been able to find humor in the potentially serious matter. In a recent interview with MTV NewsLil Wayne admitted that the dramatic incident, which has spawned several lawsuits and temporarily threatened Tony Parker's Olympics prospects, made him laugh.
"Honestly, I laughed at them," he said. "I can't front, I just laughed at them... like, it's funny to me."
With all that Weezy's been through, his perspective on the incident is a little more relaxed than most.
"I thank God I ain't going through it though, I've already been through too much, " he said.
In the past week, both Drake and Chris Brown have been sued over the melee. The NYC club owners, who themselves have been sued, and a male model who suffered an injury are both seeking to hold the rival pop stars responsible.
Wayne had previously expressed a desire to play mediator in the conflict.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Knowing Full Movie


Armageddon Full Movie


In Too Deep Full Movie


Grimm's Snow White Full Movie


Monster House Full Movie


Despicable Me 2 Trailer



So excited for this movie...love these little guys!! 

EID MUBARAK


To all my Muslim friends, Eid Mubarak!!!

Have a safe and blessed holiday!!!


FILM REVIEW: ParaNorman



ParaNorman is the kind of pleasant summer surprise that makes up for suffering through a season packed with explosions. From Laika, a production company based in Portland, comes a small town story that doesn't talk down to its audience, but nudges them knowingly. Norman, named in the film's title, is a young horror movie buff cursed by his ability to see dead people.
Green and ghoulish, the ghosts of those who won't move on clutter up his day, making his walk to school an obstacle course invisible to others. His ability has also made Norman -- with his brown, Bart Simpson hair -- an outcast at school, so at every available opportunity, he escapes into B-movie madness.
Of course, there's evil afoot, bubbling under the pleasantly rustic town of Blithe Hollow. The tiny tourist trap is a site famed for having once hanged a witch. As the resident Ghost Whisperer, Norman learns that witch is on her way back. Only he can stop her and end the zombie plague she brings along with her.
ParaNormanParaNorman's counterintuitive casting includes Oscar-nominee Anna Kendrick voicing Courtney, Norman's ditzy sister. (Alliance Films)
What's refreshing about ParaNorman is how the script takes so little for granted. Easily recognizable archetypes -- the bully, the jock, the airhead -- constantly surprise. In particular, Norman's chubby friend Neil steals many a moment. He's a plucky little motor mouth who refuses to play the victim.
Some counterintuitive casting decisions help bring these characters to life, including Casey Affleck voicing Neil's lunkhead brother, Anna Kendrick as Norman's ditzy sister and Christopher Mintz-Plasse (aka McLovin) as Alvin the dimwit bully.
There's also innovation in the way Laika brought ParaNorman to the screen. Using a technique they pioneered in Coraline, the company's wizards blend handmade with high-tech in ParaNorman. This is a stop-motion animated film, meaning it is peopled by tiny puppets moved a fraction of an inch at a time. However, by using colour 3D printers, the artists were able to create thousands of expressions for each character -- over a million in total, actually.
The result is surprisingly emotive faces that are perfect for this zany misadventure. Although ParaNorman veers a little off the rails in its admittedly mind-blowing conclusion, there's tons of heart and smarts in this ghoulish adventure. It's definitely recommended, although parents be warned: kids under six might find some of the horror movie homages unsettling.
RATING: 4 out of 5
ParaNormanIn the new 3D stop-motion comedy thriller ParaNorman, the young hero is surrounded by friendly ghosts, including his grandmother, voiced by Elaine Stritch. (Alliance Films)
http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/the-buzz/2012/08/film-review-paranorman.html

Boy struck, killed by father in 'tragic accident'


Boy's mother in critical condition after collision in Toronto

The car in the foreground was involved in a collision that sent an 8-year-old boy and his 36-year-old mother to hospital with serious injuries.

Toronto police say an eight-year-old boy has died after a car driven by his father backed over him at a parking lot near the Ontario Science Centre.
The boy and his mother, 36, were both hit in the collision, which was reported at about 11:10 a.m. on Saturday.
The child was rushed to Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children and the woman was rushed to Sunnybrook Hospital. She is in life-threatening condition.
Staff Sgt. Brian Bowman said police need to carry out their investigation, but that early indications suggest the collision was a tragic accident.
Police don't believe speed was a factor.
The car ended up straddling the curb in an empty lot near the science centre, which is in the city's northeast near Eglinton Avenue East and Don Mills Road.
Police told CBC News the 39-year-old man is at Sunnybrook Hospital with his wife and is being helped by victim's services.
Police said that language has been a barrier.
Officers with the traffic services unit have taken over the investigation and have video footage of the incident. Witnesses are being asked to contact police.

South Africa police defend shooting that killed 34 miners


Police say they were acting in self-defence

A policeman, right, fires at protesting miners outside a South African mine in Rustenburg, northwest of Johannesburg.

A policeman, right, fires at protesting miners outside a South African mine in Rustenburg, northwest of Johannesburg. 


South Africa's national police commissioner says 34 miners died and another 78 were wounded when police opened fire on striking miners outside a platinum mine, 90 kilometres northwest of Johannesburg.
Mangwashi Victoria Phiyega told a news conference Friday that her officers acted to protect their own lives after strikers armed with "dangerous weapons" charged them Thursday. She said the strikers had not dispersed earlier, despite police use of water cannon and stun grenades.
The South Africa Police Service defended the officers' actions, saying in a statement they were "viciously attacked by the group, using a variety of weapons, including firearms. The police, in order to protect their own lives and in self-defence, were forced to engage the group with force."
It was one of the worst police shootings in South Africa since the end of the apartheid era, and came as a rift deepens between the country's governing African National Congress and an impoverished electorate confronting massive unemployment and growing poverty and inequality.
The shootings "awaken us to the reality of the time bomb that has stopped ticking — it has exploded," The Sowetan newspaper said in an editorial. "Africans are pitted against each other ... fighting for a bigger slice of the mineral wealth of the country. In the end the war claims the very poor African — again."
Police ministry spokesman Zweli Mnisi on Friday said an investigation into the shooting in Rustenburg is underway.
Marikana, South Africa
Political parties and labour unions, including the ANC, called for an independent inquiry. President Jacob Zuma is coming home from a regional summit in neighbouring Mozambique to address the crisis.
Makhosi Mbongane, a 32-year-old winch operator, said mine managers should have come to the workers rather than send police. He vowed that he was not going back to work and would not allow anyone else to do so either.
"They can beat us, kill us and kick and trample on us with their feet, do whatever they want to do, we aren't going to go back to work," he told The Associated Press. "If they employ other people they won't be able to work either, we will stay here and kill them."
On a chilly, sunlit Friday morning, police investigators and forensic experts combed the scene of the shooting, watched by about 100 people. A woman with a baby on her back said she was looking for her miner husband who had not come home Thursday night.

Police service defends officers

The South Africa Police Service defended officers' actions, saying in a statement that they were "viciously attacked by the group, using a variety of weapons, including firearms. The police, in order to protect their own lives and in self-defence, were forced to engage the group with force."
Shocked South Africans watched replay after replay of video of the shooting that erupted Thursday afternoon after police failed to get the striking miners to hand over machetes, clubs and home-made spears. Two police officers had been beaten to death earlier in the week.
A miner holds up a machete as he sits with other workers during a strike calling for increased wages at the Lonmin platinum mine in Rustenburg on Thursday.A miner holds up a machete as he sits with other workers during a strike calling for increased wages at the Lonmin platinum mine in Rustenburg on Thursday.(Stringer/AFP/GettyImages)
Some miners did leave, though others carrying weapons began war chants and marched toward the township near the mine, said Molaole Montsho, a journalist with the South African Press Association who was at the scene. The police opened up with a water cannon first, then used stun grenades and tear gas to try and break up the crowd, Montsho said.
Suddenly, a group of miners rushed through the underbrush and tear gas at a line of police officers. Officers immediately opened fire, with miners falling to the ground. Dozens of shots were fired by police armed with automatic rifles and pistols.
Images broadcast by private e.tv station carried the sound of a barrage of automatic gunfire that ended with police officers shouting: "Cease fire!" By that time, bodies were lying in the dust, some pouring blood. Another image showed some miners, their eyes wide, looking in the distance at heavily armed police officers in riot gear.
Policemen keep watch on the protesters outside a South African mine in Rustenburg.Policemen keep watch on the protesters outside a South African mine in Rustenburg. (Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters)
Poor South Africans protest daily across the country for basic services like running water, housing and better health and education — all of which were promised when racist white rule ended with the first democratic elections in 1994. Protests often turn violent, with people charging that ANC leaders have joined the white minority that continues to enrich itself while life becomes ever harder for the black majority.
Police often are accused of using undue force. Still, Thursday's shooting appalled the country, recalling images of white police firing at anti-apartheid protesters in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, though in this case it was mostly black police firing at black mine workers.
It remains unclear what sparked the miners' fatal charge at police. Mnisi, the police ministry spokesman, claimed the miners shot at police as well, using one of the weapons they stole from two policemen whom they beat to death on Monday.
"We had a situation where people who were armed to the teeth, attack and killed others — even police officers," the spokesman said in a statement Thursday night. "What should police do in such situations when clearly what they are face with are armed and hardcore criminals who murder police?"

President 'shocked and dismayed'

President Zuma said he was "shocked and dismayed at this senseless violence."
"We believe there is enough space in our democratic order for any dispute to be resolved through dialogue without any breaches of the law or violence," Zuma said in a statement.
South African police opened fire on a group of striking platinum miners in Rustenburg on Aug. 16, killing 34 and wounding another 78 people. A day after the incident, police look on as women carry placards in protest outside the mine, some 90 kilometres northwest of Johannesburg. (Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters)
Lonmin PLC chairman Roger Phillimore issued a statement Friday saying the deaths were deeply regretted. But he emphasized the mine considers it "clearly a public order rather than a labour relations associated matter."
The strike began last Friday. While it intially focused on wages, the ensuing violence has been fuelled by the struggles between the dominant National Union of Mineworkers and the upstart and more radical Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union. Disputes between the two unions escalated into violence earlier this year at another mine.
Clashes involving the two rival unions have claimed the lives of 10 people, including two police officers who were beaten to death by strikers. Two mine security guards died of burns suffered after strikers set their vehicle ablaze.
Mining drives the economy of South Africa, which remains one of the world's dominant producers of platinum, gold and chromium. Lonmin is the world's third largest platinum producer and its mine at Marikana produces 96 per cent of all its platinum. The violence has shaken the precious metals market, as platinum futures ended up $39, or 2.8 per cent, at $1,435.20 an ounce in trading Thursday on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Lonmin stock plunged 6.76 per cent Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. The company's stock value has dropped more than 12 per cent since the start of the unrest.


Bombings on eve of Libya's 1st anniversary of the fall of Tripoli


2 dead, several hurt as car bombs explode in Libyan capital


A man examines a car destroyed in an explosion Sunday near a women's police academy in Tripoli.

A man examines a car destroyed in an explosion Sunday near a women's police academy in Tripoli.


Two car bombs exploded in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, killing two people and injuring several others early on Sunday, a security official said.
The first bomb went off in a main street near a military college used as a base for former rebel forces, killing two and wounding four people, according to the official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media.
Thirty minutes later, a cab parked in a narrow alley by the Interior Ministry exploded, wounding several people. The official said a third car bomb was discovered, also near the ministry, but was defused.
The bombings came on the eve of Libya's first anniversary of the fall of Tripoli. On Aug. 20, 2011, rebel fighters behind the eight-month uprising to topple Moammar Gadhafi's regime liberated the city.
Gadhafi was captured and killed last October but many Libyans are convinced that some of his associates remain at large around the country.
After Sunday's blasts, officials blamed Gadhafi's loyalists, saying they were plotting attacks and seeking to spread fear among the public and prevent the country from returning to normalcy.
"I hold former regime aides fully responsible for this cowardly action," said deputy interior minister, Omar al-Khadrawi, as he visited one of the sites of the blasts. He said "the same kind of bombs and the same tactics and equipment" were used in previously foiled car bombing attacks in Tripoli.
The city security authorities went on high alert after the bombings, which came just hours before Muslim prayers are to take place at the main Tripoli square for the Eid al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of the month of Ramadan.
Low-level attacks have been on the rise in both Benghazi, to the east, in Misrata, in central Libya, and in the capital, Tripoli.
Last month, Libya elected its first parliament after the nation's first-ever free vote. The house elected a president earlier this month and is now trying to form a new government. The future cabinet faces a mountain of challenges, including the need to form a strong national army under which various militia groups would unite and follow one central command.

Trey Songz - 2 Reasons ft. T.I.