Russian money drives property sales in Dubai On Wednesday, a Tunisian medical team arrived at the Burns & Plastic Surgery Hospital in Tripoli to assist national cadres in providing medical care. The government appointed by the House of Representatives in Tobruk in February tried to calm the anger by transporting many of those injured by the blast to Egypt.Ī spokeswoman at the Sabha Medical Centre said that except for four critical cases, Al-Galaa Hospital in Benghazi had started transferring all of the city's 32 cases to Egypt.Ībdul Hamid Dbeibeh, prime minister of the Government of National Unity in Tripoli, announced that plans had been made to transport the victims to Tunisia, Spain and Italy.Īrrangements included issuing the necessary orders to take care of those accompanying the patients and to provide them with appropriate housing. Meanwhile, the two governments in Libya competed to provide medical care for the injured. Libya: Sisters separated during Italian occupation reunited after 94 years Read More » "This proposed sale will support the foreign policy and the national security goals of the United States by helping to improve the infrastructure of a major non-Nato ally", said Holtsnider. James Holtsnider, charge d'affaires at the US embassy in Kuwait City, said that "Kuwait is a strategic and critical ally for his country from outside Nato," reported Al Qabas. The agreement means the emirate becomes the third Gulf nation recently, after Saudi Arabia and the UAE, to strike a major deal to buy US weapons.
Kuwait has obtained approval from the US State Department to buy weapons worth about $400m, according to the country's Al Qabas newspaper. Saied has ruled by decree since last summer, when he brushed aside parliament and the democratic 2014 constitution in a step his foes called a coup, moving towards "one-man rule" and vowing to remake the political system. Khiari accused Saied of high treason and submission to interference from foreign countries. Khiari had entered into a political conflict with the fiercest enemies of Ennahda, the country's largest party in the dissolved parliament, then later widened his criticism to include President Kais Saied. The charges included "acting in a way that weakens the spirit of the military system of the army" and "conspiring against the state’s internal security". After the constitution, Kais Saied's next target: The unions Read More »