Policeman looks on as vehicles and buildings burn in Tottenham in North London in the midst of a black and working class youth rebellion sparked by the cop killing of a 29-year-old man Mark Duggan. The unrest has spread to other cities., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Cameron using mercenaries in riots - Libya
2011-08-11 17:37
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Rabat - Libyan state television on Thursday said Prime Minister David Cameron was using "Irish and Scottish mercenaries" to tame riots in England.
"The rebels of Britain approach Liverpool in hit-and-run battles with Cameron's brigades and mercenaries from Ireland and Scotland. God is Greatest," said a breaking news caption on Libyan TV's morning programme.
British warplanes and ships, along with those of several Nato allies, have been attacking the forces of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi for months to stop them shelling rebel cities and forces bent on toppling him.
Gaddafi is accused of hiring mercenaries mostly from African states to fight the rebels.
Cameron ordered a surge in police numbers this week to calm London and other cities across England after four days of often unchecked street disorder and looting embarrassed his government and English authorities.
Libya's "mercenary" taunt was part of a morning show traditionally aimed at drumming up sentiment for Gaddafi.
"These (riots in Britain) are not protests fomented by foreign intelligence services," said the show host, contrasting the turmoil in Britain with what Tripoli calls a foreign-hatched plot to unseat Libya's lawful government.
On Wednesday, the Libyan government turned Western rhetoric back on Cameron, saying he "has lost his legitimacy and must go," a formulation that London, Washington and Paris have used to demand Gaddafi quit power after 41 years.
- Reuters
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