After a popular uprising against dictator Muammar Gaddafi, leading to a civil war, he was deposed and killed in 2011. The struggle is continuing between factions for the control of the country, sometimes leading to demonstrations and armed conflict against the provisional government of the General National Council (formed June 25, 2013).
I think so
In libya there are oil spills and the war going on right now about the government
The odds are against it.
We do not really know but I am hoping that the government in Libya are going to get banned soon and maybe arrested.
No, it is highly unlikely that the United States will use nuclear arms against Libya.
its been going for 3 weeks aproxcimately and that is all
No, but there is a revolution happening. Dictator Muammar Quaddafi is the cause.
no, currently there are air and missile strikes going on between the U.S Army and several other countries, but there are no U.S ground troops in Libya yet.
South Africa (was originally going to be Libya).
Italy
I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.I'm assuming that you are referring to present day Libya. The country that we call Libya tioday does not have the same borders as the ancient Roman area called Libya. Right next to Egypt, going west, was a small territory called Libya in Roman times. Next to that was an area called Cyrenaica and next to that was Syrtica followed by Tripolitana. Even though these place names are incorporated into modern Libya, in Roman times the borders were different as the Roman only populated the coastal strips and did not go very far into the interior.
"Ya Beladi"or "Libya, Libya, Libya" is the current national anthem of Libya. Wikipedia article site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libya,_Libya,_Libya