Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi on Friday urged his supporters to get back the weapons that France supplied to rebels in the Nafusa mountains who are battling his regime.
"March on the jebel (Nafusa) and seize the weapons that the French have supplied. If later you want to pardon them (the rebels), that's up to you," the embattled Gadhafi said in a message played over loudspeakers in central Tripoli.
Full Story
Protesters converged on Cairo's Tahrir Square on Friday to join camping pro-democracy activists for a demonstration to keep up the pressure on the country's military rulers over the pace of reforms.
Thousands of protesters were in the square including families of victims who died in the uprising to call for the trial of police officers implicated in the deaths, Agence France Presse reported.
Full Story
African leaders agreed Friday on a peace plan that rules Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi out of talks with rebels to end the four-month conflict in his country, a top official said.
The plan, which has to be presented to the Libyan regime and rebels, says "Gadhafi must not participate in negotiations", the head of the African Union peace council, Ramtane Lamamra, told Agence France Presse.
Full Story
A U.S. vessel aiming to break Israel's naval blockade on Gaza sailed from Greece Friday but was promptly stopped by coastguards for defying a ban, an activist on board said.
The Audacity of Hope set sail for Gaza without warning, leaving behind nine other ships in a pro-Palestinian international flotilla.
Full Story
Hundreds of thousands of protesters staged huge rallies across Yemen on Friday calling for the departure of all figures in the regime of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been hospitalized in Riyadh for nearly a month.
Saleh supporters also massed in Sanaa to express what they described as their "loyalty" to the veteran leader, who is receiving treatment from wounds sustained in an explosion at his presidential compound on June 3.
Full Story
Syrian security forces on Friday killed 11 civilians as more than half a million people took to the streets across the country to demand the departure of President Bashar al-Assad, activists said.
Six people died in the central city of Homs when security forces opened fire to quash protests, two were killed in Damascus and one in Daraya, near the capital, activists told Agence France Presse.
France insisted Friday that weapons it supplied to rebels fighting Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi were for "self-defense" in line with a U.N. resolution, after Russia and others voiced concern.
"Civilians had been attacked by Gadhafi's forces and were in an extremely vulnerable situation and that is why medicine, food and also weapons of self-defense were parachuted," Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said.
Full Story
Israeli police on Friday limited access to the al-Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques in Jerusalem as a precautionary measure a day after clashes in east Jerusalem, a spokeswoman said.
"This Friday we are preventing access to the plaza for Muslim men less than 45 years old," police spokeswoman Luba Samri said, although she denied the restriction was linked to Thursday night's violence.
Full Story
Time is running out for Syrian President Bashar Assad, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Friday amid reports of anti-regime protests in the country's second city Aleppo.
Clinton, who spoke on a visit to Lithuania, criticized the regime's incoherence in authorizing an opposition meeting and cracking down on political dissent.
Full Story
U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon welcomed Thursday a move by Bahrain to launch a probe to investigate the violent repression of pro-democracy protests, but stressed its independence was key.
The secretary-general "welcomes this development and underscores that the commission should be granted full access to all individuals, organizations and information relevant to the investigation," his spokesperson said.
Full Story


