13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi Official Trailer #1 (2016) - John Krasinski Thriller HD
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13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi Official Trailer #1 (2016) - John Krasinski Thriller HD
An American Ambassador is killed during an attack at a U.S. compound in Libya as a security team struggles to make sense out of the chaos.
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Front Lines of the Libyan Revolution (Documentary)
VICE Founder Shane Smith takes you into the heart of the Libyan revolution, where the stakes are simple: victory or death. We head into rebel-controlled eastern Libya, traveling from the Egyptian border to Benghazi and then onto the front lines in Misrata to document the violent revolution.
Hosted by Shane Smith | Originally aired in 2011 on
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Benghazi Distribution Centre
Shoyeb Adat and Shaykh Adam ibn Yusuf, UWT Representatives arrive in Benghazi with essential food items and medicine.
Aid will be distributed to the families and victims who are fleeing from the fighting.
Thank you for donating. Please continue to support the Libya Appeal.
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Libya holds inaugural olive fair as harvest season begins
(6 Dec 2015) LIBYA OLIVES
SOURCE: AP TELEVISION
RESTRICTIONS: MIDDLE EAST EXTRA CLIENTS ONLY
LENGTH: 5.46
AP Television
Tripoli, Libya - 5 December 2015
1. Mid of olive tree
2. Wide of olive tree at an olive tree farm in Tripoli
3. Wide of piles of olives in front of an olive oil mill in Tripoli
4. Mid of mill worker piling olives in front of mill
5. Close of olive pile in front of mill
6. Various of workers putting olives into machine
7. Worker putting olive paste into compression machine
8. Various of olives compressing
9. Worker getting paste ready for compression machine
10. Mid of oil coming out of compressed olives
11. Worker watching olive oil pouring into drum
12. Various of oil pouring into drum
13. Wide of exterior of Libya First International Fair for Olives and Olive Oil in Tripoli
14. Close of sign Reading: (Arabic) Libya first International Fair for olives and olive oil
15. Various of exhibition space
16. Various of olives and olive oil on display at fair
17. Mid of olive charcoal
18. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Hussien Saleh, Al-Shajara oil mill from Benghazi:
There was a motive behind the centre's (Export Development Center) efforts to improve the quality of the production, to be good for exportation and not just local consumption in the country with cheap prices. Now the price of olive oil has increased, and there's an increased demand, this has given us support, and the Export Development Center has done a tremendous job especially on exports, and we participated in international events to send out our products and let the world know that we have a good product that they can rely on.
19. Mid of Haithem Belama, coordinator of Bani Walid corner stand organising oil
20. Close of oil bottles on display
21. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Haithem Belama, from Bani Walid:
We participated in this first international fair in Tripoli with many types of olive products, Gemlik, Kothreiki, Picual and Chemlali. This last type is used for oil products, then the solid bits used for fodder and fertilizer, and we have many types of old oils in the city of Bani Walid, and it used for medicinal purposes to treat illness like Rheumatism, aching bones and hair falling out.
22. Close of fodder made from olives
23. Various of shoppers trying olive oil
24. Various of Libyan Tuareg corner in olive fair
25. Close of a 200-year-old container used by the Libyan Tuareg people for oil storage
26. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Solaiman Hamad, Head of Tuareg heritage committee:
This is our first time participating in an olive oil show event, our relation to the olive oil is we don't produce the olive oil but we have expertise in storage of the olive oil, and how to preserve it for longer time. We have this traditional container we called 'Al-Oaka' it keeps the olive oil with high quality, and here you see this one a very old specimen, it's about 200-years-old our ancestors used these to keep oil, fat and other liquids.
27. Oil storage jar
28. Various of Bahlol Tantosh (on left), Owner of Janat company, talking with farmer
29. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Bahlol Tantosh, Owner of Janat company for farming and mill equipment:
What we have benefited from at this fair is that there are many customers and producers and farmers in general who try to understand the machineries, and new methods of production, and the best way of producing to keep up with the technology and the international market demands and quality, so we can have another income source apart from crude oil.
30. Mid of olive sapling
31. Pan of shoppers at olive fair
32. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Bashier Salem, Head of Studies and Research Department, Export Development Center:
33. Wide of olive tree on olive farm
LEADIN:
STORYLINE:
The humble olive.
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Panetta Defends Pentagon's Benghazi Response
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on the Pentagon's response to the Benghazi attack.
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LNA general reports Tripoli casualty numbers
(11 Apr 2019) The spokesman for the Libyan National Army (LNA), Brigadier General Ahmed al-Mesmari, said on Wednesday 28 soldiers had been killed and 92 injured since the start of the military operations six days ago in the western region and on the outskirts of Tripoli.
Speaking in Benghazi, he also confirmed the first civilian casualties since the beginning of military operations.
A woman and her three children living in a house in the Qasr Bin Ghashir area of Tripoli were injured after their home was shelled.
Al-Mesmari added that the Libyan army forces shot down a military aircraft launched from a base in Misrata headed towards Tripoli.
Libya slid into chaos after a NATO-backed uprising that toppled and later killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.
Elections were held shortly after Gadhafi's demise, but failed to bring stability.
The oil-rich North African country is now governed by rival administrations - a UN-backed government in Tripoli and the west and Hifter and his supporters in the east.
Libya has also become a haven for armed groups, including several from neighbouring countries and a major conduit for African migrants hoping to reach Europe.
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Rebels celebrate in Benghazi as their fighters take control of capital
(22 Aug 2011)
1. Wide of celebrations in front of the Benghazi Court House
2. Mid of crowd jumping up and down cheering
3. Wide of crowd
4. Wide of light flare with crowd
5. Mid of light flare with crowd
6. Close-up of people cheering
7. Mid of celebrations
8. Close-up of rebel flag
9. Mid of Screen with Al-Jazeera Arabic Channel broadcasting
10. Mid of Fireworks in the sky
11. Mid of crowd with sparklers
12. Pan of celebrations
13. Close-up of rebel flag and Berber flag
14. Mid of celebrations
15. Wide of celebrations
STORYLINE:
Supporters of the Libyan rebel force celebrated outside Benghazi''s court house as the opposition force entered the capital Tripoli with little resistance from the army of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
Thousands of euphoric Libyans lit flares and fireworks, chanted and jumped up and down in the city, which has been a rebel stronghold since the Libyan civil war began six months ago.
Libyan rebels raced into the capital Tripoli on Sunday and reached its centre square early on Monday morning, as Moammar Gadhafi''s defences collapsed and his regime appeared to be crumbling fast.
Associated Press reporters with the rebels said they moved easily from the western outskirts into the regime stronghold in a dramatic turning of the tides in the civil war.
Sky News showed pictures of thousands of Libyans celebrating the rebels arrival in symbolic Green Square.
Green Square has been the site of night rallies by Gadhafi supporters throughout the uprising.
Early on Monday morning the square was full of celebratory gunfire aimed skyward and a pro-Gadhafi poster was destroyed by bullets.
A rebel leader said the unit in charge of protecting Gadhafi and Tripoli had surrendered and joined the revolt, allowing the opposition force to move in freely.
Earlier in the day, the rebels overran a major military base defending the capital, carted away truckloads of weapons and raced to Tripoli with virtually no resistance.
Gadhafi''s whereabouts were unknown. But he delivered a series of angry and defiant audio messages broadcast on state television.
He was not shown in the messages.
In the latest one, he acknowledged that the opposition forces were moving into Tripoli and warned the city would be turned into another Baghdad.
Opposition leaders at one point claimed Gadhafi''s son and one-time heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, had been arrested, but they later backtracked and said this was not yet confirmed.
The rebels'' surprising and speedy leap forward, after six months of largely deadlocked civil war, was packed into just a few dramatic hours.
By nightfall, they had advanced more than 20 miles (32 kilometres) to Tripoli.
Thousands of jubilant civilians rushed out of their homes to cheer the long convoys of pickup trucks packed with rebel fighters shooting in the air.
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Libya: Six years on, what remains of the revolution in key city of Zintan?
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Six years have passed since the outbreak of the revolution that led to the ouster and killing of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi. With the country divided between rival clans, some are beginning to miss the old regime, however despised it was at the time. Our reporter Charles Emptaz went to Zintan, near Tripoli, which was the scene of fierce fighting between revolutionaries and pro-Gaddafi loyalists.
Zintan is a city like no other. Perched high in Libya’s north-western Nafusa Mountains, near the capital Tripoli, it played a key role in the revolution. It was here that Gaddafi’s first missiles fell in the west of the country. It was also in Zintan that Saif al-Islam, son of the deposed leader, was imprisoned. Finally, it was in Zintan that the 2014-2015 war between the nationalists and the Islamist brigades ended. Today, what remains of all these battles, victories and defeats? What is left of the ideals of the Libyan revolution?
To recount the singular history of this city, our reporter met with Zintan’s warlords and inhabitants, sketching the outline of a post-revolutionary Libya, torn between dreams of emancipation and the risk of the country splitting up.
►► Also available to read on France 24: Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam wants to 'contribute to unification' of Libya
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More than 1,000 inmates escape from Benghazi jail; justice minister on jailbreak and assassinations
SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Benghazi
1. Wide exterior of al-Kweifiya prison's gate
2. Mid of special forces truck outside prison gate
3. Wide of guards outside main prison gate
4. Close of broken padlock on the ground
5. Mid of burnt door inside prison, burnt debris on ground
6. Close of burnt plastic chair amidst debris
7. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Smeda Ghofran, prison guard and eyewitness:
What happened was that there was a group from the Special Forces that stormed the prison. And then we found that the problem was that another group of Special Forces opened the doors and started to fire at us. Then they opened the doors and let the prisoners out.
8. Wide of man walking through debris inside prison
9. Wide of dark prison room with light coming through windows and opened door
10. Reverse mid view of man looking through boxes on shelf, shifted focus
11. Mid of man walking towards camera and going through door
12. Mid of prison wardens sitting around table
13. Close of prison warden Abdulnaser Alhadad talking to other guards
14. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Abdulnaser Alhadad, Prison Warden:
What happened was that we had some people who entered the military prison and we couldn't control it and things got out of hand. As we don't have any idea how to deal with this situation and we don't have any experience how to stop the riots in this situation, apart from the live ammunition that we have. We ordered the wardens not to use their live ammunitions because we don't want to repeat the tragedy of Abu Salim (Gaddafi prison massacre in 1996 when nearly 1300 inmates were shot dead) and kill our own people. And that's why we have a group of prisoners who escaped. At the moment we are back to work and we start receiving the escaped prisoners which is more than 50 prisoners and now they are back.
15. Mid of prison guards writing
16. Mid of prison guards talking
17. Mid of police trucks arriving to the prison gate
Tripoli
17. Wide of news conference held by Libyan Justice Minister
18. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Salah al-Marghan, Libyan Justice Minister:
These assassinations (that have been happening recently in Benghazi, not the prison break) were done in a professional way and with guns and rifles and the use of silencers.
19. Close of Justice sign on podium
20. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Salah al-Marghan, Libyan Justice Minister:
It is our duty now to get assistance from international investigators, either assistance from the United Nations or to talk to countries that support Libya.
21. Close of cameraman
22. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Salah al-Marghan, Libyan Justice Minister:
Hundreds of prisoners managed to escape. This prison held 1175 civilian prisoners - all of them escaped. 35 women also escaped as well as 120 military prisoners.
23. Mid of cameraman
24. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Salah al-Marghan, Libyan Justice Minister:
In both prisons, the civilian and military prison, the prisoners started a fire in their cells using blankets, clothes and other flammable items.
25. Wide of news conference held by Libyan Justice Minister
STORYLINE
Libyan Justice Minister Salah al-Marghan said on Sunday his government would be seeking assistance from the United Nations or from its allies to investigate how more than 1000 prisoners escaped from the al-Kweifiya prison in Benghazi a day earlier.
The escape came on the same day that protesters stormed political party offices across the country, another sign of the simmering unrest gripping a nation overrun by militias and awash in weaponry.
It wasn't immediately clear if the jailbreak at al-Kweifiya prison came as part of the demonstrations.
Inmates started a riot and set fires after security forces opened fire on three detainees who tried to escape.
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Brother of 2017 Manchester bomber being extradited from Libya to Britain
The brother of a suicide bomber suspected of helping plan a 2017 attack on a concert in the British city of Manchester is being extradited from Libya, according to the force that was holding him in the Libyan capital Tripoli. Watch full video to know more.
Dan Rather denies Lara Logan double standard
Dan Rather says CBS' treatment of Lara Logan in the aftermath of the retracted Benghazi report was not a double standard. More from CNN at
A peaceful Ramadan in Benghazi
Despite rubble lining the streets of Benghazi, many who left to escape fighting have decided to return and begin rebuilding their lives.
Libyan leader's son joins Italian soccer club
(29 Jun 2003)
APTN
1. Wide shot of castle owned by Perugia football club owner Luciano Gaucci
2. Castle courtyard
3. Perugia's fans and Gaucci
4. Zoom in to banner saying: Welcome Saadi
5. Moammar Gadhafi's son Saadi Al Gadhafi entering castle
6. Cutaway fans clapping
7. Saadi Al Gadhafi (left) Luciano Gaucci (centre) and Gaucci's sons (right) pose for photographs
8. Gadhafi and Gaucci holding No.19 Perugia jersey with Saadi written on back
9. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Saadi Al Gadhafi, Moammar Gadhafi's son:
When I decided to come to Perugia I knew it wouldn't be easy. I left the World Cup organisation in Libya, the elections of the African Football Association and many other responsibilities which need my presence. But I'm aware that this is an experience I have to have.
10. Cutaway media
11. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Saadi Al Gadhafi, Moammar Gadhafi's son:
This time with Perugia, is the first time I totally leave my precedent (previous) life to play football exclusively, even for a temporary time (period).
12. Rear view media
13. SOUNDBITE: (Italian) Luciano Gaucci, Perugia's owner:
It is an honour to have in our team a person as important as Saadi Al Gadhafi. We believe that besides the benefit to our image, he is a good player, with a good athletic training, who will improve with us and all his good abilities will be very helpful for Perugia.
14. Castle
Saadi Al Gadhafi Press Office
File, Date and Location Unknown
15. Gadhafi playing for Libya's national team
STORYLINE
Saadi Al Gadhafi, son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, signed as a player for top-division Italian club Perugia on Sunday.
The contract is for two years for a total of 600,000 Euros (684,780 US dollars).
Gadhafi, who resigned from the Libyan club Ittihad earlier this month to clear the way for his move to Italy, was presented with a red No. 19 Perugia jersey by team owner Luciano Gaucci, cleaning enterprise magnate.
The presentation was held at Gaucci's castle in Torre Alfina, a little town southwest of Perugia.
Gadhafi, 28, who took part in a going-away match with the Libyan national team on Friday in Tripoli, already has business relations with three other clubs in Italy, including part ownership of top club Juventus and second-division team Triestina, as well as a merchandising arrangement with Lazio of Rome.
Perugia has finished in the middle of the Serie A standings the past few seasons, including a tie for ninth this year.
Italian media have speculated that Perugia was engaging Gadhafi, an attacking midfielder, purely for publicity, but Gaucci and coach Serse Cosmi have denied those reports and promoted Gadhafi's merits as an athlete.
A self-acknowledged fanatical fan of Italian soccer, Gadhafi was largely responsible for Libya's hosting the Italian Supercup final between Juventus and Parma in Tripoli last August.
The North African country is also bidding to host the 2010 World Cup.
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Diplomat: It was the saddest phone call
A diplomat who had worked in Benghazi, Libya, testifies about a fatal attack before a congressional review board.
Tripoli residents fed up with Libya lawlessness
(8 Jan 2016) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Zliten - 7 January 2016
1. Wide of blast area at police training centre
2. Mid of security guard holding machine gun and walking in blast area
3. Close of damaged and burned boots on the ground
4. Close of part of truck that was used in the explosion
5. Security guard walking near truck wreckage
6. Various of crowd at funeral for blast victims
7. Mid of truck carrying bodies arriving at funeral
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tripoli - 8 January 2016
8. Various of people praying in mosque
9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ali Al-Mahmoudi, Local resident:
It is unfortunate that we have reached this stage, especially after a revolution to reject injustice, to build a state of law, a state of institutions and for development. I sadly regret that after four years we couldn't achieve even a small part of the simple Libyan citizen's dream of a state.
10. Mid of imam during Friday prayers
11. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ali Al-Mahmoudi, Local resident:
Yesterday's incident is not the first and will not be the last if we Libyans continue with the problems that now exist between the east, west and south.
12. Mid of people at Friday prayers
13. Various of protesters holding Libyan flag, banners and chanting in front of mosque
14. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Anwar Al-Regey, Local resident:
If the governments (two of the rival administrations in Tripoli and Tobruk) are not able to protect us civilians, we will have to ask the international community as we asked them before with the tyrant (Gaddafi). We will ask them again for help with these criminals who are murdering us without mercy or pity in Derna, Benghazi, Zliten, Misrata, Tripoli, Zwara or Zelten, there were many places that witnessed explosions.
15. Mid of Al-Regey speaking into megaphone during protest
16. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Anwar Al-Regey, Local resident:
What is happening to us in these five years is unreasonable, unreasonable, this is unreasonable, no Libyan can accept this. No Libyan can accept what is happening in Libya.
17. Various of Al-Regey with others during protest
STORYLINE:
Tripoli residents demonstrated outside a mosque in the Libyan capital's Al-Jazayer square on Friday in protest against a deadly bombing which had killed at least 60 people the day before.
A massive truck bomb exploded near a police base in the western Libyan town of Zliten on Thursday, killing at least 60 policemen and wounding around 200 others.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.
Libya slid into chaos following the 2011 toppling and killing of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
The oil-rich country is torn between an Islamist government based in the capital, Tripoli, and a rival, internationally recognised administration in the east.
Meanwhile, a U.N.-supported unity government sits in neighbouring Tunisia.
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Guterres: There is no military solution to Libya crisis
(4 Apr 2019) The United Nations Secretary-General on Thursday urged Libya's warring factions to de-escalate during his visit to the country, shortly after a top commander ordered his forces to march on to Tripoli.
Antonio Guterres told reporters in Tripoli that there was no military solution to Libya's war and that for the sake of the upcoming peace conference this month among Libyan factions, de-escalation is needed.
The UN chief said he was worried about a major armed showdown in Libya and urged warring factions to instead turn to dialogue.
He also urged authorities to support a Libyan National Conference to discuss the future of Libya and the political evolution of the country.
Guterres' remarks came as Libyan forces loyal to strongman Khalifa Hifter entered the town of Gharyan, about 50 kilometres, or 31 miles, south of Tripoli, the capital of the UN-backed government.
It's the closest to Tripoli that Hifter's fighters reached in their campaign westwards from the country's east.
Guterres arrived in Libya on Wednesday - the first UN chief to visit since the 2011 uprising that toppled and later killed long-time ruler Moammar Gadhafi.
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Ousted Libyan PM Zeidan flees country despite travel ban
Just hours after being removed with a vote of no-confidence, ousted Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has fled the country, defying a travel ban.
Zeidan was sacked on Tuesday for failing to stop rebels loading millions of dollars worth of crude on to a North Korea-flagged tanker this week without Tripoli's authority.
Malta's Prime Minister Joseph Muscat says Zeidan spent two hours on the island to refuel his plane, which according to Muscat then went off to another European country.
Zeidan had been banned from leaving the country as officials wanted to question him about alleged financial corruption and other irregularities.
Defense Minister Abdallah al-Thinni has been named interim prime minister for two weeks.
As for the missing tanker, details are sketchy with no independent confirmation on it's whereabouts, destination or ownership.
Desertification buries ancient villages in sand
(1 Oct 2019) LEAD IN:
Desertification have caused damage to historic villages bordering Libya's south eastern city of Kufra.
The Municipal Council is calling for sand to be removed so that important landmarks will bring tourists back to the area.
STORY-LINE:
Ancient walls are disappearing into the sand.
The old village in the historic Hawari region dates back hundreds of years.
But desertification means parts are now fully submerged under the sand dunes.
The Chairman of the Steering Committee of the Hawari District in Kufra, Sabri Marzouk, wants something done to rectify the situation.
This village, as you can see now, it is covered with sand and is wiped out by desertification. We in turn, the residents of the Hawari district, we ask the competent authorities to extend a helping hand to us to restore it and return it back to its previous state to make it a destination for visitors.
But the spokesman for the Municipal Council of Kufra City, Abdullah Sulaiman, says there are some unexpected benefits to the sands.
Perhaps there is a good aspect to that, as the sand has protected it from the wind and rain that comes from time to time, he says.
Kufra is an archipelago of oases and has the richest farms in the country in terms of crops production, due to a combination of hot weather and an abundance of fresh groundwater.
It is also famous historically as it was one of the areas that the Italian army tried in 1931 to control and subject to its rule, despite its distance from the coast and its location in the Libyan desert, far away in the deep Sahara.
Sulaiman believes the ancient ruins could be a draw for tourists.
I appeal to all the authorities responsible for tourism and antiquities in all of Libya that they take care of this neighbourhood. Because if the sand were removed, the landscape and shape will be very wonderful, and I hope that it will also be registered by the Antiquities Authorities.
He says there is not a single place in the Kufra district registered yet, except for the old Medan Mosque in the city centre.
The territory of Kufra was first explored by Westerners, beginning with the 1873/74 expedition by German Gerhard Rohlfs. Rohlfs reportedly first reached the oasis from the north in 1879.
Kufra was an important trade and travelling route for various nomadic desert people. In 1895 the Ottomans forced the Senussi to leave Jaghbub, making the oasis their main centre. After that, Westerners could no longer visit it until the First World War, when some soldiers of the Entente were held prisoner there.
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Shane Lawal Highlights Euroleague 2014-2015 (Full HD)
Olaseni Abdul Jelili Shane Lawal (born October 8, 1986) is a Nigerian professional basketball player who plays for Dinamo Sassari of the Italian League.
Lawal played college basketball for three years at the Oakland University before moving to Wayne State University for the 2008–09 season.[1]
Lawal went undrafted in the 2009 NBA draft. For the 2009–10 season he signed with Al Arabi Doha of the Qatari Basketball League.
For the 2010–11 season he moved to Spain and signed with CB Guadalajara of the LEB Plata. In April 2011, he moved to Libya and signed with Al-Ahli Benghazi for the rest of the season.
In July 2011, he signed with CB Clavijo of the LEB Oro.[2]
On August 5, 2012, he signed with Tezenis Verona of the Italian Legadue Basket.[3]
On July 29, 2013, Lawal signed a one-year deal with BC Astana of Kazakhstan.[4] With Astana he won the Kazakh League and Cup in the 2013–14 season.
On July 31, 2014, Lawal signed a one-year deal with the Italian Euroleague club Dinamo Sassari
Olaseni Abdul Jelili Shane Lawal (Abeokuta, 8 ottobre 1986) è un cestista nigeriano con cittadinanza statunitense, centro della Dinamo Sassari.
Former National Security Adviser Susan Rice warns our democracy is under assault and that attac…
Susan Rice was a top national security official during all eight years of the Obama administration. She was the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, then became the president's national security adviser in 2013. Rice worked with President Obama and others to shape America’s foreign policy, and led the National Security Council. Her new book is Tough Love: My Story of the Things Worth Fighting For.” Rice joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss the implications of President Trump urging China to investigate a political rival as well as the whistleblower complaint that has roiled Washington.
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Each weekday morning, CBS This Morning co-hosts Gayle King, Anthony Mason and Tony Dokoupil deliver two hours of original reporting, breaking news and top-level newsmaker interviews in an engaging and informative format that challenges the norm in network morning news programs. The broadcast has earned a prestigious Peabody Award, a Polk Award, four News & Documentary Emmys, three Daytime Emmys and the 2017 Edward R. Murrow Award for Best Newscast. The broadcast was also honored with an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award as part of CBS News division-wide coverage of the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Check local listings for CBS This Morning broadcast times.