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  2. Libyan Jamahiriya Broadcasting Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_Jamahiriya...

    On 24 December 1968, regular television broadcasts began with coverage of the Independence Day parade. In this early period, TV broadcasts began at 8pm and ended at 10:45pm. [8] The Libyan national television was broadcast via satellite to the Arab world and Europe via the satellites Arabsat and Hot Bird from 1997.

  3. Free speech in the media during the Libyan civil war (2011)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_speech_in_the_media...

    Alhurra TV was able to bypass government blocks on the Internet in order to broadcast live images from Benghazi across the world. On 19 March, Nabbous was killed by pro-Gaddafi troops during the Second Battle of Benghazi. [9] Libya TV, also known as Libya Al-Ahrar TV, is a satellite TV channel broadcast from Doha, Qatar.

  4. Mass media in Libya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_media_in_Libya

    Libyan Radio and Television (LRT) is the successor to the Gaddafi-era state broadcaster. More than 20 TV stations, many privately owned, broadcast from Libyan cities and from Middle East media hubs. [2] Television receivers 889,232 receivers, 149 per 1000 inhabitants (2005) [6] [needs update] Television broadcast stations. Allibya TV

  5. Media of Libya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_of_Libya

    Libya Radio and Television Corporation (LRTC) is the successor to the Gaddafi-era state broadcaster. More than 20 TV stations, many privately owned, broadcast from Libyan cities and from Middle East media hubs. [4]

  6. Libya Al Ahrar TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libya_Al_Ahrar_TV

    Libya TV now broadcasts 12 hours per day both in Arabic and the Tamazight language. In the weeks prior to the battle of Tripoli, Libya TV aired recorded phone calls between key figures in the Gaddafi regime in which they discussed moving bodies of the deceased to places where NATO had previously targeted during airstrikes.

  7. Muammar Gaddafi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muammar_Gaddafi

    Brotherly Leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi معمر القذافي ‎ Gaddafi in 1970 Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution In office 2 March 1979 – 20 October 2011 [a] Prime Minister See list Abdul Ati al-Obeidi Jadallah Azzuz at-Talhi Muhammad az-Zaruq Rajab Jadallah Azzuz at-Talhi Abuzed Omar Dorda Abdul Majid al-Qa′ud Muhammad Ahmad al-Mangoush Imbarek Shamekh Shukri Ghanem ...

  8. Execution of Al-Sadek Hamed Al-Shuwehdy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Al-Sadek...

    The trial was broadcast live on Libyan state television. [1] Al-Shuwehdy had returned from America three months earlier where he had been studying, and had begun to protest Gaddafi's regime. [1] While working as an engineer at an airport he joined friends that were campaigning against Gaddafi. [1]

  9. Al Urubah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Urubah

    Al Urubah was a pro-Muammar Gaddafi Libyan television station. Following the fall of Tripoli in August, 2011, it broadcast messages from the deposed leader and his information minister, Moussa Ibrahim. [1] The station's logo also temporarily appeared on Syria's Arrai TV Television's transmissions. [2]