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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Warnings On Travel To Libya

U.S. "gravely concerned" by Libya, warns on travel

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Bp PLC
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493.00p
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02/18/2011
 
Eni Societa per Azioni
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€18.37
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02/18/2011
 
Exxon Mobil Corp
XOM.N
$84.50
+0.62+0.74%
02/18/2011
WASHINGTON | Sun Feb 20, 2011 4:17pm EST
(Reuters) - The United States said on Sunday it was deeply concerned by credible reports of hundreds of deaths and injuries during protests in Libya, and urged the government to allow demonstrators to protest peacefully.
Protesters, inspired by uprisings in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt, are demanding an end to the 41-year rule of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi. His security forces have responded with a violent crackdown.
"The United States is gravely concerned with disturbing reports and images coming out of Libya," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. "We have raised to a number of Libyan officials ... our strong objections to the use of lethal force against peaceful demonstrators."
The State Department said U.S. Embassy dependents were being encouraged to leave Libya and U.S. citizens were urged to defer nonessential travel to the country.
Top U.S. diplomats spoke out on Sunday against brutal crackdowns on protesters in Libya and Bahrain but stopped short of calling for a change of government in any of the countries facing large protests.
At least 50 people were killed and 100 others seriously wounded in Benghazi on Sunday, a doctor in Libya's second-biggest city, told Reuters.
Human Rights Watch said 84 people were killed in the city on Saturday, bringing the death toll in four days of clashes mainly in the east of the country to 173 before Sunday's violence.
Members of a Libyan army unit told Benghazi residents on Sunday they had defected and "liberated" the city from troops supporting Gaddafi, two residents said.
Libya is a major energy producer with significant investment from Britain's BP, Exxon Mobil of the United States and Italy's ENI among others. (Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Peter Cooney)

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