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There were similar scenes after NATO bombs struck two buildings on a residential Tripoli street days ago. Some two-dozen men chanted, clapped and danced in support of Gadhafi around the burning buildings. Close by, hundreds of residents stood and stared at the damage, ignoring the loud demonstrators. Text messages sent to Libyan mobile phones earlier this month informed residents that a funeral would be held for seven Muslim clerics who were slain in a "barbarian crusader attack"
-- a NATO airstrike -- on a guest house in the oil port town of Brega. Only a few hundred people, many of them soldiers, attended. In the early days of the uprising, hundreds flooded to defend Gadhafi's compound, where human shields live in tents. Night after night, state television broadcasts live from the compound, known as Bab al-Aziziya, showing people singing and dancing in a main square. But they rarely appear to number more than a few dozen. Elsewhere, small signs of defiance are emerging. Some Libyans, all on condition of anonymity, speak out against Gadhafi when government officials are out of sight. "The regime is like a palm tree that has grown crooked," said an elderly Tripoli merchant, referring to a Libyan proverb. "All its dates have landed elsewhere," the merchant said. That was a reference to the country's wealth, which many here complain hasn't been distributed fairly. One man pointed to his one-dinar note, sporting Gadhafi's face. "No good," he said before quickly tucking the bill away. On an outing for journalists last week, the owner or manager of a cafe quietly switched his television from blaring Al-Arabiya
-- a Saudi-owned news channel despised by the regime -- to Libyan state TV when he saw the reporters approaching. Presumably he thought government minders weren't far away. Few pro-government Libyans cite adoration of Gadhafi to explain their stance. Instead, they say they worry about the country's stability. A pharmacist said she lived well and thought the rebels were tearing the country apart. She was angry at NATO for the bombing raids that crash and boom almost every night in Tripoli. Speaking at the recent demonstration, a 28-year-old computer engineer who only gave his first name, Sufian, said he wanted security. Another man, Riad Mansour, 35, said he feared Libya would "turn into another Palestine"
-- wrecked by occupation and internal instability. But it seems many others in the capital hope Gadhafi will go, even as they sit on the sidelines. "We have not seen the wealth of our land," said the elderly merchant. "We are poor and we should be wealthy. And it's his fault."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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