Showing posts with label civil war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil war. Show all posts

Oct 3, 2011

New Mississippi River tourism trail announced AP

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Tourism officials on Friday launched the new Great River Road Trail, a self-guided driving tour covering 240 miles through six counties and several small towns in West Tennessee.

The trail is made up of existing tourist attractions along the Mississippi River, including museums, parks, historic homes, nature trails and Civil War sites.

About 60 markers will line the trail, suggesting that visitors exit their cars and spend money at the museums, restaurants and shops in Shelby, Tipton, Lauderdale, Dyer, Obion and Lake counties. The trail is connected to the Great River Road National Scenic Byway, a 10-state route starting in Minnesota and ending at the Gulf of Mexico.

"The new byway encompasses virtually everything that's touched the Mississippi River," said Regena Bearden, vice president of marketing at the Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau. "Memphis visitors will be able to discover even more of our cultural gems for a truly authentic experience."

Officials hope the trail — the eighth of 16 self-guided driving tours in Tennessee — will add to the roughly $13 billion economic impact of tourism on the state.

They also acknowledge that the self-guided trails are an inexpensive way to spur tourism, mainly because the sites and attractions along them already exist. A $300,000 grant from the Tennessee Department of Transportation will pay for the markers. The only other expense is for making brochures detailing the different attractions and their locations.

"We have taken these 16 trails that are across the state and we have gone in, done the work for the visitor, and you have this wonderful trail full of hidden jewels that are going to bring people back to Tennessee," said Marty Mabry, the West Tennessee regional manager for the state's Department of Tourism Development.

The trail begins at the welcome center on Riverside Drive in Memphis, but visitors can choose to start their trip at any site along the trail. Visitors who stop at the welcome center in Memphis can pick up brochures, maps and coupons before driving out.

Stops along the trail include the Alex Haley Museum and Interpretive Center in Henning, which includes the childhood home of the author who wrote "Roots: The Saga of an American Family"; Memphis' Mud Island, which has several parks and a scale model of the lower Mississippi River; and Reelfoot Lake in northwest Tennessee, which is home to American bald eagles and some excellent fishing and hunting as well.

Well-known people also are honored along the trail, which includes the hometowns of world-renowned clown Emmett Kelly Jr. (Dyersburg), the late soul singer Isaac Hayes (Covington), and blues guitarist Sleepy John Estes (Ripley).

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The Great River Road National Scenic Byway and Trail: http://www.tntrailsandbyways.com

Jun 10, 2011

Fighting erupts in Zlitan, Turkey offers Gaddafi exit

U.S. Secretary of State Clinton meets with Mahmoud Jibril, executive bureau chairman of the transitional national council in Libya, during a bilateral Reuters – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton meets with Mahmoud Jibril, executive bureau chairman of …

BENGHAZI (Reuters) – Heavy fighting between pro-Gaddafi troops and rebels broke out in a Libyan city just 160 kilometres east of Tripoli, potentially opening the coastal road to the capital, just as cracks appeared among NATO allies.

Gaddafi forces also shelled for the first time the world heritage-listed city of Gadamis, some 600 kilometres southwest of the capital on the Tunisia and Algerian border, opening a new front in the five-month long civil war.

World powers gave mixed signals on how the deadlocked civil war might play out, with Russia trying to mediate reconciliation. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday he had offered a "guarantee" to Gaddafi if he left Libya, but received no reply.

With diplomacy stalling, rebels said fighting was erupting on new fronts.

Ahmed Bani, a military spokesman in Benghazi, told Reuters clashes had broken out in Zlitan on Thursday and resumed on Friday with Gaddafi forces killing 22 rebels.

Zlitan is one of three towns that are under government control between the rebel-held Misrata and the capital and were it to fall could act as a stepping stone to allow the anti-Gaddafi uprising to spread from Misrata, the biggest rebel outpost in western Libya, to Gaddafi's stronghold in Tripoli.

"Large numbers of troops are surrounding Zlitan from all directions and are threatening its residents with having their women raped by mercenaries if they do not surrender," Bani said, adding the rebels controlled parts of the city.

GADAMIS OASIS TOWN ATTACKED

Rebels also said the oasis town of Gadamis with a population of about 7,000 people, mainly Berber, was under attack after an anti-government protest in the old Roman city on Wednesday.

"Gadamis is being shelled by Gaddafi forces, according to witnesses in the town," spokesman Juma Ibrahim said from the rebel-held town of Zintan in the Western Mountains region.

"This is a retaliation to anti-regime protests," he said.

The old town was de-populated by Gaddafi in the 1990s and its inhabitants moved into modern buildings. It was not clear if the attack targeted the old town, a labyrinth of narrow, underground passages and houses known as the "Pearl of the Desert."

The accounts in Zlitan and Gadamis could not be independently verified and the Gaddafi government did not immediately comment.

In the besieged port city of Misrata, a doctor at the Hekma hospital said 31 people were killed and 110 wounded in government shelling on Friday.

The fighting comes after the United States accused some NATO allies on Friday of failing to pull their weight in the campaign against Muammar Gaddafi's forces, as the Libyan leader kept up shelling of the rebel-held town of Misrata.

"The mightiest military alliance in history is only 11 weeks into an operation against a poorly-armed regime in a sparsely-populated country -- yet many allies are beginning to run short of munitions, requiring the U.S., once more, to make up the difference," Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in a valedictory speech at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

Gates's exasperation has been echoed by rebels, who control the east of the country and some other areas but do not appear to pose an imminent threat to Gaddafi's rule.

TURKISH GADDAFI GUARANTEE

Turkey, which is a member of NATO, said Gaddafi had no way out, but to leave Libya and offered the him an exit.

"We ourselves have offered him this guarantee, via the representatives we've sent. We told him we would help him to be sent wherever he wanted to be sent. We would discuss the issue with our allies, according to the response we receive. Unfortunately we still haven't got a response from Gaddafi."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, appearing at the Abu Dhabi meeting of the Libya contact group on Thursday, said talks were under way with people close to Gaddafi who had raised the "potential" for a transition of power but added: "There is not any clear way forward yet."

Under pressure to come up with plans for a transitional government while still in disarray, the rebels have said the onus is on foreign powers to hasten assistance.

"Our people are dying," rebel Oil and Finance Minister Ali Tarhouni said. "So my message to our friends is that I hope they walk the walk."

Gaddafi describes the rebels as al Qaeda terrorists and says foreign intervention is a front for a grab at the country's oil.

Mikhail Margelov, Russia's Africa envoy, who travelled to Benghazi on Friday, said he would go to Tripoli as soon as NATO provided a corridor through its Libyan no-fly zone.

(Additional reporting by Peter Graff in Tripoli, Joseph Nasr in Rabat; Writing by John Irish; Editing by Ralph Boulton)