This time last year, Libya was in the grip of a bloody civil war.
Muammar Gaddafi was fighting to preserve his regime after 42 years in power.
The rebels trying to topple him were struggling to fight past his defenses on their way to the capital Tripoli.
The city eventually fell last August. Gaddafi fought on till captured and killed in October.
The BBC’s Rana Jawad was the only Western reporter to remain in Tripoli throughout the civil war.
She also knew Gaddafi’s Libya well, having lived several years in Libya.
Her new book is called “Tripoli Witness: The Remarkable First Hand Account of Life Through the Insurgency”.
“I remember very clearly and vividly,” Jawad tells anchor Marco Werman, “broadcasting off the rooftop when bullets were flying around, and people were being shot at as they took to the streets.”
And that was just the beginning.
Then came the allied bombing from the air, and military stalemate.
“A lot of people started giving up (hope) almost, in Tripoli, saying it looks like nothing will happen here.”
Repression continued, and Jawad had to go off the air.
But she continued reporting, writing for BBC online under the name, “Tripoli Witness”.
Many of those reports are in the book.
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