go to the suburbs of tripoli. she is not allowed to leave the country, anderson. do you think i mean, she says anytime she goes outside that if it s not gadhafi, you know, uniformed soldiers it s kind of supporters or loyalists who recognize her. she says she s not safe on the streets. reporter: she isn t. when she goes out, she says she is ridiculed by people because of what s been said about her on state television. there s been a massive smear campaign from the government spokesman through state television, officials. for regime loyalists here it s a generally perceived situation that she is a prostitute, a drunk person. and that s the way that she s been cast here. so when she steps outside of her house, people have a very negative reaction to her, she says. what happens, she says, when the
all right. let s get the latest on some of the other stories we re following. isha sesay has the 360 news and business bulletin. isha? anderson, five alleged 9/11 terror suspects will be tried at guantanamo bay. attorney general eric holder announced today that khalid shaikh mohammed and four other suspects will face a military trial. the obama administration had wanted to bring the men to new york for federal civilian trials. haiti has a new president. preliminary results released tonight show musician michel martelly got about 68% of the vote beating haiti s former first lady in a runoff vote last month. the faa is mandating new safety inspections on some older boeing 737s after a southwest flight made an emergency landing with a hole in its fuselage. the mandate will affect about 175 planes, about 80 of which are registered in the united states. president obama has invited congressional leaders for a budget meeting tomorrow to try to avoid a partial government shutdown. re
police pick her up and take her to a police station after interrogating her for a while, they realize there are no charges against her, so they re forced to let her go. so she s kept in this never-never world of barely being able to leave her house. she says her spirits and morale are low and she can t leave the country, the government s dangling her, just dangling her right now, anderson. reza, her family is standing by her. and as we saw, they ve even had an engagement and a wedding for her. that s a huge deal. explain why that is such a stunning development in a place like libya. reporter: well, in a conservative society like libya even allegations of rape, allegations of prostitution, a promiscuous lifestyle is enough to discredit you and dishonor you, and a defiant message to the gadhafi regime, last week the family essentially had an engagement ceremony for her. even in her absence they had this engagement ceremony, and it was a message to the gadhafi regime, despite your eff
she s fearful for her life tonight but says she has nothing left to lose. this of course is how the world first came to know her, after she snuck into a tripoli hotel full of journalists a little bit more than a week ago, screaming she d been raped by gadhafi s forces, gang raped by 15 men, bound and tormented, held captive. she had scars and bruises to prove her story. as she spoke, hotel workers revealed themselves to be government agents, assaulted they assaulted her verbally. one pointed a knife at her. then one of them threw a coat over her head. and eventually, she was hustled away. a few days later libyan state tv ran a tape of a woman being interrogated. it was eman, it turns out, lying on a floor. voices of people taunting her could be heard, telling her to do interviews on libyan state tv, withdrawing her story. she refuses all of it. the government, she said the government said that she was drunk. they said she was mentally unstable. they even called her a wh
this of course is how the world first came to know her, after she snuck into a tripoli hotel full of journalists a little bit more than a week ago, screaming she d been raped by gadhafi s forces, gang raped by 15 men, bound and tormented, held captive. she had scars and bruises to prove her story. as she spoke, hotel workers revealed themselves to be government agents, assaulted they assaulted her verbally. one pointed a knife at her. then one of them threw a coat over her head. and eventually, she was hustled away. a few days later libyan state tv ran a tape of a woman being interrogated. it was eman, it turns out, lying on a floor. voices of people taunting her could be heard, telling her to do interviews on libyan state tv, withdrawing her story. she refuses all of it. the government, she said the government said that she was drunk. they said she was mentally unstable. they even called her a prostitute. the libyan state tv anchor says right here, comparing her to a pro