Options for leaving Libya by sea and air are limited. Thousands of Filipinos say they fear joblessness more than war.
Fighting around the Tripoli airport has led to 22 deaths.
Tunisia closed its main border crossing with Libya Friday amid the country's escalating violence.
A passenger said the woman "was totally drunk" and "slapped a young girl."
Heavy clashes in Tripoli and Benghazi have closed the airspace, cut power and water, and caused foreign governments to leave.
The government said more than 150 people have died, many of them civilian, in the capital Tripoli and Benghazi in two weeks of fighting.
The U.S. Embassy evacuated all personnel from Tripoli on Saturday amid some of the worst fighting the country has seen since the 2011 Libya revolution.
The group also features Croatia and Cameroon.
Twenty-five years after protests that threatened its existence, the Communist Party knew how to prevent another uprising.
"Star Wars" has filmed in Tunisia for nearly 40 years, but now the series is moving on to Abu Dhabi, citing security and financial concerns.
Former Gen. Khalifa Hifter is gaining new loyalists in the eastern part of Libya after he staged an offensive against the government over the weekend.
Protests over Turkey's mining disaster revived long-running civil unrest in cities across the country.
Lakhdar Brahimi is the second UN envoy in two years to call it quits. That makes a negotiated solution in Syria all the more unlikely.
Ladkhar Brahimi resigns from his post as U.N. envoy to Syria after spearheading two rounds of negotiations in Geneva.
Italian vessels recovered 14 bodies and rescued about 200 people, a day after dozens drowned in a similar incident.
Fighting in Slovyansk killed dozens of people on Monday as pro-Russian forces shot down a third helicopter with anti-aircraft missiles.
The franchise filmed five movies in Tunisia, and though it likely won't return, Tunisia is still cashing in on "Star Wars."
The trademark registrations are filed under “class 14,” a section that covers jewelry, clocks and watches.
Sustaining Tunisia’s successes will require more financial and political support from the U.S., Europe and Tunisia’s neighbors.
At the U.N. Africa Forum in Brussels this week, officials will discuss plans to use data from satellites to help deal with climate change and promote development.
Conflict, controversy and biased “outside” media coverage drew two brothers back to their native land to create an alternative voice from the ground up.