http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=1&id=24522


Gaddafi tanks attack town, no U.N. move yet

16/03/2011

     
      Libyan leader Mummer Gaddafi addressing a delegation of supporters during 
a televised speech. (AFP) 
     
      A fleeing Libyan rebel shouts on the back of a truck driving back to the 
coastal city of Benghazi. (AFP) 
     
      Protesters attend a demonstration against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi 
in Tobruk, east of the capital Tripoli. (R) 
TOBRUK, Libya (Reuters) - Muammar Gaddafi's tanks and artillery struck a 
rebel-held town and other loyalist forces advanced on Libya's main rebel 
bastion of Benghazi on Wednesday as diplomatic efforts to stop him appeared to 
lose momentum.
Italy, a potential base for a no-fly zone proposed by Britain and France, ruled 
out military intervention in the oil-exporting country to support an 
increasingly vulnerable-looking rebellion against Gaddafi's 41-year-old rule.

"We cannot have war, the international community should not, does not want and 
cannot do it," Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said in Rome.

As the Libyan army told people in Benghazi to lay down their arms, aid 
organization Medecins Sans Frontieres said the violence had forced it to 
withdraw its staff from Benghazi and begin moving teams to Alexandria in Egypt.

"Security conditions have made it effectively impossible for medical teams to 
travel safely to areas where the fighting has created the greatest need," it 
said.

Residents in rebel-held Misrata, 200 km (130 miles) east of the capital 
Tripoli, Gaddafi's stronghold, said his forces had attacked the city using 
tanks and artillery.

"Very heavy bombardments are taking place now from three sides. They are using 
heavy weapons including tanks and artillery ... They have yet to enter the 
town," said one resident, called Mohammed, by telephone.

A second resident, called Saadin, confirmed the account and said the attack 
began at 7:00 a.m. (1 a.m. ET).

PRO-GADDAFI LEAFLETS IN BENGHAZI

In Benghazi, where the revolt began in mid-February, residents said they had 
found some leaflets lying around in the city streets suggesting that if they 
gave up the fight against Gaddafi now, they would not be harmed or punished.

The leaflets accused rebels of being driven by al Qaeda and high drugs, an 
allegation routinely leveled by the government against an uprising that was 
inspired by pro-democracy rebellions that toppled the Egyptian and Tunisian 
presidents.

Salah Ben-Saud, a retired undersecretary at the Agriculture Ministry, said in 
Benghazi that life in the town was normal and "pro-Gaddafi people have not 
really shown their face."

"There were rumors that he (Gaddafi) would try to take back Benghazi and that 
made people a bit nervous, but he didn't and people here don't think he would 
succeed anyway if he tried."

Thousands gathered in a square in Benghazi on Tuesday evening denouncing 
Gaddafi as a tyrant and throwing shoes and other objects at his image projected 
upside down on a wall.

Foreign powers have condemn Gaddafi's crackdown but show little appetite for 
action to support the revolt. A Gaddafi victory and a crackdown on protests in 
Bahrain could turn the tide in the region against pro-democracy movements.

Supporters of a no-fly zone to halt Libyan government air strikes on rebels 
circulated a draft resolution at the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that 
would authorize one, but other states said questions remained.

The draft was distributed at a closed-door meeting by Britain and Lebanon after 
the Arab League called on the council on Saturday to set up a no-fly zone as 
Gaddafi's troops advanced against the rebels based in the east.

German Ambassador Peter Wittig told reporters after the meeting his country 
still had queries, and noted that while the Arab League had called for a no-fly 
zone it also opposed any foreign military intervention. 

Veto powers Russia, China and the United States, along with Portugal, Germany 
and South Africa are among the members that have doubts about the wisdom of a 
no-fly zone. 

A senior Libyan foreign ministry official said the government hoped to regain 
all rebel-held territories soon. 

GADDAFI VICTORY IN "DAYS" 

"We hope (it will be done) as soon as possible. I hope it will be in a matter 
of days," Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim told Reuters in Tripoli. 

In a televised speech, Gaddafi taunted Western countries that have backed the 
imposition of a no-fly zone to come and get him. "France now raises its head 
and says that it will strike Libya," he told a gathering of supporters at his 
Bab al-Azizia fortified compound in central Tripoli. 

"Strike Libya?" he asked. "We'll be the one who strikes you! We struck you in 
Algeria, in Vietnam. You want to strike us? Come and give it a try." 

In an interview with the Italian daily Il Giornale published on Tuesday, 
Gaddafi said that if western forces attacked Libya, he would ally with al Qaeda 
"and declare holy war." 

The rebels' position looked highly vulnerable after government troops took 
control of the junction at Ajdabiyah, opening the way to Benghazi. 

NATO has set three conditions for it to enforce a no-fly zone over Libya: 
regional support, proof its help is needed and a Security Council resolution. 

An Arab League call for a no-fly zone satisfies the first condition, but with 
access to most of Libya barred by Gaddafi's security forces, hard evidence that 
NATO intervention is needed to avert atrocities or a humanitarian disaster is 
scarce. 

Growing numbers of Libyans are now crossing into Egypt fleeing Gaddafi's 
advance, the U.N. refugee agency said.


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