News

April 21, 2011

We would prevail over rebels, says Gaddafi’s son

Cairo – The son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said the government would prevail over rebels trying to oust his father and a new constitution was ready for when the insurgency was defeated, Al Arabiya TV reported on Wednesday.

The Dubai-based satellite channel said Saif al-Islam, speaking on Libyan state television, accused the Benghazi-based rebel national council as being motivated by “power and oil wealth”.

“Libya will not go back to what it was. The era of the first Jamahiriya (people’s republic) is gone and a new draft constitution has been prepared,” Al Arabiya quoted Saif al-Islam as saying.

Saif al-Islam has the highest profile among Gaddafi’s sons although, like his father, he has no official government position.

The rebels have been trying since mid-February to end Gaddafi’s 41-year-old rule but have struggled against his more experienced and better equipped forces.

Despite NATO air strikes mandated under a UN Security Council resolution to protect civilians, they have made little advance towards Gaddafi’s stronghold of Tripoli.

Saif al-Islam said the situation was changing in favour of the Libyan system, Al Arabiya reported adding that his father “will prevail” against the rebels.

Misrata under mortars attacks ; West talks of tougher action

Moreso the Libyan government troops pounded the besieged rebel-held city of Misrata overnight, undeterred by Western threats to step up military action against Muammar Gaddafi’s forces.

Mortar fire killed at least three rebel fighters and wounded 17 in the latest attacks on Tripoli Street, rebel spokesmen said.

Libya’s third largest city, the only rebel stronghold in the West of the country, has been under a punishing siege by forces loyal to Gaddafi for seven weeks.

Hundreds of people are reported to have died.

Among the casualties on Wednesday were British and American photojournalists and a Ukrainian doctor.

Rebels say Gaddafi’s forces, including snipers, are deliberately attacking civilians, an accusation denied by Tripoli.

Libyan state television said early on Thursday NATO forces had struck the Khallat al-Farjan area of the capital Tripoli, killing seven people and wounding 18 others.

The report could not immediately be independently verified.

Canadian Lieut.-Gen. Charles Bouchard, commander of NATO’s Libya operations, said on Wednesday civilians should keep away from Gaddafi’s forces to avoid being hurt by NATO air attacks on government troops.

“Civilians can assist NATO by distancing themselves from Gaddafi regime forces and equipment whenever possible. Doing this will allow NATO to strike those forces and equipment with greater success,” he said in a statement.

Rebel fighters voiced frustration with an international military operation they see as too cautious.

“NATO has been inefficient in Misrata. NATO has completely failed to change things on the ground,” rebel spokesman Abdelsalam said.

France said it would send up to 10 military advisers to Libya.

Britain plans to dispatch up to a dozen officers to help rebels improve organisation and communications.

Neither country plans to arm or train insurgents to fight.

Sarkozy  pledged stronger military action

In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who has spearheaded UN backed NATO intervention, pledged stronger military action at his first meeting with the leader of the opposition Libyan National Council, Mustafa Abdel Jalil.

“We are indeed going to intensify the attacks and respond to this request from the national transition council,” an official in the president’s office said, quoting Sarkozy as telling Abdel Jalil:

He did not say how NATO-led forces planned to overcome the stalemate on the ground after the U.S and several European allies declined last week to join ground strikes.

Abdel Jalil told reporters he had invited Sarkozy to pay a visit to the Eastern rebel powerbase of Benghazi to “boost the morale of the revolution”.

French officials did not say whether Sarkozy had accepted.

Among the dead in Misrata were British photojournalist Tim Hetherington, co-director of Oscar-nominated war documentary “Restrepo”, and American photographer Chris Hondros, killed when a group they were in came under fire.

Guillermo Cervera, a Spanish photojournalist, told Reuters the group had been returning from Tripoli Street when there was an explosion.

“It hit the group. They were all on the floor,” he said.

Ukrainian doctor   killed

A Ukrainian doctor was killed in a separate incident while a doctor’s lost her legs, medics said.

Khalid Abufalgha, a doctor on the Misrata medical committee, said a total of 365 people had been killed, including at least 85 civilians, and 4,000 people wounded in the Mediterranean city since it came under government siege about seven weeks ago.

Rebels said they were battling for control of a major road in the port of 300,000 people, which is the insurgents’ last bastion in the west of the country, where civil war erupted in February over demands for an end to Gaddafi’s 41-year rule.

Civilians say they live in constant fear of snipers.

“Mohammed and his friends were in our garage. They had gone outside to play when he had to pause to put his shoe on. In that instant the bullet hit his head,” said Zeinab, mother of a 10-year-old boy who lay in a hospital bed with a bullet wound.

Misrata is running out of food and medical supplies.

There are long queues for petrol, and electricity has been cut so residents depend on generators.

Thousands of stranded foreign migrant workers are awaiting rescue in the port area.

Rebel spokesman Abdulrahman, reached by telephone from the western town of Zintan, said there was also fighting near Libya’s Western border with Tunisia.

“Clashes are currently occuring in Nalut and have been going on since Monday. The Gaddafi forces are using Grad missiles and mortar rounds to attack Nalut. It’s not an even battle. The rebels are not well-armed.”

Evidence surfaced on Wednesday that Gaddafi’s government is dodging UN sanctions to import gasoline to Western Libya using intermediaries who transfer the fuel between ships in Tunisia, a source with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters. (Reuters/NAN)