Libyan rebels cling to city centre of Zawiyah

RAS JDIR, Tunisia, (Reuters) – Tanks of forces loyal  to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi closed in on the rebel-held  main square of Zawiyah today and their snipers shot at  anything that moved, rebel and resident sources said.
They said bodies were lying unrecovered in the ruins of many  buildings destroyed in air raids earlier in the week and there  was no one in the streets of the centre of the city of 290,000.
“We can see the tanks. The tanks are everywhere,” a rebel  fighter told Reuters by phone from inside Zawiyah, which lies 50  km (30 miles) west of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.
It was not possible to verify the reports independently.
Foreign reporters are not allowed anywhere near the city and  attempts by some to enter Zawiyah over the past few days have  been blocked by the authorities.
The fighter, named Ibrahim, said forces loyal to Libyan  leader Muammar Gaddafi were in control of the main road and the  suburbs of Zawiyah, which in the past three days have become a  focal point of a civil war on two fronts to end Gaddafi’s  41-year-old rule.
Rebel forces still controlled Zawiyah’s central square, and  the enemy was about 1,500 metres (yards) away, Ibrahim said.
There were army snipers on top of most buildings, shooting  anyone who dared to leave home.
Zawiyah, which briefly had been seen as a rebel stronghold  in the uprising which erupted against Gaddafi last month, may be  on the verge of changing hands.
“The situation is not so good,” a resident said by  telephone. “No one can move outside their homes because they  there are snipers everywhere.”
Ibrahim said Gaddafi forces “have surrounded the square with  snipers and tanks” but rebels were holding on.
“It’s very scary. There are a lot of snipers,” he said.
“There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them.  Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals,  not even birds in the sky.”
The heavy fighting has shut down one of Libya’s biggest  refineries supplying petrol to the country, which is located  near the town, a refinery official said on Wednesday.
“Heavy weapons have been fired nearby and we can’t run the  refinery under these conditions,” the official told Reuters.
Ibrahim said rebels had killed a high-ranking cousin of  Gaddafi in fighting earlier in the week.
“That’s why he bombed the city. They wanted to retrieve the  body and they did.”
He said a force of about 60 rebel fighters had left the city  to attack an army base on Tuesday some 20 km (12 miles) away.
“None of them has returned and we don’t know if they’re dead  or alive. We haven’t heard from them,” he said.