Gun battles rage in Libya, Gaddafi fights on

BENGHAZI, Libya, (Reuters) – Forces loyal to Muammar  Gaddafi hit back at rebels holding towns near the Libyan capital  yesterday but there was no sign they had broken the momentum  of opposition gains that have been closing in around Tripoli.

With a spike in oil prices threatening prospects for a  global economic recovery, the United States said it was keeping  all options open, including sanctions and military action in  response to the Libyan government’s crackdown on the uprising.

President Barack Obama called the leaders of Britain, France  and Italy to discuss rescuing citizens trapped by the violence  as well as holding Gaddafi to account. But fully coordinated  international action against the man who has ruled the oil-rich  desert nation of six million for 41 years seemed some way off.

Residents and former soldiers of Muammar Gaddafi celebrate inside a military compound in Benghazi yesterday. REUTERS/Suhaib Salem

In a rambling appeal for calm, Gaddafi blamed the revolt on  al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, and said the protesters were  fuelled by milk and Nescafe spiked with hallucinogenic drugs.

Disparate opposition forces were already in control of major  centres in the east, including the second city Benghazi. Reports  from the west of the third city Misrata, as well as Zuara, also  falling brought the tide of rebellion closer to Gaddafi’s power  base — though information from western Libya remained patchy.

In Misrata, which opponents of Gaddafi said they had taken  on Wednesday, residents said loyalists and foreign mercenaries  launched a counter-attack yesterday but had been contained.

“The protesters have overcome the security forces and taken  full control of the city,” Mohamed Senoussi, 41, told Reuters by  telephone from Misrata, 125 miles (200 km) east of Tripoli.

Gun battles in Zawiyah, an oil terminal 50 km (30 miles)  west of the capital, left 23 people dead, a Libyan newspaper  said. Al Jazeera quoted residents putting the toll at 100 there.

France’s top human rights official said up to 2,000 people  might have died so far in the uprising which began on Feb. 15.

REBELS “ON
DRUGS”

Western governments, which embraced Gaddafi and his oil in  recent years after decades of isolating a leader once branded a  “mad dog”, struggled to find a common response to the crisis.

Talk of sanctions against the country, or against Gaddafi  and his circle, swirled without clear agreement in view. Even a  push by Western states to suspend Libya from the low-powered  U.N. Human Rights Council met with strong resistance from Arab  and some other Islamic states, as well as from Russia.

The Swiss government said it had frozen assets belonging to  Gaddafi and his family. But Libya’s foreign ministry denied that  the leader had any such funds and said it would sue Switzerland.
Gaddafi, who just two days ago vowed in a televised address  to crush the revolt and fight to the last, spoke to state  television by telephone this time and sounded more conciliatory.

“Their ages are 17. They give them pills at night, they put  hallucinatory pills in their drinks, their milk, their coffee,  their Nescafe,” Gaddafi said of the rebels fighting his forces.

A Tripoli resident, who did not want to be identified  because he feared reprisals, told Reuters: “It seems like he  realised that his speech yesterday with the strong language had  no effect on the people. He’s realising it’s going to be a  matter of time before the final chapter: the battle of Tripoli.”

FIGHTBACK

As governments and foreign companies scrambled to evacuate  foreign nationals working in Libya, a U.S.-chartered ferry  remained trapped in Tripoli with 285 passengers on board.

U.S. diplomatic cables from 2009 published by Wikileaks  portrayed Gaddafi’s family as a fragmented group, riven by  greed, jealousy and ambition, casting doubt on how they might  respond to their father’s current plight.

Former Justice Minister Mustafa Mohamed Abud Al Jeleil, who  quit this week, told a Swedish newspaper he expected the Libyan  leader to commit suicide the way Adolf Hitler did at the end of  World War Two, rather than surrender or flee.

Misrata resident Senoussi said he knew of seven civilians  and several government troops and mercenaries who were killed.

“The protesters arrested 20 mostly African mercenaries and  two Libyan soldiers. I have seen them in shackles,” he said by  telephone, adding that armed rebels were roaming the city  outskirts in search of Gaddafi loyalists.

Al Jazeera quoted a senior officer who joined the rebels as  saying the government used poisoned gas against demonstrators at  Misrata’s airport early yesterday, but other Misrata residents  said they were not aware of such an event.

Soldiers were reported along the roads approaching Tripoli.  In Zawiyah, witnesses said pro- and anti-Gaddafi forces were  firing at each other in the streets.

Libya’s Quryna newspaper said 23 people were killed and 44  wounded in the town. Quoting medical sources it said “intense  exchange of fire” was preventing the wounded from reaching  hospitals. Some men were removing wounded kin from hospitals for  fear of them falling into the hands of Gaddafi loyalists.

“It is chaotic there. There are people with guns and  swords,” said Mohamed Jaber, who passed through Zawiyah on his  way to Tunisia yesterday.

A witness told Reuters the Libyan army was present in force.

Anti-government militias were in control of Zuara, about 120  km (75 miles) west of Tripoli, residents said. There was no sign  of police or military and the town was controlled by “popular  committees” armed with automatic weapons.

In the east of Libya, many soldiers have withdrawn from  active service and some are openly supporting the revolt.

Protesters have also taken control of Al Kufra, some 1,000  km (600 miles) southeast of Benghazi, Quryna newspaper said.

The uprising has virtually halted Libya’s oil exports, said  the head of Italy’s ENI, Libya’s biggest foreign oil operator.  The unrest has driven world oil prices up to around $120 a  barrel, stoking concern about the economic recovery.

Key Libyan oil and product terminals to the east of the  capital are in the hands of rebels, according to Benghazi  residents in touch with people in region. The oil and product  terminals at Ras Lanuf and Marsa El Brega were being protected,  they said, amid fears of attacks by pro-Gaddafi forces.

There were mixed reports of whether output was affected.
The desert nation pumps nearly 2 percent of the world’s oil.

UP TO
2,000 DEAD

France’s top human rights official said up to 2,000 people  could have died in the unrest and he feared Gaddafi could  unleash “migratory terrorism” on Europe as his regime collapses.

“The question is not if Gaddafi will fall, but when and at  what human cost,” Francois Zimeray told Reuters. “For now the  figures we have … more than 1,000 have died, possibly 2,000,  according to sources.”

In Benghazi, where the rebellion started a week ago, the  mood was triumphant. Effigies of Gaddafi and his family hung  from lampposts, men chanted slogans and fired guns into the air  and the town was being run under “people’s committees”.

“All is run now by the young people of Benghazi, there is no  control from outside Libya or inside Libya,” said resident Faraj  Mohamed.

In the hospital morgue, body bags lay half opened exposing  the charred remains of eight bodies.

“I am responsible for this and have medical records and I  know from hospital records that 220 to 250 people died,” doctor  Jamil Howedi said, noting that many of the dead were from the  army, killed for refusing to fight the protesters.

In Tripoli, which remains largely closed to foreign media,  locals said they were too scared to go outside for fear of being  shot by pro-government forces.