Gaddafi troops take oil town, France pushes no-fly

AJDABIYAH, Libya, (Reuters) – Muammar Gaddafi’s  troops battled rebel fighters for control of the strategic  Libyan oil town of Brega yesterday, as France promised to push  harder for a U.N.-backed no-fly zone over the country.

Government troops advancing east along the coast road took  Brega early yesterday in what looked like an increasingly  confident drive towards the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.

But the rebels, inspired by the overthrow of the Tunisian  and Egyptian president to try to end Gaddafi’s four-decade rule,  said they had re-taken Brega last night. As night fell,  there was no way of verifying the rival claims.

The government, whose forces had previously captured Ras  Lanuf, another oil town 100 km west of Brega, said earlier it  was certain of victory and threatened to “bury” the rebels, whom  it linked to al Qaeda and “foreign security services”.

On the diplomatic front, France said it would step up  efforts to persuade world powers to impose a no-fly zone over  Libya. It said the Arab League’s weekend call on the United  Nations to impose such a zone showed the world’s concern for  Libyan civilians.

Time however is short for ill-equipped rebels facing far  superior firepower, including warplanes and helicopters.

The Libyan government said it would welcome an African  Union panel to try to help resolve the crisis, but condemned the  Arab League call for a no-fly zone, describing it as “a  dangerous act for Arab security that only serves the Zionist  enemy”.

France said it would consult other powers “in the coming  hours” to try to set up such a zone “to assure the protection of  the civilian population in Libya … in the face of the terrible  violence suffered by the Libyan population.”

A Libyan government army source told state television on  Sunday morning: “Brega has been cleansed of armed gangs,” and  rebel fighters retreating eastwards were demoralised.

“There’s no uprising any more,” said rebel Nabeel Tijouri,  his heavy machinegun destroyed in the fighting. “The other day  we were in Ras Lanuf, then Brega, the day after tomorrow they  will be in Benghazi.”

Brega is 220 km (135 miles) south of the rebel stronghold of  Benghazi and Ajdabiyah is the only sizeable town between them.

The flat desert terrain means the government’s aircraft and  tanks outweigh the rebels’ enthusiasm and light weaponry, except  in towns where the odds against the rebels are reduced.

State television carried a confident official message. “We  are certain of our victory, whatever the price,” it said.

BURIED

“Those acts of division will be buried together with those  who committed them, who are linked to foreign security services  and the terrorist organisation al Qaeda,” it said.

But last night, rebel media officer Mustafa Gheriani  told reporters in Benghazi that the rebels had retaken Brega,  killed 25 Gaddafi fighters and taken 20 prisoners of war.

“Tonight it (Brega) is back in the hands of the  revolutionaries, but they will proabably come back tomorrow with  big machines, bomb it and take it back again,” Gheriani said.  “This is a war of resolve and the resolve of his (Gaddafi’s)  people is breaking down.”

Rashid Khalikov, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for  Libya, said in an interview he wanted unimpeded access:

“The situation is changing from one day to another,” he  said. “The main concern is to find out what’s going on, which we  don’t know…The civilian population is suffering a lot.”

The United States said the Arab League’s call for a U.N.  no-fly zone to protect Libyan cities was an “important step”,  but Washington remained cautious about military intervention.

Arab support satisfies one of three conditions NATO set on  Friday for it to police Libyan air space. The others are proof  that its help is needed, and a U.N. Security Council resolution.

Even if the Security Council meets to discuss a no-fly zone,  it is far from clear whether it would pass a resolution as veto  holders Russia and China have both publicly opposed the idea.

MUTINY?

The Libyan conflict has escalated from a popular uprising  similar to protests that toppled the leaders of Tunisia and  Egypt and have shaken other countries in the region. It is now  more akin to a civil war.

Protests in the capital have stopped.

Human Rights Watch said “Gaddafi and his security forces are  brutally suppressing all opposition in Tripoli — including  peaceful protests — with lethal force, arbitrary arrests, and  forced disappearances.”

Fresh from crushing the revolt in Zawiyah, west of Tripoli,  elite government troops and tanks turned to Misrata, Libya’s  third biggest city with 300,000 people and the only pocket of  rebel resistance outside the east.

Rebels said a mutiny among government troops stalled their  advance on Sunday for a second day, but this was impossible to  confirm independently.

“From the early morning they (government troops) are  fighting each other. We hear the fighting,” rebel fighter  Mohammed told Reuters by telephone. “This division between them  came to us from God … Now we are waiting to see what happens.”

Journalists have been prevented from reaching the city by  the authorities. The government dismissed the reports as rumours  and said there were al Qaeda fighters in Misrata.