Gaddafi seeks Islamist allies, rebels nab fuel tanker

BENGHAZI, Libya, (Reuters) – Muammar Gaddafi’s son has  made a bid to divide the fractious Libyan rebellion, telling a  newspaper he was forging an alliance with Islamist rebels  against their liberal allies.

Saif al-Islam Gaddafi’s comments, in an interview with the  New York Times, were a sign that the Libyan leader’s camp hopes  to exploit divisions among the rebels revealed by the  assassination of their military commander last week.

The newspaper quoted an Islamist rebel leader who confirmed  contact with Gaddafi’s son. However, he pledged continued  support for the opposition and denied a split with the liberal  wing of the six-month-old rebellion.

The rebels scored a victory on Thursday, bringing a ship  with a seized cargo of government-owned fuel into their port.

The docking of the Cartagena, a tanker carrying at least  30,000 tonnes of gasoline — a scarce commodity in government  territory — boosted an insurgency which has broad international  military and diplomatic backing but is struggling to oust  Gaddafi in his 41st year as leader of the 60-year-old state.

Gaddafi has so far remained in control of the capital  Tripoli despite severe fuel shortages and rebel advances on  three fronts, backed since March by Western air strikes.

He has defied hopes in Western states of a swift  exit, forcing them to await progress on political and military  fronts.

The rebels face their own problems, from stalling  battlefield momentum to internal splits, exposed starkly last  week when military chief Abdel Fattah Younes was killed in  circumstances that have yet to be fully explained.

Rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces have exchanged fire in the  towns of Zlitan and Brega to the east of Tripoli, and a rebel  offensive in the Western Mountains appeared to have stalled.

But a report from south of Tripoli suggested the revolt was  spreading. According to a local resident of Msalata, 110 km (70  miles) from the capital, three Libyans were killed on Wednesday  in a town until now unscathed by civil war violence.