Gaddafi vows to fight against no-fly zone

Gaddafi vows to fight against no-fly zone

News Desk

Libyan forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi closed in on rebels in the western city of Zawiyah on Wednesday, surrounding them with tanks and snipers in the main square, a resident and a rebel fighter said.

A government spokesman said troops were mostly in control of Zawiyah, but there was still a small group of fighters. “Maybe 30-40 people, hiding in the streets and in the cemetery. They are desperate,” he said in Tripoli.

Foreign reporters have been prevented from entering Zawiyah, 50 km (30 miles) west of Tripoli, and other cities near the capital without an official escort.

Rising casualties and threats of hunger and a refugee crisis have increased pressure on foreign governments to act, but many were fearful of moving from sanctions alone to military action. President Barack Obama has faced criticism for being cautious.

In the east, much of which is under rebel control, warplanes bombed rebel positions around the oil port of Ras Lanuf where the front line is shifting, with rebels in 4×4 trucks mounted with weapons engaging the army in strike and counter-strike.

Air strikes hit rebels behind the stretch of no man’s land desert between Ras Lanuf and Bin Jawad, 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli. The towns are about 60 km (40 miles) apart on the strategic coast road along the Mediterranean Sea. Pro-Gaddafi troops who had besieged the rebel-held city of Misrata left on Tuesday, driving east toward Sirte with other forces coming from Tripoli, a resident said. There had already been reports Sirte had been reinforced from the south.

Sirte, hometown and a stronghold of Gaddafi, lies on the road to the emerging front that divides the country along ancient regional lines, with oil facilities in the middle, and has become a symbolic prize targeted by the rebels.

Gaddafi has said rebels were drug-addled youths and al Qaeda-backed terrorists, and said he would die in Libya rather than surrender. One of his sons said if Gaddafi bowed to pressure and quit, Libya would descend into civil war.

Gaddafi and his entourage made a dramatic visit to a Tripoli hotel where foreign journalists were staying late on Tuesday and gave interviews to French and Turkish television.

Early on Wednesday, Libyan television broadcast a speech, recorded a day earlier, by Gaddafi to tribal leaders in Tripoli, his fourth televised address since the uprising began.

Returning to familiar themes, the Libyan leader said the rebels wanted to pave the way for a new colonial era that would allow Britain, France and the United States to divide up the country and control its oil wealth.

Representatives of the Libyan opposition met EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in Strasbourg and planned to speak at the European Parliament on Wednesday.

Mahmoud Jebril, head of the crisis committee of the National Libyan Council, said the EU should recognize the council as the sole legitimate representative of the Libyan people.

EU states agreed to add the $70 billion Libyan Investment Authority to a sanctions list on Tuesday. The embargo already covers 26 Libyans including Gaddafi and his family.

An official from the rebel Transitional National Council is appealing to the EU to recognise the rebels as the legitimate representatives of the Libyan people.

“This is for the sole purpose of mobilising assistance to the people inside who need just about every type of assistance,” Mahmoud Jebril told the BBC.

Speaking at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, he said there would not be a political vacuum in Libya.

With the international community still hesitant about how to respond to the crisis in Libya, a counter-offensive by Gaddafi loyalists has halted a rebel advance in the east and left others stranded in the western cities of Zawiyah and Misrata.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made it clear that Washington believes that imposing a no-fly zone is a matter for the United Nations and should not be a U.S.-led initiative.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, who talked with President Barack Obama about a no-fly zone by telephone, told the BBC planning was vital in case Gaddafi refused to step down in response to the popular uprising that erupted mid-February.

Britain and France are seeking a U.N. resolution to authorize such a zone to ground Gaddafi’s aircraft and prevent him moving troops by air. Russia and China, which have veto power in the U.N. Security Council, are cool toward the idea, which could require bombing Libyan air defenses.

Gadhafi said in a Turkish television interview that Libyans would fight back if Western nations imposed a no-fly zone to prevent his regime from using its air force to bomb government opponents staging a rebellion.

He said imposing the restrictions would prove the West’s real intention was to seize his country’s oil wealth.

“Such a situation would be useful,” Gadhafi said. “The Libyan people would understand their real aims to take Libya under their control, to take their freedoms and to take their oil and all Libyan people will take up arms and fight.”

“If al-Qaida seizes Libya, that will amount to a huge disaster,” Gadhafi said. “If they (al-Qaida fighters) take this place over, the whole region, including Israel, will be dragged into chaos. Then, (al-Qaida leader Osama) Bin Laden may seize all of north Africa that faces Europe.”

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Source: The New Nation - Independent Daily


 

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