[dehai-news] (BBC) Forces loyal to Gaddafi move into rebel territory in the east


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From: B-Haile (eritrea.lave@comhem.se)
Date: Wed Mar 02 2011 - 13:42:02 EST


Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi have moved into rebel territory in the east and are battling for an oil installation in the town of Brega.

BBC News

Forces loyal to Gaddafi have moved into rebel territory in the east

2 March 2011

Libya unrest: Loyalists battle rebels for oil terminal

John Simpson describes the moment Gaddafi's forces bomb an arms dump (Vid) http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12618367

Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi have moved into rebel territory in the east and are battling for an oil installation in the town of Brega.

Its manager said government forces took control at dawn without force but the rebels said they had regained the town.

Pro-Gaddafi jets also bombed an arms dump in the nearby city of Ajdabiya.

Col Gaddafi said on TV he would "fight until the last man and woman" and warned thousands of Libyans would die if Western forces intervened.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says he believes about 1,000 people have so far died in the violence engulfing the country.

The UN has suspended Libya from its Human Rights Council, accusing it of committing gross and systematic violations of human rights.

The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said on Wednesday he was formally opening an investigation into crimes against humanity in Libya.

No-fly zone
 
Government forces reportedly took the oil facility at Brega at dawn on Wednesday without using force.

"It's not an attack. We are OK. The government troops came in to secure the whole area. Our concern is to maintain the facility," Ahmed Jerksi, the manager of the oil installation in Brega, told the Associated Press.

But rebels in Benghazi, the main city in eastern Libya, said they had retaken the town.

"They tried to take Brega this morning, but they failed," spokesman Mustafa Gheriani told Reuters news agency. "It is back in the hands of the revolutionaries. He is trying to create all kinds of psychological warfare to keep these cities on edge."

Medical sources in Brega told BBC Arabic that 14 people had been killed in the fighting.

The BBC's John Simpson in Ajdabiya says fighting still seems to be going on in Brega but the people in Ajdabiya are expecting an attack

He says the defences there are pretty skimpy - three elderly Russian tanks, plus three mobile anti-aircraft guns that failed to shoot down a Russian-made jet which twice dropped bombs on a huge arms dump on the edge of town but failed to hit it.

Protesters fear air attacks on the towns they have won and are calling for the creation of a no-fly zone over Libya.

The UK has been investigating the possibility, but the BBC's Barbara Plett at the UN says there is little appetite in the Security Council for such a move.

UK PM David Cameron on Tuesday insisted it was right to be looking at plans for a no-fly zone, adding: "We do not in any way rule out the use of military assets."

'False reports'
 
In his speech broadcast on Libyan TV in a large hall in central Tripoli, Col Gaddafi warned against any foreign intervention.

"We will not accept [an] American intervention. This will lead to a bloody war and thousands of Libyans will die if America and Nato enter Libya."

He said the UN had passed resolutions condemning Libya based on "false reports" and he challenged the UN to investigate.

"We urge the world, the United Nations, to see where the people were killed, to send a fact-finding team."

He condemned those countries that had frozen Libyan assets, saying: "The assets are the assets of the Libyan nation... I am the asset of Libya, not the American dollar."

Col Gaddafi spoke as a crowd of supporters and officials chanted the slogan: "God, Muammar and Libya."

The Libyan leader said he was "surprised" that his name had been mentioned abroad since he had handed over power "to the people" in 1977, eight years after taking power and there were no positions he could resign from.

He said he had been told that "hostile radios" outside Libya were focusing on him.

In an attempt to explain recent unrest, he said "shady members of al-Qaeda" had formed "dormant cells" in several cities.

But he said there had been no violence at demonstrations in Libya.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12618367

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