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Fresh air strike as Libyan rebels advance

EU could deploy ships to enforce Libya arms ban: official
Brussels (AFP) March 4, 2011 - The European Union could deploy warships near Libya to enforce an arms embargo on the strife-torn north African country, a senior EU official said Friday. The potential weapons blockade will be among a package of measures that EU leaders will debate during an emergency summit on the Libyan crisis next Friday in Brussels, the official said. The United Nations and the European Union decided earlier this week to ban the sale of weapons to Libya as part of a set of sanctions to punish Moamer Kadhafi's regime for its violent crackdown on protesters. The 27-nation EU's security and defence policy provides "the possibility of some sort of naval surveillance" to enforce the embargo, the EU official said.

"I'm not saying that's exactly what is going to be done but there are always ways through which we can tighten up the sanctions to make sure they work," the official said. The United States, Britain and France have deployed warships towards Libya amid debate among NATO allies about whether to use military power to stop the bloodshed. The United States and Britain have evoked the possibility of imposing a no-fly zone over Libya, which would mean bombing Kadhafi's air defences on the ground and shooting down hostile jets. Several governments, including France, insist that such an operation would require a UN mandate. Russia, a veto-wielding member of the Security Council, has voiced deep reservations about it.
by Staff Writers
Uqayla, Libya (AFP) March 4, 2011
Libyan forces launched a fresh air strike on rebel territory in the east on Friday as pumped-up opposition fighters pushed forward the frontline against Moamer Kadhafi's regime.

There were no casualties or damage as a government jet bombed an opposition-controlled military base on the outskirts of the strategic eastern town of Ajdabiya on the third straight day of air strikes.

"There was a bomb outside the military base near Ajdabiya," said Mohammad Abdallah, a rebel fighter at the last checkpoint of the town on the road to Brega, where rebels repelled a government counter-offensive on Wednesday.

Other rebels also reported the air strike.

It came as rebel fighters pushed the frontline forward, heading west along the main coastal road out of Uqayla, a tiny village 175 miles (280 kilometres) from the main rebel headquarters in Benghazi, Libya's second city.

An AFP reporter about five miles west of Uqayla saw about six pick-up trucks mounted with heavy machine guns heading still further west, towards the oil port of Ras Lanuf.

Pushing the frontline west helps protect the Mediterranean towns of Brega, with its oil refinery, and Ajdabiya, a key road junction, which are vital if Kadhafi's forces are not to isolate them from the rest of the country.

Captain Shoaib al-Akaki, who defected from the military, expressed concern about internecine fighting.

"We're trying to minimise losses on both sides. You know in Libya, we're all relatives. We're a country of tribes. We all have relatives in Sirte," he said, referring to a coastal town where Kadhafi was born.

He claimed about 20 cars and trucks filled with relief supplies had been sent back further east to Brega, where rebels were killed and wounded in the regime offensive.

A patchwork coalition of rebels controls eastern Libya and some towns in the west following a revolt that started on February 15, but Kadhafi, who has ruled for four decades, retains his grip on the capital Tripoli.

But in Brega, Captain Mohammad Abdullah said the rebel's military command was not encouraging people to head to Rasnaluf because Kadhafi's troops "have taken high ground" there.

"There'll be a massacre if people go there, but civilian volunteers are fired up, they are no longer afraid of anything," he said.

He claimed hundreds of rebels had gone in that direction and were now 20 kilometres west of Uqayla and were waiting for reinforcements. He also claimed regime troops were out in the desert with heavy equipment. Neither statement could be independently verified.

"From intelligence we're getting, the (pro-Kadhafi) group from the south disobeyed orders and started heading out west and some officers refused to carry out orders, that seems to have delayed their invasion plan," he said.

In Brega, about 50 rebels armed with shoulder fired anti-aircraft weapons have set up a checkpoint outside the gates of the Sirte Oil Company, the scene of heavy fighting on Wednesday.

They fired into the air for no reason and appeared pumped up.

"We expect them to come here at any moment. If they take this place over, they'll cut off our power (ie the power in Benghazi)," said Ali al-Hudari, 38, a volunteer fighter and labourer from Benghazi.

An AFP reporter saw a group of cars heading out of Ajdabiya towards Brega. One group came from the eastern town of Al-Baida while another car came from Tobruk, nearer the Egyptian border.

"This is the time of jihad," said Mohammad, 35, who works in a bank in Tobruk said he had come to fight with a group of friends.

The air strike in Ajdabiya was the latest in a series targeting a military barracks.

Another AFP reporter on Friday saw crates upon crates of abandoned ammunition inside the barracks. A warehouse was full of anti-tank rockets, bazookas and rocket launchers, the reporter said.

In Ajdabiya, about 10 shops were open but the streets were deserted, in keeping with usual custom early Friday, the Muslim day of rest and the start of the Libyan weekend.

In Benghazi, there were scenes of chaos as young men pushed and shoved each other to grab old Libyan flags which organisers handed out ahead of a rally planned after Friday prayers, an AFP reporter said.

Opposition groups have also called for protests in the capital Tripoli.

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