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WAR REPORT
Kadhafi vows no surrender as NATO jets pound Tripoli
by Staff Writers
Tripoli (AFP) June 7, 2011

Smoke billows from the site of an explosion across an area in which strongman Moamer Kadhafi has his residence, in Tripoli on June 7, 2011. The complex that includes Khadafi's residence has been consistently targeted by a NATO air campaign in Libya. Photo courtesy AFP.

Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi vowed on state television Tuesday that he would never surrender as NATO-led warplanes pounded Tripoli with one of the heaviest bombardments of the air war so far.

NATO-led warplanes carried out some 60 strikes on Tripoli killing 31 people, Libyan government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said.

In the audio message, his first intervention since he appeared on state television on May 19, Kadhafi said that he was close to the bombing but was still resisting and called on his people to resist too.

"Despite the bombings, we will never submit," Kadhafi said in the nine-minute broadcast. "I am near the bombing but I am still resisting.

"We have only one choice -- (to stay in) our country to the end. Death, life, victory, no matter what. We will not leave our country or sell it, we will not submit."

Shortly after the recording was broadcast, more air strikes hit the Libyan capital continuing a bombardment that had gone on throughout the day.

An AFP correspondent heard eight loud explosions from the area around Kadhafi's compound in the late morning, followed by more than a dozen in the early afternoon.

Journalists taken on an escorted tour of the bomb-damaged compound were shown a dead body, draped in a green Libyan flag, which government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said was one of a number of casualties from the air strikes.

An information ministry minder said that six bombs had struck the compound itself and eight the barracks just opposite.

The British defence ministry said targets included a secret police headquarters in the heart of Tripoli and a major military installation on the outskirts.

In Brussels, where NATO defence ministers were to meet on Wednesday to discuss the progress of the Libya campaign, Kadhafi's daughter Aisha filed a war crimes complaint against the Western alliance, claiming it knowingly bombed a civilian target, killing her daughter and other family members.

The complaint, a copy of which was seen by AFP, relates to an April 30 NATO raid on Tripoli, which Libyan officials said killed the strongman's youngest son and three grandchildren.

In Washington, US President Barack Obama said after talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel that the pressure on Kadhafi "will only continue to increase" until the Libyan leader steps down.

"The chancellor and I have been clear. Kadhafi must step down and hand power to the Libyan people, and the pressure will only continue to increase until he does," Obama told reporters at the White House, standing alongside the German leader.

"What you're seeing across the country is a inexorable trend of the regime forces being pushed back, being incapacitated.

"You're seeing defections, often times of some very high-profile members of the Kadhafi government, as well as the military.

"I think it is just a matter of time before Kadhafi goes."

Labour Minister Al-Amin Manfur became the latest member of Kadhafi's regime to defect, announcing at a meeting of the International Labour Organisation in Geneva that he was changing sides.

In Libya's second city Benghazi, President Dmitry Medvedev's envoy Mikhail Margelov met rebel leaders in the first trip by a top Russian official to their eastern stronghold.

Margelov, Medvedev's African envoy, said Russia was prepared to provide financial support to the rebels but opposed any escalation of the conflict.

"Air strikes don't solve problems. We are in favour of a political solution, not a military escalation," he said.

The rebels said they were ready to receive Russian aid "tomorrow," but stressed that they would not enter any negotiations until Kadhafi stepped down.

"The only message that he can deliver to Kadhafi as far as the rebellion is concerned is 'Leave'," rebel spokesman Mahmoud Shammam said.

Margelov said Moscow was prepared to "facilitate dialogue between the two camps," but Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stressed Russia did not want to be the lead mediator.

"We have said several times that the African Union has the main role," Lavrov told reporters on a visit to NATO member Norway.

Moscow has expressed alarm as NATO's air campaign to enforce a UN-mandated no-fly zone to protect civilians entered a new phase with the deployment of British and French attack helicopters over the weekend.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees said that Iman al-Obeidi, the Libyan woman who accused soldiers loyal to Kadhafi of raping her, has arrived at a refugee centre at Timisoara in western Romania.

A Libyan rebel official last month told AFP that Obeidi had escaped from Libya to Qatar with the help of rebels. But Qatar later sent her back to Libya despite concerns for her safety, UN and US officials said.

Obeidi attracted international media attention when she stormed into the Rixos hotel in Tripoli on March 26 and threw open her coat to reveal scars and bruises on her body.




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US brushes aside Libya-China diplomatic talks
Washington (AFP) June 7, 2011 - The United States on Tuesday brushed aside news of increased Libyan discussions with China, saying "there is a UN mediator" on the crisis in the north African state.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner made the comment when asked about the visit of Libya's foreign minister to China and talks involving Beijing diplomats and rebels looking to wrest power from the oil-rich nation's leader Moamer Kadhafi.

"There is a UN mediator on this issue," Toner said.

"And we believe that should be the focus of efforts to mediate the conflict there. That said, China and the rest of the international community continue to look with concern upon the situation in Libya. And we're trying to find a way forward."

Toner reiterated Washington's position that Kadhafi "is illegitimate as a leader and, therefore, he must step down... before that democratic transition can take place."

The flurry of diplomatic activity seemed to indicate that China -- which has significant economic interests in Libya -- was stepping up its involvement in efforts to defuse the months-long crisis in the north African state.

The Libyan foreign minister, Abdelati al-Obeidi, was to stay in China until Thursday and would meet his Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi, foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters.

Chinese diplomats based in Egypt, meanwhile, have gone to the eastern Libyan rebel-held city of Benghazi "to gain an understanding of the humanitarian situation and the situation for Chinese investing entities," the ministry said.

The comments came as UN envoy Abdul-Ilah al-Khatib arrived in Tripoli for a visit that had not been announced previously, the Libyan Jana news agency reported.

Kadhafi daughter files war crimes charge against NATO
Brussels (AFP) June 7, 2011 - Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's daughter filed a war crimes complaint against NATO in Belgium Tuesday, claiming it knowingly bombing a civilian target, killing her daughter and other family members.

The complaint, a copy of which was seen by AFP, relates to an April 30 NATO assault on Tripoli, which, according to Libyan officials, killed the strongman's youngest son and three grand-children.

"The decision by NATO to target a civilian home in Tripoli constitutes a war crime," said Luc Brossollet, one of Aisha Kadhafi's lawyers.

The complaint was filed with the prosecution service in Brussels and a federal judge.

Kadhafi's daughter "in her capacity as a mother, an aunt and a sister, suffered considerable prejudice, unquestionably related to (the April 30 bombing)," the text of the complaint said.

Aisha's brother, Seif al-Arab Kadhafi, 29, her four-month-old daughter Mastoura, and nephews Seif and Carthage, both two years old, died in the raid, according to officials in Tripoli.

"The target was a civilian building, inhabited by civilians and was neither a command post nor a military control centre" of the Libyan regime, the complaint said.

Brossollet said NATO commanders were fully aware of the nature of the target when they planned the assault.

Aisha Kadhafi's lawyers argue that Belgian courts have jurisdiction over NATO as the military alliance is headquartered in Brussels.





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