Friday, 07 October 2011
Muammar Qaddafi’s besieged hometown of Sirte was rocked by heavy
street fighting on Friday, as the former leader called on Libyans to
turn out in their millions to demonstrate against the country's new
rulers.
At least 22 revolutionary fighters were killed and 146 others injured on Friday in fierce clashes with Qaddafi forces in Sirte, Al Arabiya correspondent said.
An AFP correspondent said there were particularly violent clashes around and inside the university, near the city center.
Street fighting and heavy bombardment also continued from overnight at the Ouagadougou conference centre, a major stronghold of pro-Qaddafi forces, while the Mauritanian Quarter was also under attack.
At least 22 revolutionary fighters were killed and 146 others injured on Friday in fierce clashes with Qaddafi forces in Sirte, Al Arabiya correspondent said.
An AFP correspondent said there were particularly violent clashes around and inside the university, near the city center.
Street fighting and heavy bombardment also continued from overnight at the Ouagadougou conference centre, a major stronghold of pro-Qaddafi forces, while the Mauritanian Quarter was also under attack.
During his first visit to Iraq on
Thursday, Libya’s interim premier Mahmoud Jibril, said that Qaddafi was
hiding among tribesmen in the southern part of the country, and through
their protection he is free to move forth and back through the borders
with Niger.
Meanwhile, medics at a field hospital 50 kilometers (35 miles) west of Sirte said 18 injured anti-Qaddafi fighters had been brought in, most of them with shrapnel wounds, but that there were no immediate reports of any killed.
Meanwhile, medics at a field hospital 50 kilometers (35 miles) west of Sirte said 18 injured anti-Qaddafi fighters had been brought in, most of them with shrapnel wounds, but that there were no immediate reports of any killed.
Qaddafi’s audio message
Qaddafi made his call late
Thursday on Syria-based Arrai television, as the National Transitional
Council’s forces pressed their three-week campaign to capture Sirte.
“I call on the Libyan people, men and women, to go out into the squares and the streets and in all the cities in their millions” to reject the NTC, the deposed leader said in a scratchy audio message.
“I say to them, do not fear anyone. You are the people, you belong to this land,” said Qaddafi, whose whereabouts are unknown but is widely thought to still be in Libya.
“Make your voice heard against NATO’s collaborators,” he said, in reference to the new regime.
Fighting on Sirte’s northeastern front had erupted Thursday morning after Qaddafi diehards advanced under the cover of darkness, fighters told AFP.
Sirte and Bani Walid, a desert town 170 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Tripoli, are Qaddafi’s last major bastions against the NTC, which has ruled most of the oil-rich country since the veteran strongman was toppled in August.
By midday Thursday, NTC fighters had halted the pro-Qaddafi assault and were advancing on foot among the buildings, in the face of rocket and sniper fire.
Thursday night, the Ali Nuri Sbag Brigade advanced nearly a kilometer (0.6 mile), bringing them close to the north-south thoroughfare that forms a pro-Qaddafi stronghold, an AFP correspondent said.
The brigade is made up mostly of defectors from Qaddafi’s army. Their professionalism is evident, in marked contrast to the amateurism of certain units of civilian volunteers.
Defenders had erected a sand berm to block the main road, so the attackers had to navigate a maze of alleys, two-storey homes and gardens.
The narrow lanes made it almost impossible for military vehicles to move forward without being targeted by snipers, forcing Mismari’s men to proceed on foot, guns at the ready.
“I call on the Libyan people, men and women, to go out into the squares and the streets and in all the cities in their millions” to reject the NTC, the deposed leader said in a scratchy audio message.
“I say to them, do not fear anyone. You are the people, you belong to this land,” said Qaddafi, whose whereabouts are unknown but is widely thought to still be in Libya.
“Make your voice heard against NATO’s collaborators,” he said, in reference to the new regime.
Fighting on Sirte’s northeastern front had erupted Thursday morning after Qaddafi diehards advanced under the cover of darkness, fighters told AFP.
Sirte and Bani Walid, a desert town 170 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Tripoli, are Qaddafi’s last major bastions against the NTC, which has ruled most of the oil-rich country since the veteran strongman was toppled in August.
By midday Thursday, NTC fighters had halted the pro-Qaddafi assault and were advancing on foot among the buildings, in the face of rocket and sniper fire.
Thursday night, the Ali Nuri Sbag Brigade advanced nearly a kilometer (0.6 mile), bringing them close to the north-south thoroughfare that forms a pro-Qaddafi stronghold, an AFP correspondent said.
The brigade is made up mostly of defectors from Qaddafi’s army. Their professionalism is evident, in marked contrast to the amateurism of certain units of civilian volunteers.
Defenders had erected a sand berm to block the main road, so the attackers had to navigate a maze of alleys, two-storey homes and gardens.
The narrow lanes made it almost impossible for military vehicles to move forward without being targeted by snipers, forcing Mismari’s men to proceed on foot, guns at the ready.
Reinforcements to Bani Walid
Meanwhile, NTC reinforcements
were sent to Bani Walid for another assault of Qaddafi’s loyalists who
are fiercely defending the oasis.
Mussa Ali Yunes, commander of the Jado Brigade, said “we are heading for the southern front of Bani Walid,” speaking of a column of 1,000 men and hundreds of vehicles.
Yunes said efforts were being made to convince the remaining 10 percent of the population still there to leave before the new assault is launched after a month-long siege.
“The offensive could, possibly, be launched in two days, but that depends” on the situation, he added, explaining that the NTC forces were outgunned.
“There are many weapons in Bani Walid, weapons of high technology, very recent, coming from Russia,” he said. “We need more precise weapons but also intelligence on the inside, particularly on the number of missiles they have.
“About 2,000 fighters are deployed on the northern front, but they only have light weapons for now, because all the heavy weapons are in Sirte.”
Yunes said Qaddafi son “Saif al-Islam is in Bani Walid and possibly Qaddafi as well, but there is a 50 percent doubt about that. There are many Qaddafi loyalists in Bani Walid, more than in Sirte.”
On Tuesday, an NTC commander said Saif al-Islam was leading the final stand inside the besieged oasis.
Saif al-Islam, his father and Qaddafi’s intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi are the subject of International Criminal Court war crimes arrest warrants for murder and persecution in the bloody uprising.
Mussa Ali Yunes, commander of the Jado Brigade, said “we are heading for the southern front of Bani Walid,” speaking of a column of 1,000 men and hundreds of vehicles.
Yunes said efforts were being made to convince the remaining 10 percent of the population still there to leave before the new assault is launched after a month-long siege.
“The offensive could, possibly, be launched in two days, but that depends” on the situation, he added, explaining that the NTC forces were outgunned.
“There are many weapons in Bani Walid, weapons of high technology, very recent, coming from Russia,” he said. “We need more precise weapons but also intelligence on the inside, particularly on the number of missiles they have.
“About 2,000 fighters are deployed on the northern front, but they only have light weapons for now, because all the heavy weapons are in Sirte.”
Yunes said Qaddafi son “Saif al-Islam is in Bani Walid and possibly Qaddafi as well, but there is a 50 percent doubt about that. There are many Qaddafi loyalists in Bani Walid, more than in Sirte.”
On Tuesday, an NTC commander said Saif al-Islam was leading the final stand inside the besieged oasis.
Saif al-Islam, his father and Qaddafi’s intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi are the subject of International Criminal Court war crimes arrest warrants for murder and persecution in the bloody uprising.
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