Rebels approach Tripoli as pressure mounts on Gaddafi
By
OREN KESSLER AND
AP
02/28/2011 00:52
Opposition girds for expected offensive; strongman's son describes family finances as ‘modest,' insists regime hasn't used force against Libyans.
Anti-government rebels rejoiced on Sunday after gaining control of the city closest to Libya's capital, while at the same time preparing to stave off an expected offensive by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi.
Diplomatic pressure abroad continued to build against the embattled strongman. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoed President Barack Obama's demand for Gaddafi to relinquish power, and two prominent US senators said Washington should support a provisional government in rebel-held areas of eastern Libya.
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The senators also called for a no-fly zone over the area, enforced by US warplanes, to stop attacks by the regime. The United States, Britain and the UN Security Council all imposed sanctions on Libya over the weekend.
Gaddafi's son, Seif al-Islam, claimed again that the country was calm, denying the regime had used force or air strikes against its own people. Human rights groups and European officials have put the death toll since unrest began in Libya nearly two weeks ago in the hundreds, or perhaps thousands, though it has been impossible to verify the numbers.
Gaddafi has launched what is by far the bloodiest crackdown in a wave of antiregime uprisings sweeping the Arab world, but there were no reports of violence or clashes on Sunday.
The Libyan regime, eager to show foreign reporters that the country is calm and under its control, took visiting journalists to Zawiya, 50 km. west of Tripoli. The tour, however, confirmed that anti-government rebels are in control of the center of the city of 200,000, and have deployed army tanks and anti-aircraft guns mounted on pickup trucks.
On the outskirts of the city, the rebels are surrounded by pro-Gaddafi forces, also backed by tanks and anti-aircraft guns. There were at least six checkpoints controlled by troops loyal to Gaddafi on the road from Tripoli to Zawiya. Each checkpoint was reinforced by at least one tank, and the troops concealed their faces with scarves.
A key city close to an oil port and refineries, Zawiya is the nearest population center to Tripoli to fall into the opposition hands. Police stations and government offices inside the city have been torched and anti-Gaddafi graffiti is everywhere. Many buildings are pockmarked by bullets.
Meanwhile, efforts continue to extricate stranded foreigners from the country. The German air force evacuated 132 people from the desert in a secret military mission, the country's foreign minister said on Sunday, but thousands of other foreigners remained stuck in Tripoli due to bad weather and red tape.
Two German military planes landed on Saturday on a private runway belonging to the Wintershall AG company and evacuated 22 Germans and 112 others, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in Berlin. The military planes arrived safely on Saturday night on the Greek island of Crete.
Also on Sunday, officials in Benghazi said cities in eastern Libya under the control of rebels have appointed a former minister to lead a provisional government. But a spokesman for the new government, Abdel-Hafidh Ghoga, denied that former justice minister Mustafa Abdel-Jalil was named its leader.
US Sen. Joe Lieberman, speaking on CNN's
State of the Union on Sunday, said Washington should arm the provisional government in rebel-held areas of eastern Libya "to fight on behalf of the people of Libya against a really cruel dictator."
He also proposed imposing a no-fly zone over the east to stop forces loyal to Gaddafi from attacking.
Speaking on the same program, Sen. John McCain suggested that US warplanes be used to enforce the no-fly zone and that Washington recognize the government in eastern Libya.
Gaddafi's son denied in a TV interview that his father's regime had used force or air strikes against its own people.
"Show me a single attack. Show me a single bomb," he told ABC's
This Week. "The Libyan air force destroyed just the ammunition sites. That's it."
Al-Islam is the most visible of Gaddafi's children and has, since the anti-government protests broke out nearly two weeks ago, been acting as a spokesman for the regime.
"The whole South is calm. The West is calm. The middle is calm. Even part of the East," he said.
Asked about Obama's call for his father to step down, he said: "It's not an American business, that's No. 1. Second, do they think this is a solution? Of course not."
As for the US freeze of Libyan assets, he said: "First of all, we don't have money outside. We are a very modest family and everybody knows that."
Gaddafi on Sunday dismissed the UN sanctions and said a small group of rebels protesting his rule were surrounded and would be defeated.
In a telephone interview with a Serbian television station, he said Saturday's Security Council vote imposing travel and asset sanctions on him and close aides was null and void.
"The people of Libya support me, small groups of rebels are surrounded and will be dealt with," Gaddafi told Serbia's Pink television station in Belgrade. The station said the interview was conducted from Gaddafi's office in Tripoli.
Meanwhile, Britain on Sunday froze the UK-based assets of Gaddafi, members of his family and their representatives in accordance with UN sanctions imposed on Libya.
Those affected include Gaddafi's four sons and one daughter, the Foreign Office said.
"I decided to implement this UN resolution in the UK as quickly as possible, before the financial markets reopened," Treasury chief George Osborne said. "This is a strong message for the Libyan regime that violence against its own people is not acceptable."
No immediate figure was put on the value of the assets, which banks and other financial institutions are now under an obligation to track down and freeze. Cash, shares, bonds and property are among the items affected.
The Times newspaper reported this weekend that Gaddafi deposited £3 billion ($4.8b.) with a London private wealth manager last week, and held commercial property and a £10-million ($16-m.) mansion in London. The report did not cite sources.
Rebels from Zawiya and army forces that defected from the regime to join them largely consolidated control of the town on Thursday, after an army unit that remained loyal to Gaddafi opened fire on a mosque where residents – some armed with hunting rifles for protection – had been holding a sitin.
About 30 km. west of Zawiya, around 3,000 pro-Gaddafi demonstrators gathered on the coastal highway, chanting slogans in support of the Libyan leader.
Tripoli was quiet, with most stores closed and long lines outside the few banks open for business.
City residents thronged the banks after state TV and SMS text messages announced in the past few days that each family would receive 500 Libyan dinars (about $400), plus the equivalent of about $100 credit for phone service. State TV said families also will be entitled to 60,000 Libyan dinars (about $49,000) in interest-free loans to buy apartments.
A doctor in Libya's third-largest city, Misrata, 210 km. east of Tripoli, said residents retrieved two more bodies of those killed during fighting with pro-Gaddafi forces near the city's air base on Friday.
The two bodies raise to 27 the death toll from the fighting. About 30 residents who took part in that battle remain unaccounted for.