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WAR REPORT
Cameron, Sarkozy visit liberated Tripoli
by Staff Writers
London (UPI) Sep 16, 2011

British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy flew to the Libyan capital to assure the newly installed National Transitional Council government of continued NATO support.

Cameron and Sarkozy are the most senior Western leaders known to have visited Libya since NATO launched its military operation earlier this year and forced Moammar Gadhafi out of power.

Cameron was accompanied by British Foreign Secretary William Hague and other senior aides during the visit to Tripoli and Benghazi.

The whereabouts of Gadhafi are unknown but dozens of his aides and family members have taken shelter in Niger. NTC officials were in Niger to persuade the African country to hand over members of Gadhafi government, known to include his son Saadi Gadhafi.

Cameron and Sarkozy visited Tripoli as battles raged between NTC forces and Gadhafi loyalists in the fallen leader's hometown of Sirte on the Mediterranean coast. Television reports showed scenes of street battles but the number of casualties was unclear. Fighting for the control of several military bases and an airport in the area also continued Friday.

Cameron and Sarkozy met with members of Libya's transitional government, including its head Mustafa Abdul Jalil. The British and French leaders also visited a hospital and a military college to talk with civilians injured in the fighting.

Further NATO support to the fledgling administration includes measures that will help the Libyan-led process to become free, democratic and inclusive, British officials said.

The transitional government will continue to receive assistance from military advisers and cash to begin clearing land mines laid across the conflict zones in Libya and help disarm thousands of militia members.

The NTC will receive nearly $1 billion more from Libya's frozen funds and some of that money will go toward weapons disposal and new communication equipment for the Libyan police.

The two leaders had a news conference in Tripoli where they pledged help with gathering evidence of human rights abuses by the Gadhafi regime.

"We want to help you diplomatically, militarily, economically and with your development," Cameron said. "We are your friends but this is your country, your leadership, your plan."

The NATO commitment to the Libyan people wasn't over and that protecting civilians was a priority, the two leaders said, echoing NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who told news media in Europe the military operation could now be in the final stage.

Transitional government forces are demanding air cover as ground operations against loyalist resistance continue.

A new resolution at the U.N. Security Council will provide a framework for international support to the Libyan people, including mechanisms for unfreezing assets.

Libya will resume its seat in the United Nations next week.

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New Libya rulers say Kadhafi strongholds will fall in 'days'
Tripoli (AFP) Sept 17, 2011 - A military official of the new Libyan regime said Saturday Moamer Kadhafi's bastions of Sirte and Bani Walid would be conquered in a "matter of days," even if the fallen strongmans's forces put up fierce resistance.

"In a few days the situation will completely change in Sirte and Bani Walid which will be under our control," said Ahmad Bani, spokesman for the military wing of the National Transitional Council (NTC).

Speaking at a press conference in Tripoli, Bani said the "geographical nature and the strong presence of snipers" in Bani Walid prevented a quick conquer of the oasis city, 180 kilometres (110 miles) southeast of Tripoli.

"We managed to enter the town on the north side that we control. We have advanced towards the centre but we were attacked by snipers and mercenaries who have launched rockets from the mountains," he said.

Earlier, an AFP correspondent said Kadhafi fired rockets and scored casualties in a fierce counter-attack from Bani Walid Saturday, an AFP correspondent said.

In Sirte, the other bastion located 370 kilometres (230 miles) east of Tripoli, Bani confirmed that "revolutionaries took control of the airport and a major air base.

"Since these two well-guarded positions were taken, the rest of the city would be easy to conquer," he added.

But front-line fighters and commanders gave contrasting reports of progress in Sirte, with men on the ground acknowledging they were facing a tough enemy and those in charge downplaying the pockets of resistance.

"We don't even have five percent of Sirte because we just go in and out," said fighter Abdul Rauf al-Mansuri.

Mansuri added that after night-time clashes NTC forces did not control the airport as claimed by a top commander in Misrata and that they had also lost their advantage by pulling back at night, giving Kadhafi's men time to rearm.

"If we controlled the city, we would sleep there, but we don't," he said.

For the remaining bastion of Sabha, 750 kilometres (470 miles) south of Tripoli, Bani said that "when the mercenaries hear that the regime fell in Sirte and Bani Walid, they will act differently," suggesting their possible surrender.

Bani predicted that "in the coming days all of Libya will be entirely under the control of the revolutionaries."





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China paper warns US against Palestinian UN veto
Beijing (AFP) Sept 16, 2011
A Chinese state-run newspaper on Friday warned of a spike in tensions in the Middle East if the United States vetoed the Palestinian bid for membership of the United Nations next week. As peace talks with Israel stall, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas is expected to formally submit a request for UN membership next Friday, despite strong objections from Washington that the move would be "co ... read more


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