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Toddlers among 9 dead as NATO admits Tripoli raid
by Staff Writers
Tripoli (AFP) June 19, 2011

Germany rules out sending troops to Syria: minister
Berlin (AFP) June 19, 2011 - German Defence Minister Thomas de Maiziere ruled out participation by Berlin in any NATO operation in Syria to stop a bloody crackdown on protesters, in an interview to be published Monday.

"It is the same as in Libya: we will not take part," he told the news weekly Der Spiegel.

De Maiziere said he did not expect the United Nations "to provide a Security Council resolution along the same lines for Syria" as it had in March in the case of Libya authorising military action to protect civilians.

Several European nations -- notably Britain, France, Germany and Portugal -- have joined Washington in pushing for a UN resolution condemning the crackdown but this is opposed by permanent Security Council members China and Russia.

Germany, a non-permanent member of the Security Council, controversially abstained in the March vote on Libya -- the only NATO or European Union member to do so -- and declined to join the NATO-led air war there.

Asked if he had a "guilty conscience" over opting out of the intervention in light of NATO's current supply problems there, De Maiziere criticised the alliance's planning.

"Of course when you start something you must always know how long you can continue," he said, adding that Berlin had rebuffed another US request at a NATO meeting this month for military assistance in Libya.

He added that he saw little likelihood of Germany taking part in any peacekeeping force in Libya if strongman Moamer Kadhafi fell from power.

"An international peacekeeping force is a hypothetical thing which would only be necessary if Libya broke apart and one had to separate the warring parties," he said.

"In a country that is hopefully developing democratically that would neither be necessary nor desirable. I hope that it will not come to a military operation of that kind, because Libya will hopefully remain united and develop democratically."

At the NATO meeting earlier this month in Brussels, De Maiziere said Germany would be ready to consider sending peacekeeping troops to a post-Kadhafi Libya in remarks that met with criticism in Berlin.

NATO on Sunday acknowledged it was responsible for civilian deaths in Tripoli after Libyan officials showed reporters five bodies, including two toddlers, they said were among nine people killed in a "barbaric" air strike.

An alliance statement in Brussels said "NATO acknowledges civilian casualties in Tripoli strike" during action targeting a missile site.

"It appears that one weapon did not strike the intended target and that there may have been a weapons system failure which may have caused a number of civilian casualties," the statement added.

Libyan government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim earlier accused the Western alliance of "deliberately targeting civilians," insisting there were no military targets anywhere near the residential neighbourhood of Tripoli that was hit overnight.

Alliance spokesman Wing Commander Mike Bracken had earlier said NATO was looking into the matter, adding: "NATO deeply regrets any civilian loss of life during this operation and would be very sorry if the review of this incident concluded it to be a NATO weapon."

The admission that the civilian deaths were caused by NATO is an embarrassment for the alliance which has led the bombing campaign under a UN mandate to protect civilians.

However, officials from the rebel-held east of the country blamed Kadhafi for the deaths, alleging that the veteran strongman was deliberately using schools and mosques to stash arms.

"We are sorry for the loss of civilian life," said rebel spokesman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, adding that "we hold the Kadhafi regime responsible for having placed military armaments and rocket launchers near civilian areas."

Journalists were taken to the Al-Arada district of Tripoli to see rescue teams and bystanders desperately searching for survivors among the wreckage of a two-storey block of flats after the early morning air strike.

An AFP correspondent saw two bodies pulled from the rubble.

Tripoli insisted the scene was not staged after officials showed journalists a little girl in hospital two weeks ago they said was wounded in a NATO air strike. One of the medical staff said she had been in a traffic accident.

The alliance has acknowledged mis-hits in the past, mostly involving rebel fighters wrongly identified as loyalist troops.

On Saturday, NATO acknowledged that aircraft under its command had accidentally hit a rebel column near the oil refinery town of Brega on the frontline between the rebel-held east and the mainly government-held west on Thursday.

Calls are increasing for a negotiated solution to the five-month-old conflict, which has recently seen a bloody stalemate between the two sides.

On Saturday, organisations including the Arab League, the European Union and the United Nations highlighted the importance of "accelerating the launch of a political process" to end the conflict.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton attended the meeting along with outgoing Arab League chief Amr Mussa and African Union head Jean Ping, while UN chief Ban Ki-moon joined by live video link.

Ban said the roots of a negotiating process were showing but that the international community needed to give a "consistent message" on a political solution with Kadhafi.

His comments came after both Libyan Prime Minister Baghdadi al-Mahmudi and Russian envoy Mikhail Margelov insisted that contacts were under way between the two sides -- despite furious rebel denials.

Rebel spokesman Ghoga said a negotiated solution had not been ruled out, but that Kadhafi and his family could not be a part of it.

Observers, including the International Crisis Group, have called on both parties to reach a deal, amid fears over a devastating and protracted conflict, as well as concerns about the Transitional National Council's capacity to govern.

The rebels said on Sunday they have not yet received any of the roughly one billion dollars promised by international donors earlier this month, and urged benefactors to make good on their promise to aid the TNC.

"(The) funds should have been deposited from last week and none have been deposited to date," Ghoga said.

The fighting continued on Sunday, with claims of nine people killed and 51 wounded as rebel and pro-Kadhafi forces tried to break a month-long military stalemate around the besieged city of Misrata.

Rebels said the dead, including fighters and civilians, were killed as the rebel-held city in western Libya came under heavy artillery fire.

Several of the wounded were said to be in critical condition.

There were also reports of heavy fighting in the town of Nalut, near the Tunisian border, but the number of casualties was not known.

burs/arb/srm




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NATO 'regrets' first civilian casualties in Libya
Brussels (AFP) June 19, 2011 - NATO on Sunday said it regretted its first civilian casualties in Libya and its second misfire in 24 hours, as strains emerged within the alliance and rebel forces failed to make progress on the ground.

In a statement, the alliance acknowledged responsibility for civilian deaths in a Tripoli bombing raid that left nine dead, including two toddlers.

"NATO regrets the loss of innocent civilian lives," said Libyan mission commander Lieutenant-General Charles Bouchard.

"Although we are still determining the specifics of this event, indications are that a weapons system failure may have caused this incident," he added.

These first established civilian deaths come as an embarrassment for the alliance whose bombing campaign under a UN mandate is to protect civilians.

The incident also comes a day after NATO said its aircraft mistakenly hit a Libyan rebel column in the area of Brega on June 16, one of several misfires against opposition forces.

After investigating claims of civilian deaths early Sunday by the Kadhafi regime, NATO said it appeared a weapon had failed to strike its intended target.

Journalists had been taken to the Al-Arada district of Tripoli in the dead of night, before 1:00 am (2300 GMT Saturday), to see rescue teams and bystanders desperately searching for survivors among the wreckage of a two-storey block of flats.

An AFP correspondent saw two bodies pulled from the rubble.

Press were then taken to a Tripoli hospital and shown the bodies of a woman and two toddlers who officials said were members of the same family and had died in the raid.

Government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said four passers-by were also killed, bringing the death toll to nine, with 18 people were wounded.

Accusing the alliance of "deliberately targeting civilians," Ibrahim insisted there were no military targets anywhere near the residential neighbourhood of the capital that was hit.

"Every mission is planned and executed with tremendous care to avoid civilian casualties," said NATO, which has conducted 11,500 sorties since it took command of the campaign three months ago.

On Saturday, NATO said that after looking into reports that an airstrike hit opposition forces in the Brega region on Thursday, "NATO can now confirm that the vehicles hit were part of an opposition patrol".

"This incident occurred in an area of conflict between (Moamer) Kadhafi forces and opposition forces," a statement added.

"We regret any possible loss of life or injuries caused by this unfortunate incident," NATO said.





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