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WAR REPORT
France says unable to confirm Kadhafi son's death
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Aug 5, 2011

France, a driving force in the NATO operation in Libya, on Friday said it could not confirm reports that Moamer Kadhafi's youngest son and feared commander Khamis had been killed in an air strike.

"We don't have information to corroborate this report," foreign ministry spokeswoman Christine Fages said after a Libyan rebel spokesman said NATO had hit an operations centre in the town of Zliten killing 32, including Khamis.

Rebel military spokesman Mohammed Zawawi cited spies operating among Kadhafi's ranks and intercepted radio chatter as sources.

But there was no independent verification of Khamis's death, which has been rumoured a number of times during Libya's five month-long civil war.

If confirmed Khamis's death would be a huge blow to both the regime's military and the morale of Kadhafi's inner circle.

The 28-year-old Khamis trained at a Russian military academy and commands the eponymous and much-feared Khamis Brigade -- one of the Libyan regime's toughest fighting units.

Fages said that "what NATO is doing is applying a Security Council resolution."

"NATO is protecting civilians from attacks by the Kadhafi regime. The air strikes, which are only targeting objectives of military interest, are being carried out within this framework," she said.

earlier related report
NATO confirms Zliten raids, probes claims of casualties
Brussels (AFP) Aug 5, 2011 - NATO on Friday confirmed strikes by its warplanes in and around western Zliten the previous day but had no comment on Libyan claims that Moamer Kadhafi's son Khamis and 30 others died in the raid.

"We are aware of the news reports," a NATO official told AFP.

"NATO struck an ammunitiion storage at around 8:15 pm (1815 GMT) in Zliten and a military police facility within a combat area at around 10:45 pm in the area of Zliten yesterday," he added.

As Tripoli accused the alliance of targeting civilians, a rebel spokesman in Libya told AFP that Khamis Kadhafi, 28, was confirmed among the dead in a NATO strike on a command centre in the western town.

"NATO does not target individuals and takes all allegations about civilian casualties very seriously and we are looking into it as we always do," the NATO official said.

The strike appears to have come just hours after Tripoli took journalists on an escorted tour of the centre of Zliten in an effort to rubbish rebel claims of attacking the strategic coastal centre on the road to the capital.

On Thursday an AFP journalist saw the town centre was in the hands of regime forces, although intensive artillery fire was heard in the distance.




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Kadhafi's forces fire at British warship: ministry
London (AFP) Aug 5, 2011 - Moamer Kadhafi's forces fired rockets at a British warship off the Libyan coast this week as the vessel helped in a NATO bombing mission, the Ministry of Defence said Friday.

"Thankfully they did drop short, but the threat was real," a ministry spokesman told AFP, adding that it was the sixth time that HMS Liverpool, a Type 42 destroyer, had come under fire from the coast in its four months on patrol.

The rockets were launched from land in the early hours of Wednesday during a strike by coalition forces on Khadafi targets near Zlitan in western Libya.

"HMS Liverpool was close at hand, firing a barrage of illumination rounds to facilitate NATO operations against other targets in the Zlitan area," the MoD said in a statement.

"Kadhafi's troops fired a number of rockets very inaccurately back out to sea."

According to reports from British journalists on board the destoyer at the time, Kadhafi's forces fired 20 Russian-made BM-21 rockets towards the destroyer, but they nosedived into the sea just to the south of the ship.

"We had one salvo of 20 rounds fired from the coast, so there were many missiles. They came out to sea towards Liverpool but our weapons systems worked exactly as expected," commander Colin Williams told the Daily Mirror.

"All the weapons systems came to bear within two or three seconds and the ship was prepared.

"Unfortunately, because they stopped firing we could not engage in self-defence."

As part of its contribution to military operations in Libya, Britain has deployed three warships off the coast: HMS Liverpool, HMS Ocean, which carries Apache helicopters, and HMS Bangor, a mine hunter.





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WAR REPORT
NATO planes bomb Tripoli, rebels sabotage key pipeline
Tripoli (AFP) Aug 5, 2011
NATO warplanes bombed the Libyan capital early Friday, state television said, as Moamer Kadhafi's regime accused rebels of sabotaging a key pipeline feeding the country's sole functioning refinery. About 10 loud explosions rocked the city around 1:30 am (2330 GMT), an AFP journalist said. Shortly afterwards, Libyan television said "civilian and military sites" at the southeastern suburb ... read more


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