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Tripoli rocked by blasts ahead of 'post-Kadhafi' talks
by Staff Writers
Tripoli (AFP) June 8, 2011

A picture shows a damaged conference hall often used by the Libyan government to host high-ranking visitors in Tripoli on June 8, 2011 after it was targeted in a wave of NATO air strikes. Photo courtesy AFP.

Danish planes in Libya running out of bombs: report
Copenhagen (AFP) June 9, 2011 - The Danish military forces operating in Libya are running out of bombs for their F-16 fighter jets and have asked the Netherlands to help replenish their stock, a report said Thursday.

"The Danish F-16s are about to run out of bombs to continue to attack Libya," the Politiken daily said, citing unnamed defence sources.

"The Danish military has therefore asked Holland for help," it added.

A spokesman for the Danish military's logistics division did not confirm the report but said his department was speaking to other coalition partners about supplies.

"It is our job to always support operations in the short, medium and long-term and we always have a close cooperation with our F-16 partnership countries, in particular Norway and the Netherlands," Anders Paaskesen of the Danish Defence Acquisition and Logistics Organisation told AFP.

Denmark was one of the first countries to offer air assets for the international air campaign to protect Libyan civilians from Moamer Kadhafi's forces.

Its fighter jets have been participating in the mission since March 20. Denmark has six F-16 jets stationed at the Signonella base of the Italian island of Sicily, four of which are operational at any given time.

Since operations began, the Danish jets have carried out 274 sorties and dropped 494 precision bombs, Inge Borggaard of the Air Force Tactical Command told AFP.

Loud explosions rocked Tripoli late Wednesday near the residence of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi as global powers gathered for talks on mapping out a democratic future for the North African nation.

The first blast shook central Tripoli around 2000 GMT, followed 15 minutes later by a stronger explosion near a hotel housing foreign journalists.

Regime spokesman spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said NATO pounded the Libyan capital with more than 60 bombs on Wednesday, killing 31 people and causing dozens of injuries.

The explosions came after up to 3,000 Kadhafi troops attacked Libya's third-largest city Misrata in a three-pronged movement from the south, west and east, rebel spokesman Hassan al-Galai told AFP by telephone from the city.

Twelve people were killed and 33 wounded in the fighting in which Kadhafi's forces deployed gunships, tanks and Grad rocket launchers as well as mortars, Galai said.

Misrata is the most significant enclave in western Libya captured by the rebels since the start of the uprising in mid-February.

International powers were gathering for talks in the United Arab Emirates on Thursday to discuss the crisis in Libya, with the nation's veteran leader having vowed never to surrender despite the NATO-led military campaign.

"With each meeting, international pressure is growing and momentum is building for change in Libya," said Victoria Nuland, spokesperson for US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, as the US delegation arrived in Abu Dhabi for the third International Contact Group talks.

Two dozen countries, including key NATO allies Britain, France and Italy, as well as delegates from the United Nations, the Arab League, and the Organisation of Islamic Conference are due to attend the talks.

As the military, political and economic pressure mounts on Kadhafi to step down, the group will discuss "what a post-Kadhafi Libya ought to look like," a senior US official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

Another US administration official said the Contact Group would discuss the dire need for funding for the rebel National Transitional Council.

The opposition has complained that little has happened since the group last met on May 5 in Rome when Clinton and her partners agreed on a new fund to aid the rebels and promised to tap frozen assets of Kadhafi's regime.

NATO allies pledged on Wednesday to stay in Libya "for as long as necessary" and commit the "necessary means" to the military campaign as they extended the operation for another 90 days until late September.

"All ministers agreed we will keep up the pressure for as long as it takes to bring this to an early conclusion," NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said after the meeting in Brussels.

But the top US uniformed commander Admiral Michael Mullen conceded the Libya campaign was making "very slow progress," while French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet played down expectations of a quick end to the war.

With only eight out of 28 NATO members carrying out air strikes, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen as well as US and British defence chiefs prodded allies to help ease the burden on air crews showing signs of fatigue.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates named three countries that should mull taking part in air strikes -- Spain, Turkey and the Netherlands -- and urged Germany and Poland, which are not participating at all, to consider joining the campaign, said officials familiar with the discussions.

Meanwhile, in a new twist the International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, said investigators had evidence Kadhafi ordered mass rapes and bought containers of sex drugs for troops to attack women.

"Now we are getting some information that Kadhafi himself decided to rape and this is new," Moreno-Ocampo said at the United Nations.

China said it would welcome a visit "in the near future" by the Libyan rebels, as Beijing stepped up contacts with both sides in the conflict.

Chinese diplomats have so far held two confirmed meetings with the rebel National Transitional Council in Benghazi.

"We are ready to receive a visit from NTC representatives in the near future," the official Xinhua news agency quoted foreign ministry official Chen Xiaodong as saying.

"We believe the current situation is untenable and it's time to come up with a solution."

A flurry of diplomatic activity seemed to indicate that China -- which has significant economic interests in Libya -- was stepping up its involvement in efforts to defuse the crisis.

On Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told his visiting Libyan counterpart Abdelati al-Obeidi that securing a ceasefire should be the "top priority" of both sides in the months-long conflict.

earlier related report
China says visit by Libya rebels welcome
Beijing (AFP) June 9, 2011 - China said Thursday it would welcome a visit "in the near future" by the Libyan rebels trying to wrest power from strongman Moamer Kadhafi, as Beijing steps up contacts with both sides in the conflict.

Chinese diplomats have so far held two confirmed meetings with members of the National Transitional Council, the leadership body established by opposition forces in the eastern rebel-held Libyan city of Benghazi.

"We are ready to receive a visit from NTC representatives in the near future," foreign ministry official Chen Xiaodong was quoted as saying Thursday by the official Xinhua news agency.

"We believe the current situation is untenable and it's time to come up with a solution."

The official did not specify when such a visit could take place.

A flurry of diplomatic activity seemed to indicate that China -- which has significant economic interests in Libya -- was stepping up its involvement in efforts to defuse the crisis there.

On Wednesday, China's foreign minister Yang Jiechi told his visiting Libyan counterpart that securing a ceasefire in the oil-rich north African state should be the "top priority" of both sides in the months-long conflict.

"It is a top priority for related parties to reach a ceasefire to avoid greater humanitarian disasters and solve the Libya crisis through political means," Yang said in talks with Libya's Abdelati al-Obeidi, Xinhua reported.

Yang told al-Obeidi that he hoped both Kadhafi's regime and the rebels fighting since February to end his more than four decades in power would "take to heart the basic interests of the country and the people," the report said.

The Chinese minister encouraged both sides to "start the political process to solve the crisis at an early date to safeguard regional peace and stability".

Yang also told al-Obeidi that China "opposes acts beyond the authorisation of the UN Security Council", Xinhua said.

Russia and China -- both veto-wielding members of the Council -- abstained from the Council vote in March that gave the go-ahead for international military action against Kadhafi's regime.

China has previously spoken of its concerns that the NATO-led bombing in Libya was overstepping a Council resolution authorising "humanitarian" intervention in the conflict.

Al-Obeidi arrived in China on Tuesday, and was due to leave Thursday.

When asked about a possible rebel visit, foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Thursday: "China is willing to stay in touch with parties in Libya and make concerted efforts toward a political resolution of the Libyan conflict."




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Panetta sees signs pressure may topple Kadhafi
Washington (AFP) June 9, 2011 - US defense secretary nominee Leon Panetta said Thursday that sustained economic, diplomatic and military pressure are likely to lead Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi to step down.

"I think there are some signs that -- if we continue the pressure, if we stick with it -- that ultimately Kadhafi will step down," Panetta told the Senate Armed Services Committee in a confirmation hearing.

Panetta, who has served President Barack Obama as CIA chief, said economic sanctions, diplomatic measures, and NATO military operations under the umbrella of a UN resolution had placed "tremendous pressure" on the Libyan leader.

"Frankly, I think there are gains that have been made. We have seen the regime weakened significantly, we have seen the opposition make gains, both in the east and the west," he told the committee.

Panetta -- seen as a lock to win Senate confirmation and succeed outgoing US Defense Secretary Robert Gates -- also warned that leaving Kadhafi in power would send "a terrible signal" to Middle Eastern countries groping towards democratic reforms in regional turmoil sometimes dubbed the "Arab Spring."

"I think it tells them that our word isn't worth very much if we're not willing to stick to it," he said.

Republican Senator Susan Collins warned that the Obama administration needed a plan for after Kadhafi, saying: "If there's any painful lesson that we have learned from our experience in Iraq, it is that if we do not have a plan in place after we have deposed a tyrant, that chaos and violence ensues."

"What you've raised is a legitimate concern and it's an area that we have a lot more work to do in order to ensure that if Kadhafi does step down, that we can ensure that Libya will be a stable country," said Panetta.

"But I do think that if we can get Kadhafi to step down, that I'm confident that there are enough leaders in the opposition who can provide hopefully that continuity," he said.

Panetta also assured lawmakers that there would be no US ground troops in Libya even if Kadhafi leaves, saying: "As far as I know, no one is discussing any boots on the ground there at any time."





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WAR REPORT
Ceasefire a 'top priority', China tells Libya
Beijing (AFP) June 9, 2011
China's foreign minister told his Libyan counterpart that securing a ceasefire in the oil-rich north African state should be the "top priority" of both sides in the conflict, state media said. "It is a top priority for related parties to reach a ceasefire to avoid greater humanitarian disasters and solve the Libya crisis through political means," Yang Jiechi said in talks with Libya's Abdela ... read more


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