Libya rebels advance, vow to topple Qaddafi

Rebels say won't stop until all Libya free after warplane attacks rebels for a third straight day.

AL-UQAYLA:
Libyan rebels vowing "victory or death" advanced towards a major oil terminal on Friday, calling for foreign air strikes to set up a "no-fly" zone after three days of attacks by Muammar Qaddafi's warplanes.

Eastern-based rebels told Reuters they were open to talks only on Qaddafi's exile or resignation following attacks on civilians that have provoked international condemnation, a raft of arms and economic sanctions and a war crimes probe.

In Tripoli, opponents of Qaddafi prepared to march in the capital after prayers, but the authorities were preventing foreign media from reporting independently on the protests.

"Victory or death ... We will not stop until we liberate all this country," Mustafa Abdel Jalil, head of the rebel National Libyan Council told supporters of a two-week-old uprising that has shaken Qaddafi's grip on the North African oil producer.

Ahmed Jabreel, an aide to Abdel Jalil, said if there was any negotiation "it will be on one single thing -- how Qaddafi is going to leave the country or step down so we can save lives. There is nothing else to negotiate".

Rebel volunteers defending the opposition's expanding grip on a key coast road said a rocket attack by a government warplane just missed a rebel-held eastern military base which houses a big ammunition store in the town of Ajdabiyah.

"We're going to take it all, Ras Lanuf, Tripoli," Magdi Mohammed, an army defector, fingering the pin of a grenade, told Reuters at the rebels' front-line checkpoint.

Western nations have called for Qaddafi to go and are considering various options including the imposition of a no-flyzone, but are wary about any offensive military involvement to stabilise the world's 12th-largest oil exporter.

The air attacks have failed to stop the rebels using the coast road to push their front line west of Brega, an oil terminal town 800 km (500 miles) east of Tripoli. They said they had driven back troops loyal to Qaddafi to Ras Lanuf, site of another major oil terminal, 600 km (400 miles) east of Tripoli.

Amid growing international concern about dwindling food and medical supplies in some rebel-held areas, diplomatic efforts are accelerating to end a conflict that the West fears could stir a mass refugee exodus across the Mediterranean to Europe.

US President Barack Obama said he was concerned a bloody stalemate could develop between Qaddafi and rebel forces but gave no sign of a willingness to intervene militarily.

"Muammar Qaddafi has lost the legitimacy to lead and he must leave," Obama said, the first time he has called in public for Qaddafi to leave Libya, although he has urged his exit in written statements by the White House.

The popular uprising against Qaddafi's 41-year rule, the bloodiest yet against a long-serving ruler in the Middle East or North Africa, has knocked out nearly 50 percent of the Opec-member's 1.6 million barrels of oil per day output, the bedrock of its economy.

The upheaval is causing a humanitarian crisis, especially on the Tunisian border where tens of thousands of foreign workers have fled to safety. But an organised international airlift started to relieve the human flood from Libya as word spread to refugees that planes were taking them home.


Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez pushed a vague peace plan for Libya, saying he had spoken to his friend Qaddafi who had supported the proposal for a negotiating commission, accusing the West of eyeing the North African nation's oil.

But Saif al-Islam, a son of Qaddafi, said on Thursday that Libya did not need outside help to solve its troubles.

Rebels holding the port city of Zawiyah, 50 km west of the capital, Tripoli, said they had launched counter-attacks against Qaddafi's forces massing in the area and warned supplies of medicines and baby milk were running low.

Asset freeze

"Women and children are at home while the men are armed and roam the streets and city limits in anticipation of a major attack by pro-Qaddafi forces," resident Ibrahim told Reuters by telephone, giving only one name.

The Pentagon said there was evidence Qaddafi's forces were dropping ordnance but it was not clear if warplanes were bombing rebel forces.

As international efforts progressed to isolate the Libyan leader, Austria widened an asset freeze list to include a top official at the Libyan Investment Authority, Mustafa Zarti, because of possible ties to Qaddafi's inner circle.

In Zawiyah, residents said Qaddafi's forces had deployed in large numbers over the past days. "We estimate there are 2,000 on the southern side of town and have gathered 80 armoured vehicles from the east," resident Ibrahim said, adding a battalion had also come from the west side.

His account could not immediately be verified.

The government says it is not using military force to retake rebel-held cities although one official did not rule it out if all other options were exhausted.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said reports indicated two Libyan Red Crescent ambulances were shot at in Misrata, west of Benghazi, and two volunteers were wounded. The ICRC has 12 staff in Benghazi including a medical team visiting areas outside the city in cooperation with the Libyan Red Crescent.

In The Hague, International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said Qaddafi and members of his inner circle could be investigated for possible war crimes committed since the uprising broke out in mid-February.

In London, the London School of Economics said it had asked a leading legal figure to investigate its ties to Libya after its director resigned for accepting funding from a charity run by Saif al-Islam.

Howard Davies, a former deputy governor of Britain's central bank who has also held a series of senior positions in the business world, quit late on Thursday after accepting that he had damaged the prestigious college's reputation.

He is the first high-profile British figure to lose his job over commercial ties with Qaddafi.
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