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Kadhafi forces in new attacks, powers hold talks

'Justification' needed for Libya no-fly zone: Japan
Paris (AFP) March 15, 2011 - Any no-fly zone over Libya requires strong justification such as a UN Security Council mandate, a Japanese foreign ministry spokesman said Monday as Group of Eight powers gathered to tackle the conflict. "As far as the no-fly zone is concerned, some sort of justification should be necessary," said Hidenobu Sobashima, a spokesman for Japanese Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto. "Perhaps a UN Security Council resolution may be a good justification," he told reporters in Paris. "Further than that we wonder whether another sort of framework could be sufficient. We doubt it."

France is pushing for world powers to agree the measure to protect civilians and rebels from bombardment by Libyan warplanes as forces loyal to ruler Moamer Kadhafi push a fierce assault against them. Britain and France are drafting a resolution for the UN Security Council for a no-fly zone, but failed last week to convince their European Union partners to back the move. Among the other G8 powers at the Paris gathering, the United States is also proceeding cautiously on the question of intervention in Libya. China, the only veto-wielding member of the Security Council not represented at the Paris G8 talks, is opposed to a no-fly zone.

The G8 ministers gathered for a dinner on Monday evening and were due to meet on Tuesday as well as holding various bilateral talks. As well as Libya, they were due to discuss Friday's devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan, which have raised fears of a nuclear disaster after damage to a power plant, as well as economic concerns. The spokesman said Matsumoto, who was named to his post just last week, was ready to detail his government's efforts to tackle any danger from nuclear fallout. "This sort of earthquake is not frequent," Sobashima said. "We have made our best efforts to ensure the safety of the operational nuclear facilities."
by Staff Writers
Ajdabiya, Libya (AFP) March 14, 2011
Forces loyal to Libyan strongman Moamer Kadhafi launched attacks Monday on a key town which rebels have vowed to defend, as major powers remained split on measures to ground his warplanes.

The UN Security Council wrangled over Arab calls for a Libya no-fly zone, with Russia insisting "fundamental questions" remain.

European and Arab envoys emphasized the need for urgent UN action as Kadhafi's forces advance. But because of the split between world powers, the Security Council would need several days to agree measures, diplomats said.

In Tripoli, the UN's new envoy to Libya, Abdul Ilah Khatib, held talks with Foreign Minister Mussa Kussa to demand an end to the violence and access for humanitarian relief efforts, the world body said.

Rebel fighters in Ajdabiya said four shells had crashed west of the town while a former officer who defected from Kadhafi's air force said there had been air strikes.

Former colonel Jamal Mansur also said rebels had regained a foothold in Brega, 80 kilometres (50 miles) to the west, which the Libyan army said it captured on Sunday.

Ajdabiya guards vital roads north along the coast to the rebel capital of Benghazi and east across the desert to the oil port of Tobruk, which has given the insurgents control of eastern Libya up to the Egyptian border.

The lightly-armed rebels have been pushed back some 200 kilometres by superior forces in the past week and are now only 170 kilometres from Benghazi, Libya's second city with a population of around one million.

The rebels braced for new attacks knowing they could expect little quarter from Kadhafi's troops equipped with heavy weaponry and warplanes to which they have virtually no answer.

On the western front, Kadhafi's forces entered the town of Zuwarah after clashes with rebels in which at least one person was killed, a witness and pro-Kadhafi source said.

Libyan army spokesman Colonel Milad Hussein said in Tripoli that government forces were "marching to cleanse the country" of insurgents, whom he called "rats and terrorists."

But state television in Tripoli said former Libyan soldiers like Mansur who defected to the rebels would be pardoned if they surrender to government forces.

Mansur admitted the rebels were seriously ill-equipped and warned they could turn to urban guerrilla warfare.

"We are asking the West to carry out targeted strikes on military installations" as proposed by France, he said as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton flew in to Paris for two days of talks with G8 counterparts.

Clinton was also to meet members of Libya's opposition national council in the French capital, a US official said.

G8 members Britain and France have drafted a resolution for the Security Council to enforce the no-fly zone, and French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe on Sunday vowed to step up efforts to have the measure approved.

But Russia has appeared reluctant and the United States, Germany and Italy have taken a cautious line on intervention.

Moscow's UN envoy Vitaly Churkin said "fundamental questions" remained including "who is going to implement the no-fly zone (and) how the no-fly zone is going to be implemented".

Keeping up the pressure, US President Barack Obama on Monday issued a new warning to Kadhafi, who he said had "lost his legitimacy and ... needs to leave."

A no-fly zone plan is to be put to NATO on Tuesday, according to Clinton, but alliance member Turkey also voiced opposition to intervention, warning it could have dangerous consequences.

Libya's national council said a no-fly zone would boost the anti-regime forces.

"If Kadhafi's forces are at the gates of Benghazi and there's a no-fly zone, of course we will fight," said council spokesman Abdelhafez Ghoqa.

"We can expect anything from a man like Kadhafi, but we will do our best to win," he said in response to a question about the possible bombing of Benghazi.

The European Union has sent a mission to Benghazi, a spokeswoman for the bloc said Monday. The aim was "to gather information and assess the situation to support ongoing prudent planning," including for an air exclusion zone.

Meanwhile Libya's state news agency said Kadhafi had invited Chinese, Russian and Indian firms to produce its oil instead of Western companies which fled the unrest.

Most oil companies operating in Libya, including French Total and Chinese CNPC, have partially or completely shut down production since the uprising against Kadhafi began a month ago.

The television said Sunday that "Libyan oil terminals have become safe... And we urge (foreign) firms to send their tankers to load and unload."

Total said the unrest in Libya had slashed output by 1.4 million barrels a day to under 300,000, but Qatar's Energy Minister Mohammed Saleh al-Sada said the world oil market was "comfortable" despite the conflict.

National council leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil was quoted by the Financial Times on Monday as saying countries not supporting the uprising would miss out on access to Libya's oil if Kadhafi's regime is deposed.

In other developments, Russia slapped an entry ban Monday on Kadhafi and froze all financial operations involving the Libyan leader's family and top security aides involved in the violent crackdown on the opposition.

President Dmitry Medvedev's decree also prohibited the export of all goods and services potentially linked to any type of military activity, in addition to an arms export ban imposed last week.

Elsewhere in the region, troops from Bahrain's neighbours entered the Shiite majority kingdom across a causeway from Saudi Arabia on Monday after weeks of protests against the Sunni monarchy.

Saudi Arabia said Monday it had answered a request by Bahrain for support against a security threat under an agreement of the six-country Gulf Cooperation Council.

Bahrain's opposition said it considered any foreign military intervention to be an occupation, as thousands of protesters again swarmed into the kingdom's business district.

The United States urged Gulf states "to show restraint and respect the rights of the people of Bahrain, and to act in a way that supports dialogue instead of undermining it."

burs/hc



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