By Joseph Logan and Alexander
Dziadosz
French and British leaders will visit Libya on Thursday to
congratulate the new rulers they helped install, but families fleeing besieged
bastions of ousted strongman Muammar Gaddafi are a reminder that peace is still
far off.
The visit will be a victory lap
for Nicolas Sarkozy and David Cameron, who defied doubters at home to lead a
NATO bombing campaign that succeeded in ushering in a victory by forces who
swept away Gaddafi's 42-year rule last month.
Both leaders are hugely
popular on the streets of Libya, where "Merci Sarkozy" and
"Thank you Britain" are common graffiti slogans. Both may hope to
earn political dividends back home from what now appears to have been a
successful bet.
But on the eve of their visit,
the leader of Libya's National Transitional Council said heavy battles lie
ahead against Gaddafi loyalists who have refused to surrender.
NTC Vice Chairman Abdel Hafiz
Ghogo told Reuters the two leaders would visit both Tripoli and Benghazi, where
the NTC rulers are still based even though Gaddafi opponents seized the capital
more than three weeks ago.
Western countries and
neighbors are anxious to welcome Libya into the international community, not
least so it can restart lucrative oil production frozen by six months of war.
Britain has circulated a draft
resolution to the United Nations Security Council that would ease U.N.
sanctions against Libya's National Oil Corp and central bank, diplomats said on
Wednesday, adding that it hoped for a vote on it this week.
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogan is expected in Libya on Friday. Egypt's foreign minister, Mohammed
Kamel Amr, is also due to visit. A U.S. assistant secretary of state visited on
Wednesday.
But the failure to capture
Gaddafi, and ongoing fighting in and around besieged towns still firmly held by
the ousted leader's supporters, are proof that a peaceful and prosperous future
for Libya is far from assured.
The European Union on
Wednesday demanded an end to arbitrary killings and detentions by both sides,
and especially to vigilante attacks on sub-Saharan Africans and black Libyans,
who are widely accused of having fought for Gaddafi.
FIGHT "FAR FROM THE
END"
Gaddafi has not been seen in
public since June. In a letter read out onSyria-based Arrai TV he called on the U.N.
Security Council to protect his hometown of Sirte -- still held by forces loyal
to him -- from what he called NATO "atrocities."
"If Sirte is isolated
from the rest of the world in order for atrocities to be committed against it,
then the world has a duty not to be absent," Gaddafi was quoted as saying.
His spokesman, Moussa
Ibrahim, speaking on a satellite phone from an undisclosed location, told
Reuters the 69-year-old leader was still in Libya, in good spirits and ready to
fight.
"The leader is in good
health, in high morale ... of course he is in Libya," said Ibrahim, who
declined to give his own location. "The fight is as far away from the end
as the world can imagine. We are still very powerful, our army is still
powerful, we have thousands upon thousands of volunteers."
The need for Sarkozy and
Cameron to visit Benghazi as well as Tripoli is a sign of the obstacles Libya
still faces in transforming itself into a peaceful, unified democracy. The NTC
has not yet been able to safely establish a government in a capital still
bristling with militiamen from disparate groups.
The country is deeply divided.
Many of its new rulers hail from Benghazi in the east, while the fighters who
won the battle for Tripoli mostly come from towns in the west. The NTC has
promised to name a more inclusive government lineup within days.
Ghoga, the NTC deputy
chairman, told Reuters in Benghazi that Abdel Jalil and the NTC would remain
based there at least until the "liberation" of cities in Gaddafi's
supporters' hands.
FIERCE FIGHTING
NTC Chairman Mustafa Abdel
Jalil called for equipment to fight what he predicted would be hard battles
against Gaddafi loyalists near the city of Sabha deep in the Sahara desert.
"There will be a lot of
fierce fighting in this area," he told BBC TV. "We ask for support to
get the right equipment in order to conquer these troops and to proceed further
south to try and capture colonel Gaddafi and his family."
He said Gaddafi would be
planning attacks on oil fields, cities or power plants.
Towns held by Gaddafi
loyalists have proven tenacious despite weeks of siege. After a week of
fighting, NTC forces at Bani Walid 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Tripoli have
been urging people to leave before they try to storm the town.
Scores of cars packed with
families left Bani Walid on Wednesday as NTC forces broadcast messages telling
them to go and handed out free petrol to help them escape.
"There is a lot of random
shooting. It is much safer for my children to leave. Gaddafi militia men do not
want to negotiate," Fathalla al-Hammali, 42, said, driving away from the
town with his three young children.
Daw Saleheen, who is heading
regional forces battling for control of Bani Walid, said he was ready to use
heavy weapons against an estimated 1,200 loyalists, who had placed rockets and
mortars on civilian homes as well as dozens of snipers.
"We know all their
positions," Saleheen told reporters on the northern outskirts of his home
town. "We have sent a message to all civilians that if they can they must
leave now."
(Additional reporting by
Maria Golovnina near Bani Walid, Libya, William MacLean in Tripoli, Sherine El
Madany in Ras Lanuf, Emma Farge in Benghazi, Mark John and Bate Felix in Niamey;Barry Malone and Sylvia Westall in Tunis and Avril
Ormsby in London; writing by Barry Malone andPeter Graff; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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Source : Reuters
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