Delegates representing Arab and African nations as well as NATO coalesced behind the Libyan rebels at a summit in Qatar Wednesday, promising more humanitarian aid and money channeled through a temporary trust fund of sorts.
Members of what is called the Libya Contact Group agreed that a temporary financial mechanism could provide a way to get money to the Libyan opposition.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said participants in the Qatari capital, Doha, were discussing the possibility of using frozen Libyan assets for the fund.
"I think this discussion about the trust fund is very interesting," he told reporters. "And we will look into it because the frozen international money belongs, if it's government money, to the people of Libya."
The funding decision came amid a grim assessment of the humanitarian fallout from the Libyan conflict and reports of mounting civilian casualties.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the delegates that in a worst-case scenario, as many as 3.6 million strife-affected people could eventually require help. And the money to provide that help has been slow in coming, he said.
So far the United Nations has seen only 39 percent of the $310 million it requested in emergency funding, "clearly insufficient given the prospective need," Ban said.
"It is critical that the international community act in concert, that we speak with one voice, and that we continue to work in common cause on behalf of the Libyan people," he said.
The international delegates were meeting with Libyan opposition leaders in an attempt to work out a peaceful end to the deadly impasse in the North African nation. Despite a NATO-led aerial campaign and rebels fighting on the ground, leader Moammar Gadhafi has shown no signs of acquiescing.
Among the high-profile attendees in Doha is Gadhafi's former intelligence chief and foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, who fled to Britain last month.
Rebel spokesman Shamsiddin Abdulmolah said the opposition is open to a meeting with Koussa if he first makes clear -- in writing -- what he has to offer.
The Libyan Contact Group was formed after a London conference on Libya last month. The first meeting in Doha comes as civilian casualties continue to mount.
The besieged western city of Misrata has been especially vulnerable. Gadhafi's tanks have been pounding the city, where several more people were killed Wednesday, Abdulmolah said.
On Tuesday, a doctor told CNN, at least 10 people were killed and 30 were wounded.
In Tripoli, two loud explosions were heard near the center of town Wednesday.
A military official said on state-run television that NATO "airstrikes hit Misrata's main road of Tripoli Street, resulting in civilian casualties."
The official said the towns of al-Sbai'ah, Aziziyah and Sirte were also hit by "the colonial crusader enemy."
U.S. fighter jets have continued to fly bombing missions in the NATO-led campaign, Pentagon spokesman Col. David Lapan said Wednesday, although U.S. officials had previously indicated in public comments that the U.S. mission had become limited to providing support, including refueling and electronic jamming.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague and French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe both called Tuesday for NATO to get more aggressive with the airstrikes in Libya, and opposition members urged the international community to implement the U.N. Security Council resolution that calls for "all necessary measures to protect civilians under threat of attack."
Libyan National Transitional Council member Ali Issawi said the rebels should be supported with military supplies. He said the Libyan people ought to have the right to defend themselves.
Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, deputy chairman of the transitional council, said the opposition has submitted a wish list of military equipment to Qatar and France. He said the list was compiled by rebel military leaders, but he didn't know exactly what was being requested.
In an interview last week, Ghoga indicated that weapons were on their way to Libya.
The Doha meeting follows an effort earlier this week by the African Union to forge a peace plan that had been accepted in principle by Gadhafi. But Ghoga and fellow rebel leader Mustafa Abdul Jalil rejected it on grounds that it did not provide any solutions to violence against the Libyan people.
Meanwhile in Germany, the foreign ministry said it had summoned the Libyan ambassador to inform him of the expulsion of five Libyan diplomats. They will have to leave Germany within seven days because of accusations of intimidation of Libyan citizens in Germany.
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