China meets Libya rebels in latest blow to Gaddafi Latest on Libyan civil war
China made its first confirmed contact with Libyan rebels in the latest
diplomatic setback for Muammar Gaddafi, and France said on Friday it was working
with those close to the veteran ruler to convince him to leave power.
The
meeting in Qatar between a Chinese diplomat and the leader of the rebel National
Transitional Council follows a spate of defections by high profile figures this
week including top oil official and former prime minister Shukri Ghanem. Libyan
rebels and NATO have made Gaddafi's departure a condition for agreeing a
ceasefire in a conflict that has killed thousands, but he emphatically told
visiting South African President Jacob Zuma this week he would not leave Libya.
A NATO-led military alliance extended its mission to protect civilians in Libya
for a further 90 days this week, andFrance said it was stepping up military
pressure as well as working with those close to Gaddafi to try to convince him
to quit. "He is more and more isolated," French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe
Juppe told Europe 1 radio. "There have been more defections around him and we
have received messages from his close entourage which has understood that he
must leave power."
"We will increase the military pressure as we have been doing
for several days...but at the same time we are talking with everyone who can
convince him to leave power," he said, speaking by telephone during a visit to
Israel. In Beijing, a terse Chinese Foreign Ministry statement said Beijing's
ambassador to Qatar, Zhang Zhiliang, had met and "exchanged views on
developments in Libya" with Mustafa Abdel Jalil, the chairman of the Council,
which is trying to offer itself as a credible temporary alterative to embattled
Gaddafi.
The ministry gave no details of the talks but the meeting itself was an
indication that Beijing wants to keep open lines of communication with the rebel
forces that could supplant Gaddafi, even as it urges a political solution.
"China's stance on the Libya issue is clear -- we hope for a political solution
to the Libyan crisis, and believe that Libya's future should be determined by
its people," it said.
China was among the emerging powers that abstained in
March when the United Nations Security Council voted to authorize NATO-led air
strikes. But China also quickly condemned the subsequent expansion of those
strikes, and since then has repeatedly urged a ceasefire and a political
compromise.
China was never especially close to Gaddafi, but it generally tries
to avoid taking firm sides in other countries' domestic conflicts, including in
the Middle East, where it has been buying growing quantities of oil. BODIES OF
AFRICAN REFUGEES FOUND In Tunisia, a U.N. official said the bodies of 150
African refugees fleeing turmoil in Libya had been recovered off the Tunisian
coast after the vessels carrying them illegally to Europe got into difficulty.
Tunisian authorities rescued 570 people, but many others went into the water
when a stampede to get off the small fishing boats -- combined with the effect
of rough seas -- capsized some of the vessels, a Tunisian official said. In all
about 250 people were reported on Thursday as missing from the vessels. With the
United Nations warning that his government was running out of food, the Libyan
capital Tripoli this week saw the first big protest in months against Gaddafi's
41- year rule.
Now in its fourth month, the Libyan conflict is deadlocked, with
rebels unable to break out of their strongholds and advance toward Tripoli,
where Gaddafi appears to be entrenched. Rebels control the east of Libya around
Benghazi, where the rebel Council is based, and a mountain range stretching from
the town of Zintan, 150 km (95 miles) south of Tripoli, toward the western
border with Tunisia. Gaddafi says the rebels are armed criminals and al Qaeda
militants, and has called the NATO intervention an act of colonial aggression
designed to grab Libya's plentiful oil.
Western governments say they believe
they are wearing down Gaddafi's ability to control Libya through a combination
of diplomatic pressure and military action, although the U.S. role in the
conflict in particular has been controversial at home. The Pentagon on Thursday
said approval of a resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives directing
President Barack Obama to withdraw from NATO operations against Libya would send
an "unhelpful message of disunity" to allies and foes alike.
US LAWMAKERS TUSSLE
OVER LIBYA The House of Representatives prepared to vote on differing approaches
to U.S. involvement in Libya, one directing President Barack Obama to pull U.S.
forces out of NATO operations and a second that demands more information about
U.S. strategy. The resolutions are a response from U.S. lawmakers in both main
parties who are unhappy the United States is now in a third conflict after Iraq
andAfghanistan.
Guma El-Gamaty, a rebel official based in Britain, said rebel
fighters fought a skirmish overnight with Gaddafi loyalists near rebel- held
Ajdbaiyah town in eastern Libya. Explosions were heard in central Tripoli on
Thursday evening, following on from similar blasts in the early hours, when
aircraft could be heard flying overhead.
Libyan state television reported air
strikes in the Al Jufrah district of central Libya on Thursday night. Ghanem,
the top official who oversaw Libya's oil and gas sector, was the second most
senior official to quit and rebels said the defection showed that the end is
nearing for Gaddafi almost four months into a rebellion against him. But the
Libyan government said it would send a representative to the next meeting of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna on June 8. REBELS
PUSH WEST In Misrata, rebels have driven forces loyal to Gaddafi out of the city
center and pushed westwards toward the neighboring town of Zlitan, where they
were exchanging artillery fire.
Residents in Zlitan say pro-Gaddafi forces have
been moving into the town and mounting a crackdown to prevent Gaddafi opponents
from rising up and joining the rebels. In the Western Mountains, rebel spokesman
Abdulrahman told Reuters that 20 to 30 Grad rockets exploded in and around
Zintan on Thursday evening, fired by Gaddafi troops positioned east of the town.
He also reported battles near Arrayayna, northeast of Zintan, which he said had
been going on since the rebels ambushed retreating Gaddafi forces there on
Wednesday.
Rebel spokesman Khalefa Ali said a Libyan army major whose unit is
deployed in Ghadamis near the Algerian border has defected and joined rebel
ranks in Nalut, some 330 km north. The major, who asked not to be named, arrived
there on Thursday.
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