Fierce fighting across Libya as government sends envoy

TRIPOLI,  (Reuters) – A Libyan insurgent said rebels  had retaken the heart of the closest city to the capital from  forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi last evening in some of  the fiercest fighting in almost three weeks of clashes.

Zawiya appeared to change hands twice during the day as  Gaddafi tried to crush the uprising against him by bombarding  the western town and the frontlines of the rebel-held east of  the country.

“Thanks to Allah we are sitting in the square now,” the  fighter, who gave his name as Ibrahim, said by telephone after  earlier reporting his forces had pulled back from the square.

“This is a death or life battle for us, we have nothing to  do now but to fight him,” he said.
A doctor in the town said earlier many dead lay in the  streets, including old people, women and children, with at least  40 killed, probably many more. He also said the rebels had been  driven from the centre earlier in the day.

Al Jazeera television said several members of Gaddafi’s  forces were killed in Zawiyah, including a general and colonel.  The government stuck with its earlier report that its forces had  driven rebels from the centre and state television said people  there were celebrating victory over “terrorist gangs”.

The counter-offensive by Gaddafi has halted the rebels’  advance in the east, where they were forced to withdraw from the  frontline town of Bin Jawad after coming under heavy shelling.

“We came into Bin Jawad but gunboats fired on us so we  withdrew,” one fighter, Adel Yahya said. Rebel colonel Bashir  Abdul Qadr appeared unsure whether naval vessels had been used.  “We had bombing from the direction of the sea,” he said.
At the same time, the Libyan government appeared to be  putting out feelers towards western governments who have tried  to isolate Gaddafi with financial sanctions and are discussing  further measures to try to stop the violence and force him out.
Libyan government emissaries appeared to have flown to  Brussels to talk to European Union and NATO officials meeting today and tomorrow, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini  said, suggesting the situation was very fluid.

Portugal said a Gaddafi envoy met its foreign minister yesterday to explain Tripoli’s view of the conflict and Greece  said another will meet Greek Deputy Foreign Minister Dimitris  Dollis, in Cairo this morning. There were no details of  the kind of message the emissaries were bringing.

Rebels in the east faced a new barrage of artillery fire on  their desert frontline outside the oil port of Ras Lanuf and  said government forces had hit an oil pipeline leading to  Sidrah, about 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli. State  television blamed “al Qaeda-backed” armed elements.

Dr. Gebril Hewadi of the Benghazi medical management  committee told Reuters television at least 400 people had been  killed in eastern Libya since clashes began there on February  17, with many corpses yet to be recovered from bombing sites.
An engineer working from the Bin Jawad port told Al Jazeera  he had seen Gaddafi’s warplanes strike the facilities, including  destroying four storage tanks and power and water plants, the  first time oil facilities have been hit.

Libya’s top oil official said the unrest had cut output to  about half a million barrels per day from 1.6 million, but the  oil industry was still centrally coordinated.

Brent crude oil rebounded towards $116 a barrel, renewing  fears global economic recovery could be hit.
The eastern rebels reiterated an appeal for outside powers  to impose a no-fly zone to shield them from air attacks.
But U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made it clear  imposing a no-fly zone was a matter for the United Nations and  should not be a U.S.-led initiative.

The White House said, however, it felt a U.N. arms embargo  on Libya contained the flexibility to allow the rebels to be  armed if such a decision were made. Earlier this week the State  Department said it believed the rebels could not be armed.
It was the latest in a series of mixed messages from  Washington which is wary of plunging into another war.

Gaddafi has said he would die in Libya rather than flee.  But that has failed to stem speculation on his plans.   A Libyan-born analyst said Gaddafi’s inner circle had  approached countries in Africa and Latin America about providing  him refuge in the event he had to flee.

“It’s provisional, it’s a testing of the waters, it’s just  preparing for the future,” said Noman Benotman, who has contacts  among Libyan security officials. “It may also be a deception, to  try to unsettle the international community. But the contacts  definitely happened.”

CASULATIES AND REFUGEES

Rising casualties and threats of hunger and a refugee crisis  have increased pressure on foreign governments to act, but many  are wary of moving from sanctions alone to military action.
“We want to see the international community support it (a  no-fly zone),” Clinton told Sky News. “I think it’s very  important that this not be a U.S.-led effort.”