Libyan rebels claim Misrata success

MISRATA: Rebels in Misrata said they have pushed troops loyal to Moamer Kadhafi out of the besieged city, after the Libyan leader's compound took direct hits in a NATO air strike.Several rebel...

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AFP
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Libyan rebels claim Misrata success
MISRATA: Rebels in Misrata said they have pushed troops loyal to Moamer Kadhafi out of the besieged city, after the Libyan leader's compound took direct hits in a NATO air strike.

Several rebel sources Monday said regime forces were ejected from Misrata, 215 kilometres (132 miles) east of Tripoli, but rockets continued to rain down on the country's third city.

"There may be some soldiers hiding in the city, afraid of being killed, but there are no groups of soldiers left," one rebel said.

However, the claim was greeted sceptically in the western city of Benghazi, bastion of the rebellion that erupted in mid-February against the veteran strongman.

The Transitional National Council's military spokesman Colonel Ahmed Omar Bani dismissed reports of progress in Misrata.

"It is a disaster there," he said. "Kadhafi is not going anywhere. Misrata is the key to Tripoli. If he lets go of Misrata, he will let go of Tripoli. He is not crazy enough to do that."

In Tripoli, Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam called the overnight NATO raid on the Bab al-Aziziya compound "cowardly."

"This cowardly attack on Moamer Kadhafi's office may frighten or terrorise children but we will not abandon the battle and we are not afraid," he said.

Regime spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told reporters Kadhafi was safe.

"The leader is working from Tripoli. The leader is well, is very healthy, is leading the battle for peace and democracy in Libya," Ibrahim said.

Three people were killed and 45 wounded -- 15 seriously -- in the air strike, Ibrahim said.

A meeting room facing Kadhafi's office was badly damaged by the blast that NATO in Brussels said was "a precision strike" on a communications centre.

"The target was a Communications Headquarter that was used to coordinate attacks against civilians," a statement said.

At least five explosions rocked eastern Tripoli late on Monday, witnesses said, although they could not pinpoint the location.

"We heard three loud explosions and we saw flames and smoke billowing close to us," a resident of Ain Zara neighbourhood in eastern Tripoli said.

Two other detonations shook the same neighbourhood a few minutes later, another witness said.

Misrata, where residents have lived under a rain of shells and sniper fire for 50 days, was hit overnight by rockets and incessant gunfire, despite a pledge by the Libyan regime to halt the fighting.

In the Mujamaa Tibi hospital, Mohamed al-Fajieh recounted the results of the night's fighting, describing unusually severe wounds and corpses reduced to little more than ashes.

There were "completely charred corpses, some of them so badly burned that we aren't sure they are human bodies," he said. "This is the first time we've seen such burns."

According to figures provided by sources at hospitals across Misrata, around a dozen people were killed and at least 20 wounded overnight.

Sources said those caught up in the violence were all civilians -- including young children.

Rebel leader Taher Bashaga said: "It will take some time, I think, but then it will all go well and Misrata will be free for ever, God willing."

Two captured pro-Kadhafi soldiers said that loyalist forces were losing their grip in Misrata.

"Many soldiers want to surrender but they are afraid of being executed" by the rebels, said Lili Mohammed, a Mauritanian hired by Kadhafi's regime to fight the insurgents. (AFP)