NOVANEWS
Government forces try to retake rebel-held towns along the coast amid reports of shooting in the capital, Tripoli…..
ALJAZEERA : Muammar Gaddafi’s forces are waging counterattacks on anti-government rebels along the central Libyan coast, with air raids and ground battles reported in Bin Jawad, Ras Lanuf, Az-Zawiyah and Misurata.
Gaddafi is facing an uprising since February 17 that poses the biggest challenge ever to his four-decade rule over the oil-rich north African nation.
Bin Jawad was reclaimed by government forces on Sunday, but opposition rebels continued to advance on the area amid conflicting claims about the capture and recapture of several strategic Libyan cities and towns.
Sources report deadly clashes took place in the area, that lies in the middle of the coastline between the opposition stronghold of Benghazi and the capital, Tripoli, over which Gaddafi retains a tight grip.
Injured opposition fighters had been taken to the local hospital in nearby Ras Lanuf, a rebel-held town.
Rebels in Misurata also beat back Gaddafi’s forces in heavy fighting that left 18 people killed, a local doctor told the Reuters news agency.
Gaddafi meanwhile made a fleeting appearance on Libyan state television on Sunday night, but disappeared almost immediately.
Crowds were seen celebrating and shouting the leader’s name as he appeared in Tripoli’s Green Square, but no explanation was given as to why state TV did not stay with footage of the president. They instead cut back to the studio, going on to a separate interview.
This comes after heavy shooting was heard in Tripoli early on Sunday. The government said there was no violence in the capital, and called the shots “celebratory fireworks”.
|
Mussa Ibrahim, the Libyan government spokesman told the Reuters news agency: “Everything is safe. Tripoli is 100 per cent under control. What you are hearing is celebratory fireworks. People are in the streets, dancing in the square.”
It was unclear who was carrying out the shooting, or what caused it, Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught reported from the city.
Automatic weapon rounds, some of it heavy calibre, echoed around central Tripoli along with pro-government chants, whistling and a cacophony of car horns as vehicles sped through the vicinity, witnesses said.
“I assure you, I assure you, I assure you, I assure you, there is no fighting going on in Tripoli,” Ibrahim said.
Our correspondent, reporting from Green Square, said that thousands of people had turned out to show their support for Gaddafi.
“The square is absolutely packed with supporters of Gaddafi,” she said, adding that some of these “supporters” had admitted to a British journalist on Sunday that they were army and police personnel in civilian clothes.
Conflicting claims