Saturday, October 8, 2011

Sniper fire delays push into Sirte

Snipers loyal to deposed Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi are holding back the government forces trying to capture his hometown.

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Sirte - Snipers loyal to Muammar Gaddafi held back government forces trying to capture his hometown on Thursday and the deposed leader warned the heads of the developing world who have recognised Libya's new rulers that they would face a similar fate to his own.

Hiding in a mosque and a building that was once Gaddafi's favourite venue for international summits, loyalists blocked the advance of government forces, making forecasts of a quick end to the battle for Sirte look premature.

Thousands of civilians in the town of Sirte are caught up in the fighting. Red Cross workers who were able to reach the town's hospital described patients sheltering from the gunfire in the corridors and a lack of staff to treat them.

Taking Sirte is of huge symbolic importance to Libya's new rulers, and until it is captured they are putting on hold plans to start rebuilding the oil-producing North African state.

Once a sleepy fishing town and Gaddafi's birthplace, Sirte was transformed by the former Libyan leader into the country's second capital.

Parliament often sat in Sirte and summit meetings were staged in a marble-clad conference centre in the south of the Mediterranean coastal city, from where fighters loyal to him fired on the attacking forces on Thursday.

Commanders with the National Transitional Council (NTC) have predicted they will have Sirte, which has a population of 75 000, under their full control by the weekend.

They pledged that units on Sirte's outskirts would be brought into the fight on Friday in a coordinated offensive.

An audio recording of Gaddafi obtained by Reuters on Thursday from Syria-based Arrai television was the first sign of life from him since September 20, when the same station last aired a speech by him.

“If the power of (international) fleets give legitimacy, then let the rulers in the Third World be ready,” Gaddafi said in an apparent reference to Nato's support for NTC forces.

“To those who recognise this council, be ready for the creation of transitional councils imposed by the power of fleets to replace you one by one from now on,” said Gaddafi, who was in power for 41 years.

Gaddafi loyalists who pulled back to Sirte when they lost control of other cities are putting up fierce resistance. They have nowhere else to go.

“A lot of them are veterans, the hard-core fanatics. There's also mercenaries (and) people fiercely loyal to Gaddafi,” said Matthew Van Dyke, an American who is fighting with the anti-Gaddafi forces.

“They are not going to give up,” said Van Dyke, who said he came to Libya seven months ago to visit friends, was arrested by Gaddafi forces, and joined the fighting on his release.

“It's going to take a while. (Because of) the snipers, we are going to take a lot of casualties.”

Anti-Gaddafi fighters on Thursday had advanced just over one kilometre into Sirte from the luxury hotel on the Mediterranean shore that had earlier marked the front line.

They were hunkered down in a neighbourhood of villas and five-storey residential blocks from where they were using machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades to try to take out loyalist sniper positions.

They set up firing positions, fortified with sandbags, next to the apartment block windows. But they were drawing heavy fire: buildings were riddled with bullets and their balconies had been partially demolished by heavy-calibre rounds.

A Reuters reporter saw a rocket-propelled grenade crash into one of the apartment buildings with NTC fighters inside. It caused little damage because, by a fluke, it passed through a hole made earlier by another projectile.

Anti-Gaddafi fighters used binoculars to watch for muzzle flashes from loyalist sniper rifles.

They said the snipers were positioned in the minaret of a nearby mosque and in the Ouagadougou conference hall.

That is the building where Gaddafi, often decked out in elaborate traditional dress, would host summits of African and Arab heads of state.

An NTC defence spokesperson quoted by Al Jazeera television said one of Muammar Gaddafi's son, Mo'attassem, had left Sirte and fled south. NTC official have said Gaddafi is most likely deep in the south of Libya, in the Sahara desert. - Reuters

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/sniper-fire-delays-push-into-sirte-1.1152294

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