THE LIBYAN government claimed yesterday that it would defeat opposition forces in Benghazi within 48 hours and put an end to the most serious challenge to Col Muammar Gadafy’s rule in more than 40 years.
But as the leader’s son Saif al-Islam boasted of imminent victory, rebels said they had inflicted heavy losses on loyalist forces fighting to regain control of Misrata, a key port and the last big anti-Gadafy strong point in western Libya.
Opposition sources said they had destroyed 16 tanks and captured 20 members of an elite unit commanded by Khamis, another of Col Gadafy’s sons, after an armoured force attacked Misrata from the south and west. Artillery and rockets were also deployed.
Libyan officials, however, were speaking with mounting confidence about the outcome of the month-long crisis, insisting that foreign media had exaggerated the extent of the violence and portraying the rebels as influenced by al-Qaeda – a claim for which there is little evidence.
Saif al-Islam poured scorn on talks at the UN and elsewhere to impose a no-fly zone over Libya. “The military operations are finished,” he told France’s Euronews channel. “In 48 hours everything will be over. Our forces are close to Benghazi. Whatever decision is taken, it will be too late.”
The Libyan government, meanwhile, was maximising efforts to display popular support for Col Gadafy. Fireworks and volleys of celebratory gunfire illuminated the night sky over Tripoli after Tuesday’s fall of Ajdabiya, a strategic town that commands the approaches to Benghazi.
State media also reported that two key tribes which had previously declared for the opposition had switched sides and pledged their loyalty to Col Gadafy.
Libyan TV showed delegations of cheering regime loyalists expressing their support for the leader in his headquarters at the heavily guarded Bab al-Aziziya barracks in central Tripoli and excoriating traitors and conspiracies at home and abroad.
“We would never forsake the pure blood with which our grandfathers liberated the land and we would never betray or abandon it,” Col Gadafy told them.
Senior Libyan officials said that Col Gadafy’s offer of an amnesty for those who had taken up arms would be applied “without exception” and repeated the call for a “national dialogue” on reform that would allow opponents of the regime to express their wishes peacefully. “We want to avoid bloodshed,” said one well-placed source in Tripoli. “It is time for the rebels to lay down their arms.”
But it is hard to see the opposition taking up the offer after previously insisting that Col Gadafy step down and rejecting all talks with the regime.
Reports of disappearances and abductions of opposition sympathisers in the capital and elsewhere will also make it difficult for Benghazi rebels to accept promises of no retribution.
Official confidence of imminent triumph does not extend to the international arena. Even if French-led diplomatic efforts fail to secure a no-fly zone, widespread hostility to Col Gadafy is now unlikely to fade; nor will UN Security Council sanctions and referrals to the international criminal court simply fade away.
Accounts of the fighting in Misrata could not be verified because the Libyan authorities have barred journalists from the city. A doctor at Misrata hospital told Reuters that 11 people had been killed and 20 wounded in the fighting. – (Guardian service)
Guardian correspondent Ghaith Abdul-Ahad, who was detained by Libyan authorities a fortnight ago, has been released.
News of Abdul-Ahad’s release came as the New York Times said that four of its journalists were missing in Libya. They are: Anthony Shadid, the paper’s Beirut bureau chief; Stephen Farrell, a reporter and videographer who was kidnapped by the Taliban in 2009 and rescued by British commandos, and two photographers, Tyler Hicks and Lynsey Addario, who have worked extensively in the Middle East and Africa.