Times 2

Gaddafi fighters resist attack on Bani Walid

By Maria Golovnina

NEAR BANI WALID, Libya, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Libyan fighters trying to capture one of Muammar Gaddafi's last strongholds battled into the desert town of Bani Walid today against stiff resistance from Gaddafi loyalists.

But after advancing to within 500 metres (yards) from the town centre, some forces of Libya's Transitional National Council (NTC) pulled back shortly before NATO warplanes carried out at least five strikes on Gaddafi positions around the town.

“Field commanders have told us to retreat because NATO will be bombing soon,” fighter Abdul Mulla Mohamed said, driving away in one of dozens of vehicles leaving Bani Walid, 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Tripoli.

A NATO spokesman in Brussels earlier denied reports that the Western alliance had warned NTC fighters to withdraw ahead of air strikes, saying it had no contacts with the NTC. Artillery explosions echoed across a rocky valley in the town's northern outskirts and a rocket fired by Gaddafi loyalists landed in the hills, kicking up clouds of dust.

“We are not far from liberating Bani Walid,” Daw Saleheen, a representative of the NTC's military council, said earlier. “We urge Gaddafi fighters to lay down their weapons. You can go to any house and will be safe. It is not too late.”

Two NTC commanders were killed and two wounded in the fighting. Doctors said two Gaddafi soldiers and one NTC fighter were killed on Friday. Abdullah Kanshil, an NTC official, said four or five civilians had died in overnight fighting.

Kanshil said about 1,000 Gaddafi soldiers were defending the town — far more than the 150 previously estimated. “They are launching Grad rockets from private houses so NATO (warplanes) cannot do anything about it,” he said.

FIERCE FIGHTING

Twisted metal and wrecked vehicles littered an olive grove near Bani Walid, evidence of the ferocity of Friday's clashes. Ambulances streamed back and forth from the front line. NTC snipers lay on hilltops, responding nervously to any sign of movement in the sun-baked valleys around them.

Heavy fighting erupted around Bani Walid and the coastal city of Sirte, Gaddafi's birthplace, on Friday, a day ahead of a deadline for a negotiated surrender set by the NTC. NTC officials said the truce was effectively over, paving the way for what could prove the final battles of a civil war that evolved from February's popular uprising against Gaddafi.

Now that his 42-year rule has ended, diplomats said Britain plans to submit a draft resolution to the U.N. Security Council early next week to start easing sanctions against Libya and establish a modest U.N. mission in the country.

But NTC forces which finally overran the Libyan capital on Aug. 23 must still capture Bani Walid, Sirte and the Gaddafi-held town of Sabha in the far south, as well as find the deposed leader, before they can declare Libya liberated and set the clock ticking for elections and a new constitution.

The front lines around Sirte appeared to be quieter after Friday's fighting. The NTC has been sending hundreds of fighters south towards Sabha in the last two days. It is not known whether Gaddafi, wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, is holed up in any of the three main strongholds his loyalists still control.

In a defiant message broadcast on Thursday, Gaddafi said he was still in Libya to lead the fight against what he called “rats” and “stray dogs” who had taken over the capital.

NIGER ESCAPE ROUTE

Niger, which has taken in several of Gaddafi's fugitive aides and generals, said it would respect its commitments to the international court if Gaddafi or his sons arrived. A convoy of 12 Libyan vehicles and two Nigerian military vehicles left Niger's northern city of Agadez in the direction of Niamey on Friday afternoon, a Reuters witness said.

The convoy was believed to contain a group of 14 former Gaddafi officials, including General Ali Kana and General Ali Sharif al-Rifi, that had reached Agadez on Thursday.

Hisham Buhagiar, the military coordinator of the NTC's hunt for Gaddafi, said on Friday he had indications his quarry was in or near the town of Birak, some 700 km south of Tripoli. NATO forces had bombed the area late on Thursday, he said.?”

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