As Libya’s new masters meet their Western backers in Turkey on Thursday to secure funds and make plans for a future without Muammar Gaddafi, South Africa said it had repeatedly asked the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) to stop bombing Libya
Answering questions on Wednesday in the National Assembly in Cape Town, SA Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe said that President Jacob Zuma had made this point clearly in his engagements with British Prime Minister David Cameron when he visited SA, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Nato secretary general Anders Rasmussen, when he attended a special meeting in Russia recently.
“The president as well as the minister and deputy minister of international relations and cooperation, Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, have consistently spoken out against Nato’s violation of the mandate of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 in seeking regime change and the resultant loss of civilian lives as it continues its bombing campaign of Tripoli,” Motlanthe said.
In Libya, scattered pockets of loyalist diehards kept the opposition fighters at bay as they hunted Gaddafi and his sons. Rebels also reported fighting deep in the desert and a stand-off around Gaddafi’s tribal home town.
In Tripoli, rockets and shooting kept largely kept civilians indoors and gunfire rang out in the centre. Most were anxious but hopeful the war would soon end, and with it the worsening shortages of food, water and medical supplies — both for hundreds of wounded and for the sick.
“The end will only come when he’s captured, dead or alive, said Mustafa Abdel Jalil, head of the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC), who offered amnesty to any of Gaddafi’s entourage who killed him and announced a reward worth more than $1-million for his capture.
Jalil said on Sunday rebel forces would halt their offensive if Gaddafi announced his departure and give him and his sons safe passage out of the country.
There was no clear indication of where Gaddafi is, though his opponents surmised he was still in or around Tripoli after what Gaddafi himself described as a “tactical” withdrawal from his Bab al-Aziziya compound before it was captured on Tuesday.
But Western leaders and the rebel government-in-waiting have lost no time readying a handover of Libya’s substantial foreign assets. Funds will be required to bring relief to war-battered towns and develop oil reserves that can make Libya rich.
After talks with Arab and Western allies in Qatar on Wednesday, a senior rebel leader said the NTC would seek to have $5-billion in frozen assets released to jump-start the country’s economy and provide vital relief to its citizens. The amount is higher than a previously given estimate of $2.5-billion.
Meanwhile, the United States submitted a draft resolution to the United Nations Security Council to unfreeze $1.5-billion in Libyan assets. No vote was held on the draft on Wednesday, but diplomats said a vote could come on Thursday or Friday.
Senior diplomats were to meet in Istanbul later for a Libya Contact Group meeting to discuss the next steps for the country. While Libya is rich in oil, four decades of rule by personality cult has left it with few institutions of normal governance.
Friends of Libya meeting in Paris
After meeting rebel government chief Mahmoud Jibril in Paris on Wednesday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who took a lead in pushing for Nato military intervention, said Paris would host a “Friends of Libya” summit on September 1.
It would include Russia and China, both critics of the Western bombing campaign which have been concerned at now losing out on business deals with the rebels.
Rebels have spoken of bringing back workers to restart oil export facilities soon.
The rebels, many of whom were once supporters of Gaddafi, have stressed the wish to work with former loyalists and officials and to avoid the purges of the ousted ruling elite which marked Iraq’s descent into sectarian anarchy after 2003.
Their gains are however no guarantee of security or progress with Gaddafi and his entourage at large. Abdel Salam Jalloud, a close ally who switched sides last week, said Gaddafi planned to drop out of sight and then launch a guerrilla war:
“He is sick with power,” he said. “He believes he can gather his supporters and carry out attacks … He is delusional. He thinks he can return to power.”
There were signs of more supporters giving up on him, following a stream of defections during the six months of the uprising. At Tripoli’s Rixos hotel where loyalist gunmen had been preventing nearly 40 foreigners, mostly journalists, from leaving, gunmen relented on Wednesday and let them go.
And the second in command of Libya’s intelligence services and health minister declared their allegiance to rebel forces during interviews aired on Al Arabiya television.
‘Dirty bomb’
After by far the bloodiest of the Arab Spring revolts that are transforming the Middle East and North Africa, there were clear indications of new threats of disorder. Four Italian journalists had been kidnapped near Zawiya, between Tripoli and the Tunisian border.
Western officials also fear weapons, including anti-aircraft missiles and nuclear material capable of making a “dirty bomb”, could be taken from Gaddafi’s stocks and reach hostile groups.
Imposing order and preventing rivalries breaking out across tribal, ethnic and ideological lines among the disparate rebel factions are major concerns of both the new leaders and of their Western backers, who are working to avoid the anarchy and bloodshed that followed the overthrow of Iraq’s Saddam Hussein.
In a poor-quality audio tape broadcast by satellite on Wednesday, Gaddafi (69) urged Libya’s tribes to “exterminate traitors, infidels and rats”.
Rebel fighters who swept in to Tripoli at the weekend, uniting several fronts and a variety of opposition groups, were trying to establish order in the city, but faced pockets of resistance and there were signs of looting. Snipers kept up fire from high buildings, including around Gaddafi’s compound. Rebels blasted back with anti-aircraft guns mounted on pickup trucks.
“There are still many snipers in eastern Tripoli,” said one rebel fighter. “We’ll finish them off but it’ll take time.”
Aymen, a rebel at the Mitiga airbase in Tripoli, said rebels were trying to fight their way into the Abu Slim area, not far from Gaddafi’s fallen Bab al-Aziziya complex.
“They are surrounding it but Gaddafi loyalists are putting up a fight, firing from inside. We continue to comb for supporters of the fallen regime,” he said by phone.
Nouri Echtiwi, a rebel spokesperson in Tripoli, said rebels had released several hundred detainees from a prison in Abu Slim. The figure not be immediately verified.
Gaddafi’s tribal home town of Sirte, on the coast between Tripoli and Benghazi, was still not in the hands of the new leadership who have despatched forces there.
“Talks have been ongoing for two days now between NTC and tribal leaders from Sirte to liberate the city and ensure its inhabitants lay down arms and allow access to administrative buildings,” Echtiwi said.
Rebels also reported fighting in the southern city of Sabha.
Meanwhile, government buildings were being stripped of anything of value. The images on Arab satellite TV of rebels grabbing the props of Gaddafi’s power, could invigorate other revolts in the Arab world, such as in Syria where President Bashar al-Assad has launched military crackdowns on protesters.
At Bab al-Aziziya, fighters were coming out with sniper rifles and ammunition, which they distributed among their ranks.
But medical supplies, never especially plentiful, were reaching critical levels in many places where some of the hundreds of casualties from the fighting were being treated. Shooting in the street also kept medics away from work.
“The hospitals that I’ve been to have been full of wounded — gunshot wounded,” said Jonathan Whittall, head of the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) mission to Libya.
“In one health facility that I visited, they had converted some houses next to the clinic into an inpatient department … But because of the shortage of staff, there was no nursing staff and the patients were essentially caring for themselves.”
SA against regime change
Meanwhile, Motlanthe said the South African government had been clear in all engagements on the matter of Libya that it was against regime change and would continue to raise this issue in an attempt to prevent further loss of civilian lives and in seeking the adoption and implementation of the African Union “roadmap” by all parties involved in the Libyan conflict.
“The African Union has made it very clear that the Libyan people must determine their own future through an inclusive process that will ensure a full democratisation of all political institutions. This will allow for macroeconomic recovery and the restoration of normality in Libyan society,” Motlanthe said.
“It is our collective view as leaders in Africa that no illegal removal of a government can be justified, not least through violent means.” – Reuters, I-Net Bridge