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Gaddafi forces routed in Misrata

• Air strikes force government tanks to retreat from Misrata • Nato to assume day-to-day military command in Libya • Obama says Gaddafi may wait out military assault • Gaddafi tells supporters: ‘We will not surrender’ • Read a summary of events so far • Read out latest Libya news story 6.48pm: From the naval air base of Sigonella in Italy, a key stating post for the air strikes on Libya, Tom Kington has some more detail shedding light on the injuring of a number of villagers close to where a US fighter jet crased on Monday night: American fighter aircraft fired cannons to protect a downed US pilot in Libya on Tuesday, close to where local residents were reportedly injured by gunfire, a US military source revealed. The source’s statement on Wednesday could explain how at least eight Libyans near the scene were wounded by gunfire. The US military denied early reports that two helicopters arriving to collect the pilot in the early hours of Tuesday fired on locals. The source said Harrier jump jets that had arrived at the scene before the helicopters “strafed” the ground as they flew low over a group of vehicles indicated as a potential threat to the pilot. A second source told the Guardian the vehicles were targeted about three miles from the stranded pilot, about 30 minutes before the helicopters arrived. The pilot and a crew member had parachuted from their F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft after it suffered a mechanical failure during a raid near Benghazi, parachuting to separate locations. Two Osprey tiltrotor aircraft were dispatched from the USS Kearsarge off the Libyan coast to pick up the pilot, located thanks to a GPS signal, the source said. The second crew member could not be traced by rescuers because his GPS was not transmitting, he said. He was met by locals who took him and gave him shelter. He is now reportedly at Aviano air base in northern Italy. 6.44pm: Canadian forces have carried out their first attacks in the UN-sponsored campaign to enforce a no-fly zone over Libya, dropping four laser-guided bombs on an ammunition depot, according to the Associated Press news agency. Maj.-Gen. Tom Lawson, the deputy chief of air force staff, said that four CF-18 jet fighters, supported by two air-to-air refueling aircraft, conducted two separate bombing runs on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. The first attack took place overnight near Misrata, Libya’s third-largest city, located east of Tripoli. He had no information on where the second attack place or what kind of damage it may have inflicted. 6.40pm: British aircraft flew over Libya today but for the second day running took no part in attacks, according to defence officials, reports Richard Norton-Taylor, the Guardian’s security expert. British aircraft flew over Libya today but for the second day running took no part in attacks, according to defence officials, reports Richard Norton-Taylor, the Guardian’s security expert. The commander of British aircraft operating over Libya has said that Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s air force “no longer exists as a fighting force”. Air Vice-Marshal Greg Bagwell said the allies could now operate “with near impunity” over the skies of Libya. He was speaking during a visit to RAF aircrew based at Gioia del Colle in southern Italy. Ten Eurofighter/Typhoons and eight Tornado GR4s ground attack aircraft are now based there. “We are watching over the innocent people of Libya and ensuring that we protect them from attack” Bagwell said. “We have the Libyan ground forces under constant observation and we attack them whenever they threaten civilians or attack population centres.” US, British, and French aircraft have flown more than 300 sorties over Libya since Saturday and more than 162 Tomahawk cruise missiles have been fired. Four Tornado planes based at RAF Marham in Norfolk flew direct to Libya on the first two nights. The Trafalgar class submarines , HMS Triumph, has fired Tomahawk cruise missiles but less than its full complement of 16, it is understood. David Cameron told MPs that the Qataris on Tuesday deployed Mirage aircraft while Kuwait and Jordan would be providing “logistical contributions”, adding that “further support will be forthcoming” from Arab countries. He said 11 nations had contributed 150 aircraft to operations over Libya but a “lot more remained to be done”. 6.34pm: To Syria briefly now, and Amnesty International has condemned last night’s attack on a mosque by Syrian security forces who are reported to have killed at least seven people. . The human rights organisation said that internet activists were among at least 93 people detained in a wave of arrests across the country. Amnesty said that videos sent by human rights activists appear to show armed forces shooting in the mosque area while civilians plead for them to stop. It quoted local sources who named those those killed as ‘Omar ‘Abd al-Wali, Muhammad Abu al-Eyoun, Hamid Abu Nabbout, Dr Ghassan ‘Ali al-Mahameed, Ashraf Masalma, Ibtisam Masalma and Tahir Masalma. The 93 who were arrested are believed to be aged between 14 and 45 and include five women. Some did not take part in the street protests but appear to have been arrested for their activities on the internet, according to Amnesty. 6.21pm: Our colleague, Mona Mahmood, has been scanning the Arabic and Libyan press for comments. After an earlier post , here are some more snippets. Al-Shams, a Libyan newspaper based in Tripoli This aggression will be foiled in the same way the US barbaric aggression against Libya in 1986 was foiled and our slogan is ” Victory or Martyrdom”, it is not a strange slogan to us, we the son of hero martyr ” Omer Al-Mukhtar” who held this slogan against the Italian invaders. Libya Al-Youm, a Libyan newspaper based in Switzerland Misratta is still standing and steadfast because of the bravery of its young men. The signals of collapse in Gaddafi ‘s regime became very clear and that means the balance of victory is going in the direction of the people revolution forces and the coming weeks will carry a lot of surprises. 6.00pm: Good evening and welcome to our continuing coverage of the Libya crisis. Our earlier live coverage can be found here . Let’s start with a summary. • Allied air strikes have virtually wiped out Muammar Gaddafi’s forces that were attacking the rebel-held town of Misrata. The aerial attacks have ended five days of bloody assault that cost nearly 100 lives. • The rebel council in Benghazi has created a governing body. Mahmoud Jibril, a US-educated planning expert who defected from the Gaddafi regime, has been named as its head. • Gaddafi promised victory to an enthusiastic crowd in his first public appearance in a week late on Tuesday. He said there would be “no surrender” to powers who belonged “on the dust heap of history”. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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Joe Biden believes President Obama should be impeached over Libyan war

In this interview with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, Joe Biden clearly states his position that a President should be impeached for launching an attack on a nation that hasn’t attacked the United States. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 23/03/2011 14:41 Number of articles : 6

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Joe Biden believes President Obama should be impeached over Libyan war

In this interview with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, Joe Biden clearly states his position that a President should be impeached for launching an attack on a nation that hasn’t attacked the United States. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 23/03/2011 14:41 Number of articles : 6

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Joe Biden believes President Obama should be impeached over Libyan war

In this interview with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, Joe Biden clearly states his position that a President should be impeached for launching an attack on a nation that hasn’t attacked the United States. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 23/03/2011 14:41 Number of articles : 6

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Ed Schultz and Ben Jealous Hit Beck for Dismissing That King Died While Fighting for Labor Rights

Click here to view this media Ed Schultz and the NAACP’s Ben Jealous took Glenn Beck to task for his revisionist history, dismissing the fact that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. died while fighting for the rights of public sector union members. As they rightfully pointed out, if he were alive today, he’d be out there with these protesters marching against these Republican governors who are doing their best to destroy what’s left of collective bargaining rights for unions in America. Media Matters has more on Beck’s nonsense and you can read the full report here — Beck Dismisses The Fact That MLK Died While Fighting For Labor Rights .

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Would Wisconsin’s Anti-Union Bill Pass in a Second Vote?

Click here to view this media Occasionally Greta Van Susteren earns her keep, at least as it pertains to legal issues. She interviewed Wisconsin GOP Leader Scott Fitzgerald and grilled him on why he’s persisting with a court action when he could simply give 24-hour notice and call a vote. I have long thought the reason for the cramdown of the vote on this wasn’t because of Democrats, but because of Republicans. I think their unity was fracturing and with each passing day, public pressure and disapproval was growing to the point where at least three Republican Senators were in danger of defection. Fitzgerald seems to think so too. After being pressed by Greta, who quite reasonably points out that all he’d have to do is comply with the 24-hour notice requirements to get his law passed and published even as the old one “meanders in the courts”, he says this: Greta, you know that the legislature is always very tentative, and you may have the votes on one day and then you don’t on the next. He goes on, but that right there says it all.

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NOW Defends Palin for Being Called a ‘Dumb [Vagina]‘ Without Mentioning Maher, Then Attacks Conservatives

The National Organization for Women on Tuesday finally responded to Bill Maher calling Sarah Palin a highly derogatory term for a woman's vagina, but did so without mentioning Maher's name, the program he said it on, or the television network he represents. NOW Communications Director Lisa Bennett also took the opportunity to bash conservatives (photo courtesy Reuters): 1. Listen, supposedly progressive men (ok, and women, too): Cut the crap! Stop degrading women with whom you disagree and/or don't like by using female body terms or other gender-associated slurs. OK? Can you do that, please? If you think someone's an idiot or a danger to the country, feel free to say so, but try to keep their sex out of it. Sexist insults have an impact on all women. That was the extent of her defense of Palin. Even worse, the offending party and the particulars of his sexist remark weren't even mentioned. As such, folks not aware of this issue still aren't. But Bennett didn't stop there, for she felt the need to blame this all on conservatives: 2. We're on to you, right-wingers: a. You're trying to take up our time getting us to defend your friend Sarah Palin. If you keep us busy defending her, we have less time to defend women's bodies from the onslaught of reproductive rights attacks and other threats to our freedom, safety, livelihood, etc. Sorry, but we can't defend Palin or even Hillary Clinton from every sexist insult hurled at them in the media. That task would be impossible, and it would consume us. You know this would not be a productive way to fight for women's equal rights, which is why you want us stuck in this morass. So sticking up for America's most powerful women that have been publicly defamed on national television is not a “productive way to fight for women's equal rights?” Wouldn't that actually be the most productive way for it would get the most attention? Apparently not: b. As usual, you're looking for any way to discredit NOW. You claim we care and work only for liberal woman, but that's a LIE. We have defended Sarah Palin and other conservative women from sexist attacks. Maybe not on your schedule, but we've done so. And by the way, all those laws we advocate for — we don't ask that they include a clause saying only certified liberal women can benefit from them. Conservative women benefit from them, too! Just because we don't open up a Palin wing on the NOW website doesn't mean we don't think that every single woman — right, left and in-between — deserves equal pay, full reproductive rights, justice in the courts, etc. So knock off the facetious whining that right-wing women are not represented by NOW's work. Actually, there would be no attempt to discredit NOW if it quickly came to the defense of conservative women that are being sexistly attacked by prominent media figures. The fact that NOW has largely stood by and watched this sexist Palin-bashing for over two and a half years is a part of the problem. So, too, was NOW's decision to ignore New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd calling Republican women “Mean girls” last October. If NOW had a better record of admonishing sexism aimed at conservative ladies, this wouldn't be an issue. More importantly, maybe such attacks would stop. NOW's silence after such offenses potentially increases their number. Consider that in this instance, since Maher, “Real Time,” and HBO weren't even mentioned in Bennett's condemnation of this event, there is absolutely no negative consequence for him, his program, or the network that airs it. As such, there's no reason for him to stop what he's doing, and no reason for HBO to ask him to. But this wasn't the first time NOW incorporated a conservative rant into a pseudo-defense of Palin. When CBS “Late Show” host David Letterman was regularly ridiculing her back in 2009, the women's rights group decided to address the matter by also bashing Rush Limbaugh. I guess this organization is so uncomfortable defending Palin that it feels the need to go after others on the right when doing so. This hypocrisy was not lost on members of NOW.org who overwhelmingly condemned Bennett's statement in the comments section:

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The 10 best bad fairies

Forget all those tales of wishes granted and teeth collected – the best fairies are deceitful, malicious and bad Michelle Harrison won the Waterstone’s children’s books prize in 2009 with her debut novel, The Thirteen Treasures, a Grimm-style story of a girl who can see fairies. She followed it with The Thirteen Curses and The Thirteen Secrets, the third instalment of the trilogy. “The first fairy story to have an impact on me was one invented by my older sister, Theresa. It was of a fairy who had been killed by a wicked witch and buried in our garden. The lack of a happy ending led me to wonder if it was true and, morbid child that I was, I dug in the flowerbeds in search of that fairy. After that I quickly became familiar with the usual tales of good fairies granting wishes and collecting teeth, and gradually lost interest, preferring stories of adventure, mystery, and ghosts. “My interest in fairies was revived unexpectedly during a college illustration course. I discovered the art work of Arthur Rackham, Alan Lee, and Brian Froud. It completely changed the way I viewed fairies and prompted me to research deeper into British folklore. There I found stories of fairies that were deceitful, malicious – even deadly. I knew I had to write about them, and I’ve been hooked on the darker side of fairy tales ever since. ” 1. Faeries by Brian Froud and Alan Lee Crammed with fairy folklore and hundreds of beautiful illustrations, this book will challenge your perception of fairies. From sinister stories of changelings to tales of water hags such as Jenny Greenteeth, this rich and fascinating book can be pored over or simply dipped into. This was my first introduction to ‘real’ fairies, and it remains a firm favourite and constant source of inspiration. 2. The Merrybegot by Julie Hearn One my my all-time favourite books, fairy or otherwise. Set in a West Country village, it’s the story of Nell, the cunning woman’s granddaughter, and what follows when she and her beloved granny are suspected of witchcraft. Though it focuses on superstition and healing, there are some quirky, and very amusing, piskie and fairy scenes. I absolutely love this book, and I’m forever recommending it to people. Every sentence is beautifully crafted and it’s a pleasure to read and re-read. 3. A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare Shakespeare’s witty and charming play tells of four young lovers who blunder into the crossfire of the warring fairy king and queen, Oberon and Titania. With the mischievous Puck administering love potions galore, the humans’ lives and emotions are manipulated beyond their control. Though the play ends well for all, for me there’s a sense of unease surrounding one of the couples, whose love is manufactured by the fairies rather than genuine. The version with Arthur Rackham’s gorgeous illustrations is my favourite. 4. Poison by Chris Wooding “Once upon a time there was a young lady who lived in a marsh, and her name was Poison…” So begins a fairy tale in the tradition of all great fairy tales. Poison, a wilful, sullen girl journeys to the phaerie realm in search of her younger sister, stolen from her bed. Though not necessarily a new premise, Wooding’s tale stands apart from others of its kind as a darker tale unfolds. A haunting book with vivid and sometimes gruesome characters, and my number one ingredient in any book – a fantastic ending. 5. Cold Tom by Sally Prue Sally Prue wastes no words in this odd and unsettling story which is loosely linked to The Ballad of Tam Lin . Tom knows he’s different from the rest of the Tribe, a beautiful but cruel race who see emotion as weakness, and love as being enslaved. Prue’s fairies are amongst the wildest I’ve come across. They tear raw flesh from animal bones with their teeth; they think of humans as hot, stinking, foul ‘demons’; and their only concern is survival. Chilling and unique. 6. Lady Cottington’s Pressed Fairy Book by Terry Jones, illustrated by Brian Froud Lady Angelica Cottington’s diary is one with a difference. Frustrated that no one believes in the fairies that only she can she, a quick snap of the book (intended for pressing flowers) manages to catch one of the little beasts between its pages. Humorously illustrated throughout by Brian Froud this is a visual treat, with the images of the squashed fairies (sometimes just the feet or a wing) becoming increasingly hilarious (and rude) as the story continues. For those concerned about the fairies’ well being, a disclaimer at the start explains that the images are merely ‘psychic impressions’ and that no fairies were harmed in the making. 7. The Crowfield Curse by Pat Walsh When Will rescues a hob from a trap in the woods, the creature shares a secret. Hidden in the forest is a grave. Some want to find it, while others want it kept hidden at all cost. The reader is propelled into the world of sinister fairies, or ‘fays’, and the Seelie and Unseelie courts. This book made me laugh and cry, and there is a strong message of bravery in going against the grain of what we are told is acceptable and right. The hob has swiftly become one of my favourite fairy characters. I wish I could smuggle him to Elvesden Manor – I think he’d be right at home with my own fairies. 8. Heretic by Sarah Singleton When Elizabeth finds a strange, green-skinned creature in the woods, she doesn’t immediately realise that it is in fact, a girl of her own age. Isabella has hidden for three centuries in the fairy realm in order to escape religious persecution – something Elizabeth is no stranger to. Her own family is harbouring a Catholic priest in Protestant England, risking the lives of them all. I’m a big fan of Sarah Singleton’s work. Gothic, well-researched, and evocative, Heretic weaves history and fantasy into an intelligent and bewitching story. 9. Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti Despite warnings from her sister, a young girl, Laura, falls victim to malicious goblin men peddling irresistible, enchanted fruit. In exchange for a lock of her hair and a tear drop, Laura eats the fruit and falls ill, nursed back only by Lizzie’s sisterly love. Rossetti’s cautionary poem can be read on several levels though there is ambiguity, even from the author, over whether it is intended for children. Many argue that the themes of temptation and forbidden fruit, and the nature of the descriptions would suggest not. 10. The Stolen Child by WB Yeats “Come away, O human child … With a fairy hand in hand…” This classic poem tells of a child being coaxed away by the fairies. On the surface its stunning imagery of the natural world comforts the reader into thinking the child is going to a better place, for as the fairies put it, the world is “full of weeping”. But the last verse of the poem, describing how the child will no longer hear everyday things such as the kettle boiling on the hob or the cows on the hillside, chokes me up every time. Loreena McKennitt puts the words to music in a song of the same title, which I’m very fond of. Fairytales guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi forces renew assault

• Nato to assume day-to-day military command in Libya • Fighting continues in Misrata, food running low • Obama says Gaddafi may wait out military assault • Gaddafi tells supporters: “We will not surrender” Follow our live Libya Q&A with a panel of experts 2.27pm: The Guardian has been told that text messages are being sent to people in Tripoli, claiming to be from rebels in Benghazi and the east, but actually sent by Gaddafi’s regime. A source in Libya said the texts say the country will be split in two. The texts also threaten that rebels from Benghazi are heading to the west of the country to rape and pillage in Tripoli, with the help of western powers. Separately, our source claims that state television in Tripoli is showing pictures of dead people which the reports say were killed in the coalition air strikes – however some of the dead have been recognised by viewers as relatives who disappeared during Gaddafi’s crackdown on Tripoli. The Guardian is unable to confirm the source’s account at this moment in time. 2.13pm: A resident in Misrata, who has asked not to be named, has told the Guardian that snipers are targeting the hospital in Misrata despite Gaddafi forces’s heavy artillery having been silenced. A coalition bombardment has silenced the cannon and tanks this morning, but snipers are targeting the hospital there. The resident said he had spoken to a contact in Zintan who said the town was being bombarded by Gaddafi’s forces and is now “facing the fate of Zawiyah” and “needs desperate help”. 1.44pm: A doctor in Misrata has told the BBC World Service that there are no pro-Gaddafi tanks in the city today – “because all the tanks have either escaped or been destroyed by the allied forces”. However the doctor said the hospital where he works is still surrounded by snipers loyal to Col Gaddafi. “They are shooting anybody going in or coming out of the hospital. Until now we have four civilian dead.” 1.00pm: Our live Libya Q&A with a panel of experts is about to begin. Post your questions, or read our experts’ answers, here . 12.42pm: Reuters have managed to get another telephone update from Misrata: Western air strikes early on Wednesday hit an air base south of Libya’s rebel-held Misrata where government forces are positioned, but snipers shot two people dead in the centre of the city, a resident said. “This morning, air strikes twice hit the airbase where Gaddafi’s brigades are based,” the resident, called Sami, told Reuters. “Two people were killed by snipers an hour ago in the centre of the town. Their bodies are now at the hospital, which I visited a while ago. Shooting is still going on there (in the city centre) now,” he said. 12.36pm: An image, below, from the under-siege rebel town of Ajdabiya – a rebel fighter at a checkpoint. – 12.34pm: A brief, and expected, update via the Associated Press – Nato commanders have confirmed that the alliance’s warships are now patrolling off Libya’s coast to enforce the arms embargo. 12.13pm: David Cameron has been speaking about Libya at the start of his pre-budget prime minister’s questions in the Commons (see Andrew Sparrow’s live politics live blog for full coverage . Cameron said the no-fly zone has had “an early and good effect” in terms of forcing Gaddafi’s forces back from Benghazi and protecting civilians. He added: Clearly there is great concern about what the regime is doing in Misrata, and any idea that their second ceasefire was any more meaningful than the first ceasefire we can see is complete nonsense. Asked by Ed Miliband, the Labour leader, about Arab contributions to the military effort, Cameron said Qatar, Kuwait and Jordan were now involved but conceded that due to the speed of the response the Arab involvement was not as great “as perhaps would have been welcomed”. Quizzed by Miliband about whether or not Gaddafi himself was viewed as a possible target – the source of apparent differences earlier this week between the government and military – Cameron said that all actions would be in line with the UN resolution, adding: All targets should be in line with that, but I don’t propose to give a running commentary on targets, or frankly to say anything beyond that. 12.01pm: News of a renewed assault my Gaddafi loyalists on another rebel-held town, Zintan, about 50 miles south-west of Tripoli. Reuters spoke to a resident: Gaddafi’s brigades started bombardment from the northern area half an hour ago. The bombardment is taking place now. The town is completely surrounded. The situation is very bad… They are getting reinforcements. Troops backed with tanks and vehicles are coming. We appeal to the allied forces to come and protect civilians. 11.58am: Now briefly to Yemen . Brian Whitaker writes: After declaring a state of emergency in Yemen at the weekend, President Saleh won backing for it on Wednesday morning from the Yemeni parliament — though almost half the MPs absented themselves from the session. The text of the draft emergency law has been published (in Arabic) on al-Masdar’s website. It provisions are truly draconian, imposing restrictions on the media, travel and public meetings, even regulating the opening of shops and allowing for the “temporary takeover” of property. The state of emergency is supposed to last for just one month, though it’s worth recalling that a similar “emergency” declared in Egypt in 1967 has remained in place almost continuously since then. 11.42am: An interesting snippet from Reuters, who have spoken to an official at Agoco, a Libyan oil firm based in rebel-held Benghazi. Despite the surrounding chaos the company is still producing 95,000 barrels per day of oil, with two oil field working. This is around 25% of the normal level but they hope to resume full production in a couple of weeks. 11.38am: Tom Kington on the USS Kearsarge has another update from last night’s operations: Four US Harrier jump jets flew bombing missions from an Navy vessel off the Libyan coast on Tuesday night as coalition forces continued attempts to dislodge Libyan forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi. The Harriers, armed with GPU 12 laser guided bombs, took off from the USS Kearsarge at 11pm local time, returning at 2am before aircraft refuelled and took of for a second sortie. The Kearsarge’s group of six Harriers attacked targets outside Benghazi on Sunday morning and near Ajdabiya on Sunday night, hitting tanks, artillery pieces and mobile missile launchers. Officials did not reveal Tuesday night’s targets, but Libyan government forces were reportedly continue to shell rebels in Ajdabiya, suggesting they remain a viable target for coalition aircraft. Marine Colonel Mark Desens, who commands the Harriers, said that flying the vertical take-off jets from the Kearsarge gave them an advantage over conventional jets flying from airbases further away from Libya. “With the Harriers we can turn them around very quickly and do two sorties a night,” he said. 11.30am: A reminder of our upcoming Q&A on Libya with a panel of experts (see 9.53am for details). It’ll be happening between 1pm and 2pm here . 11.28am: Here is a video of Gaddafi in full flow last night in front of fired-up crowds, vowing not to surrender against the west’s “crusade”. 11.21am: Tom Kington has emailed from the USS Kearsarge, from where Harrier jets bombed Gaddafi forces last night. This has shades of Joseph Heller’s absurdist Catch-22. US Navy vessels patrolling off the coast of Libya have been told to keep an eye out for Muammar Gaddafi’s least expected threat – his submarine. Documents pinned up on the bridge of one vessel list the sea-borne threats American sailors may encounter as they take on the colonel, including Gaddafi’s Soviet-era Foxtrot class submarine. But intelligence on the sub is reassuring, suggesting it has rusted into ineffectiveness alongside much of Gaddafi’s pre-embargo arsenal. “Operations rare to non-existent” states the document, adding the submarine is currently being overhauled and “operates primarily on the surface,” submerging “only for a few hours.” 11.07am: More than 335,600 people have fled Libya, mainly to Tunisia and Egypt, since the beginning of the crisis, according to the UN office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs (OCHA). The situation of civilians in and around Ajdabiya, Misrata and other locations where active fighting continues remains of grave concern. In addition to the risk of personal injury from the fighting, the population of these towns may also have humanitarian needs arising from the disruption of regular services and supply lines. The presence of assistance actors inside Libya remains very limited due to prevailing security conditions. 10.53am: A resident in Misrata, which has come under heavy shelling from Gaddafi’s forces, has told Reuters that coalition aircraft have launched two strikes in the area. “The allied planes bombed twice so far. At 12:45 this morning (2245 GMT last night) and then again less than two hours ago,” the resident, called Saadoun, told Reuters by telephone from Misrata. “They (pro-Gaddafi forces) haven’t fired a single artillery (round) since the air strike. 10.30am: Time magazine has a good piece on the difficulties – understandable enough – the rebels in Benghazi have in cobbling together an effective alternative government and fighting force at the same time. “The big problem here is that most of the revolutionary guys don’t trust the military people because a lot of military guys were with Gaddafi from the start,” says Najla Elmangoush, a criminal-law professor at Benghazi’s Garyounis University and an activist at council headquarters. “We welcomed them when they joined,” she adds. “But people are concerned that maybe they’ll try anytime to change sides.” The regime is trying to encourage that fear, spreading false rumors last weekend that rebel commander Younis had returned to the regime’s camp. 10.22am: It’s difficult to get updates from Misrata – we’re working on this and will hopefully have more as the day progresses – but here’s a worrying witness testimony as heard on ABC’s PM news programme. The rebels are trying their best to secure a perimeter around the hospital but it’s not safe because the rebels are holding just only light weapons. It’s not a battle, it’s a massacre what’s happening here in Misurata. Most of the citizens who were in the areas under the control of Gaddafi’s troops and army, they have moved down toward the sea looking for some safer places. They are stepping away and escaping from the gunfire. 10.06am: This Al-Jazeera video from the frontline on the outskirts of Ajdabiya shows rebels being fired at by Gaddafi forces. 9.53am: From 1pm we’ll have a panel of experts answering questions on the Libyan crisis: • Anthony Aust, former legal adviser at the Foreign Office who served at the UK mission to the United Nations and helped draft the resolution on Kuwait in 1990. • Paul Smyth, a RAF former wing commander and Tornado navigator. • Dr Laleh Khalili, a lecturer in Middle Eastern Politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London . I’ll post a link to the live Q&A page later this morning. 9.45am: Nato warships will begin patrolling off Libya’s coast today to enforce the UN arms embargo on the country, a spokesman said. The allies agreed on Tuesday to organize the naval mission, which initially will consist of two Nato naval flotillas that routinely patrol the Mediterranean, AP said. The flotillas are made up of two frigates, six minesweepers and a supply ship. A Nato official said the mission will be commanded from Nato’s operational centre in Naples, Italy. He says more nations are likely to contribute warships to the task force. 9.26am: This video shows Nato secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen outlining the details of an operation to enforce Libya’s arms embargo. 9.05am: Sweden has frozen around 10 billion kronor ($1.6 billion) of assets belonging to Muammar Gaddafi’s regime in Libya, according to AP. Jonatan Holst at The Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority says “it’s not impossible” there could be more hidden in the Scandinavian country. He would not give details of the public Libyan assets, but said Wednesday the information has been received by financial institutions in Sweden. The Stockholm-based watchdog ordered Swedish companies to start reporting any financial links to the Libyan regime on 2 March. Holst says the value of the assets began to grow as more people with ties to the Libyan regime were added to the asset search list. 8.58am: Chris McGreal is still on the outskirts of Ajdabiya, where he says the battle lines “remain as they were yesterday”. There continues to be a lot of incoming shelling from Gaddafi side against the rebels – if anything it is more intense this morning, suggesting Gaddafi forces, far from being broken by the airstrikes, might actually be being resupplied and reinforced. The situation is unclear but certainly at the moment it seems the rebels are on the back foot – they’re just sitting and waiting, taking the shelling. The bursts of artillery are not very accurate, but periodically the shells do kill or injure someone. The shells come in waves, around every 20-30 minutes, and the effect is to say the least very unnerving for the rebels, a lot of whom have pulled back from the frontline. There’s now a few hundred up at the front, but a few kilometres back are several thousand more. 8.41am: The Guardian’s Middle East editor Ian Black is in Tripoli, and has more on Gaddafi’s speech at his Bab al-Aziziya compound in the early hours of this morning. It was his first public appearance in a week, and there was nothing in it to suggest any lessening of his determination to sit out what he calls the “colonialist-crusader” attacks on Libya. The US may have intelligence about a weakening of Gaddafi’s resolve or plans to leave the country but the face he presents to his people is as defiant as ever. There would be “no surrender” to powers who belonged “on the dustheap of history” he pledged to the approving roar of the crowd. It seemed clear that he was aware of growing rumours about his whereabouts after two strikes on Bab al-Aziziya – with one opposition source reporting him at a hideout deep in the Sahara. “I am here, in my modest tent,” Gaddafi told them. “I am here.” 8.30am: Good morning, welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the continuing crisis in Libya. • Britain, France and the US have agreed that Nato will take over the military command of the no-fly zone over Libya . The move represents a setback for Nicolas Sarkozy, who had hoped to diminish the role of the alliance. Barack Obama agreed in separate phone calls with Sarkozy and David Cameron that political oversight would be handed to a separate body made up of members of the coalition, including Arab countries such as Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, which are outside Nato. • Fighting is continuing in the rebel-held Misrata, with residents reporting shelling and sniper attacks with water and food running short. A doctor told Associated Press that tanks had opened fire on a peaceful protest Monday. “The number of dead are too many for our hospital to handle,” said the doctor, speaking on condition of anonymity. Regarding food, he said: “We share what we find and if we don’t find anything, which happens, we don’t know what to do.” • Barack Obama has said it may not be military might that ousts Gaddafi, rather belief among rebel Libyans that it is time for change. “Potentially what we may see is all the enthusiasm that the Libyan people had for a change in government that was occurring a few weeks ago,” and that had repressed by Gaddafi’s “brutal amplification of force” would now be reawakened, the president said. He added that Gaddafi may try to hang on to power rather than admit defeat. • Right on cue, Gaddafi has told supporters “we will not surrender”. “We will defeat them by any means … We are ready for the fight, whether it will be a short or a long one … We will be victorious in the end,” he said in a live television broadcast, his first public appearance for a week. “This assault … is by a bunch of fascists who will end up in the dustbin of history,” Gaddafi said in a speech followed by fireworks in the Libyan capital as crowds cheered and supporters fired guns into the air. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Protest Adam Gabbatt Mark Tran Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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Ivory Coast’s Gbagbo threatens international journalists in wake of reports of ‘heavy weapons’ being used on civilians

Click here to view this media The UN has issued a warning: As the world focuses on Libya and Japan, UN aid agencies are warning that Ivory Coast is rapidly becoming a forgotten humanitarian catastrophe. Laurent Gbagbo, the sitting president of the4 Ivory Coast is now warning international reporters that they will be treated as terrorist accomplices if they don’t write what he approves of: The Ivorian leader refusing to cede power has warned international journalists that they would be considered accomplices to terrorists if they don’t do a more balanced job of reporting the country’s political crisis. In a statement read on state television, Ahoua Don Mello, a spokesman for sitting president Laurent Gbagbo, accused journalists of fabricating last week’s shelling of civilians in an Abidjan neighborhood. The United Nations said the attack could constitute a crime against humanity. Gbagbo also accused the media of refusing to report atrocities committed by forces loyal to his opponent, Alassane Ouattara, in the country’s West. He warned the press that if they didn’t do a better job of reporting, they would be dealt with like the U.N. peacekeepers, who have been repeatedly attacked by pro-Gbagbo mobs. If there’s ever a humanitarian need for help in the world, I’d say the Ivory Coast should be at the top of the list at least: The U.N. peacekeeping mission in Ivory Coast says it is concerned that heavy weapons could be used against civilians as rival presidents struggle for power . In a statement Tuesday, the mission said forces loyal to incumbent president Laurent Gbagbo are repairing an attack helicopter and preparing multiple rocket launchers for use. The mission called the weapons “a grave threat to the civilian population” and warned Gbagbo forces that the U.N. would act if such weapons are used . Earlier, Ivory Coast’s internationally recognized president, Alassane Ouattara, called on the United Nations to authorize “legitimate force” to protect civilians. Mr. Gbagbo has resisted calls to relinquish power to Mr. Ouattara, who the United Nations and African Union back as the winner of a November president poll. Since the election, supporters of the rival presidents have engaged in intense fighting, sparking fears that Ivory Coast may be on the brink of a civil war. The U.N. says more than 435 people have been killed in post-election violence… read on enlarge Credit: BBC In December, the electorate commission said that Alassane Ouattara had beaten Gbagbo in the presidental runnoff. The BBC’s John James in the main city Abidjan says there will now be a tug of war between the two bodies with the outcome unclear. Supporters of President Laurent Gbagbo had tried to block the result, saying there had been fraud in the north. Former rebels control this area. It is also where Mr Ouattara is most popular. The election is intended to reunify the world’s largest cocoa producer. The announcement of the result of Sunday’s run-off had been much delayed, leading to heightened tension in the country. The electoral commission head, Youssouf Bakayoko, said Mr Ouattara had won 54% of the vote, compared to 46% for Mr Gbagbo. He was speaking under armed guard at a hotel, rather than from the commission’s headquarters. About the same time the head of the Constitutional Council, Paul Yao N’Dre, who is seen as being close to Mr Gbagbo, said it was taking over the declaration from the election commission. “Because of disagreements on the results of some regions, the independent electoral commission wasn’t able to give the provisional results. Is it any wonder people are trying to get out of there alive? The International Office for Migration [IOM] is helping the displaced find safe haven. Spokesperson Jemini Pandya says, “There’s been very large-scale displacement within Abidjan since fighting really increased a few weeks ago. It’s extremely difficult to be able to go and assess the real scale of the displacement because the security conditions are too bad and also because of the targeting of humanitarian aid workers.”

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