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Prince Andrew pulls out of trade trip

Prince Andrew pulls out of trade trip

Buckingham Palace says trip ‘postponed’ because of safety concerns rather than cancelled in light of revelations Prince Andrew has pulled out of a proposed trip to Saudi Arabia after almost three weeks of damaging revelations about his personal integrity and links with corrupt and repressive regimes. The Duke of York was due to travel next week to boost defence contracts in his role as Britain’s trade envoy. Buckingham Palace denied the trip was cancelled in light of the allegations, saying simply that the trip had been “postponed” because of safety concerns. “The Foreign and Commonwealth Office, UK Trade and Investment and the palace have agreed to postpone the visit given the current circumstances in the region,” the palace said. “Any suggestion that this had anything to do with recent UK media coverage is absolutely not the case.” The Queen is reported to have held private talks with Andrew on Tuesday over the mounting scandal. The Duke, who is fourth in line to the throne, has been plagued by revelations about his close friendship with convicted sex offender and billionaire Jeffrey Epstein. This week former ambassador Stephen Day called on the duke to step down from his role, condemning him as the “worst person” to deploy in the Middle East where his presence is seen as “crass”. A member of the Foreign Office’s advisory group on ethical foreign policy and UK director of Human Rights Watch, Tom Porteous, suggested that Andrew should take a “crash course in corporate responsibility” and human rights awareness. Last month David Cameron was criticised for taking eight arms dealers on a visit to the Middle East at the same time that corrupt autocratic regimes in the region were using force to put down democratic uprisings. The duke’s connections to Colonel Gaddafi and his family, the president of Azerbaijan and arms smuggler Tarek Kaituni have also drawn public criticism from human rights organisations and MPs. Prince Andrew Saudi Arabia Middle East Monarchy Rowenna Davis guardian.co.uk

Cairo

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Cairo

Obama Asks Saudi Arabia To Covertly send Arms to ignite Civil War in Libya. BREAKING! Gaddafi Private Jet Crosses Into Greek Airspace; heading to Israel! Cesc Fabregas Regala el Primer Gol Cairo | Christians and Muslims | Egypt Thousands of Christians and Muslims clashed in Cairo , Egypt, on Tuesday over the burning of a church. Women's rights marchers in Cairo report sexual assaults by angry … “People were saying that women were dividing the revolution and should be happy with the rights they have,” said Ebony Coletu, 36, an American who teaches at American University in Cairo and attended the march, as she put it, … Muslims and Christians clash in Cairo – Worldnews.com Cairo – One Christian youth was shot dead on Tuesday during a protest between 1 300 Christians and Muslims who were throwing stones and Molotov cocktails at each other, a security source said. The fighting erupted when a group of … Christians and Muslims clash in Cairo , 1 dead | Home > > Other … Thousands of Christians and Muslims clashed Tuesday, with one Christian man killed and scores wounded as anger rose over the burning of a church in a Cairo suburb. One killed in sectarian clashes in Cairo One killed in sectarian clashes in Cairo …Clashes erupted Tuesday evening when more than 1,0…The violence lasted into the early hours of Wednes…There were conflicting reports about how the clash…At least 15 homes were set on fire … CWKhalil says: RT @ayaelb : Our sources confirm #Libya Gen. Abdel-Rahman Ben Ali al-Zawi in Cairo to meet with officials with message from #Gaddafi

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Libya uprising

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Libya uprising

• Tanks move towards centre of Zawiyah • Airstrike hits oil terminal near Ras Lanuf • Gaddafi mounts diplomatic offensive • Gaddafi accuses west of being after Libya’s oil • UN launches investigation into torture by Gaddafi forces Click here for a summary of the latest developments 4.45pm: This section of the today’s blog is closing – live-blogging of events in Libya and elsewhere is now continuing here . 4.21pm: Hafiz Ghoga, a spokesman for the Benghazi-based National Libyan Council, Hafiz Ghoga, has told a news conference that opposition fighters have come under heavy fire in Bin Jawad. He said: The revolutionary forces have entered Bin Jawad and are now being subjected to heavy artillery and air attack. Near the frontline, rebel fighter Alamin Mashesh told Reuters: “I was just in Bin Jawad. We took it and now we are in control … We just burned five tanks with missiles and rocket propelled grenades.” Another opposition fighter, rebel Abdel Karim Mustafa, gestured to show uncertainty when asked if it was under rebel control. “We just went into Bin Jawad, but there are air strikes,” he said. 4.06pm: A live video stream has been posted of what is said to be a mass anti-demonstration protest in Benghazi, the eastern city that is the heart of the opposition movement and home of the transitional national council. 3.46pm: Libyan government emissaries have flown to Brussels to talk to European and NATO officials ahead of the organisations meetings on Thursday and Friday, the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said today. It seems that Gaddafi is on a diplomatic offensive but what his representatives are putting on the table, if anything, is unclear. From Reuters: “Two aircraft of the Libyan regime appear to have left Libya for Brussels with the intention of enabling emissaries of Gaddafi to meet representatives taking part in the meetings of the EU and NATO tomorrow and the next day,” Frattini said. He noted that the visits to Cairo and Brussels suggested that the situation was very fluid and he cautioned against taking any action which might be premature. “I don’t know what will be said in Cairo, I don’t know who will meet whom in Brussels but these movements are a fact that we have to take account of,” he said. Earlier, a Maltese official said Libyan emissaries had arrived on the Mediterranean island on Wednesday for talks with Maltese officials, and then flown to Portugal. There was no immediate confirmation from Lisbon but a source in Brussels said the plane was carrying a moderate member of Gaddafi’s government to meet Luis Amado, the Portuguese foreign minister. 3.41pm: An al-Jazeera video shows footage of one of Gaddafi’s fighter planes near Ras Lanuf, as well as the oil terminal that was bombed. – 3.27pm: The opposition movement has claimed it is in back in control of Bin Jawad, which the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend, Reuters reports: The rebel movement announced via loudspeakers in the centre of Benghazi that rebels now controlled Bin Jawad, a town near the front between rebels and Muammar Gaddafi’s forces about 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli. Crowds in Benghazi cheered. A Reuters correspondent at the frontline, who spoke to rebels, said their fighters had moved forward towards Bin Jawad from the town of Ras Lanuf after a heavy exchange of fire. But one rebel back from the front said they had not reached Bin Jawad. 3.08pm: A government spokesman in Tripoli has claimed there are 40 opposition fighters remaining in Zawiyah, at most. “Maybe 30-40 people, hiding in the streets and in the cemetery. They are desperate,” he told Reuters. But Khaeri Aboshagor, spokesman for the London-based Libyan League for Human Rights, said the town might prove hard to control entirely. “If they have taken the square, the resistance might diminish – it’s a symbolic place, and you could say whoever holds the square holds the town – but they will keep fighting. It’s a very spread out town and you can’t just hold it with 50 tanks and some pickup trucks.” 2.58pm: Apparently, Libyan state TV is claiming that al-Qaida bombed the oil terminal near Ras Lanuf, in its latest piece of propoganda. Al-Jazeera reported at least three bombs were dropped on the facility by Gaddafi’s forces. 2.46pm: There has been more fighting in Bin Jawad – the town the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend – according to al-Jazeera. It reports that the fighting is for control of the western parts of the town and a plane has been flying overhead. @Libyanfsl tweets (translation from Arabic) : February 17 rebels entered the city of heroes Bin Jawad after the arrival of the supply of Libyan troops #Feb17 #Libya 2.29pm: A Tunisian man who crossed the border on the way from Tripoli to Tunis in mid-afternoon said government forces have sealed off the western city of Zawiyah. Bachir al Tunesy told Reuters: The road was okay until we got close to Zawiyah. They’ve encircled the city and dug up the road leading to it so nobody can come in or out of Zawiyah. 2.12pm: At least three bombs have been dropped on an oil terminal outside Ras Lanuf has been hit by at least three bombs, al-Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland reports. The images on television show a huge plume of smoke coming out of the oil terminal. Rowland says there is “intense fighting” in the oil port. – 1.58pm: The home of Gaddafi’s son, Saif al-Islam, in Hampstead Garden Suburb, north London, has been occupied by squatters showing solidarity for the Libyan revolution, according to the local paper, the Hampstead and Highgate Express . – 1.50pm: The Guardian has a gallery of images from the Ras Jidr camp on the Tunisian border with Libya . It provides a glimpse into the conditions that greet the thousands of refugees who have fled Libya. Another good photo gallery is on the New York Times website , which has more than 200 photos from Libya from the past two weeks. 1.42pm: Forces loyal to Gaddafi hit storage tanks in the oil terminal of Es Sider in east Libya on Wednesday during a heavy bombardment of rebels in the area, rebel fighters told Reuters: Big, black plumes of smoke rose above the terminal. It was not immediately possible to independently confirm the report that the storage tanks were hit or to ascertain if the cause was the bombardment by Gaddafi’s forces or a stray rebel rocket. “We were standing over there in the direction of Es Sider. It was a fierce, random bombardment on us and then it hit the storage tanks,” rebel fighter Abdel Salam Mohamed told Reuters. 1.41pm: I reported earlier that the hospital in the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf has been evacuated. Apparently, it has been evacuated because the water to the town was cut by yesterday’s bombing and not because of an increased military threat as originally believed. 1.03pm: Here’s a summary of events so far today: • Gaddafi’s tanks have reportedly been moving towards the centre of Zawayiah . The city, 30 miles west of Tripoli, came under fierce attack yesterday and the tanks are believed to be moving towards Zawiyah’s opposition-held square. People in the city painted a grim picture of what is happening. A fighter named Ibrahim told Reuters by phone that tanks are “everywhere”. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. A resident said: “The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary.” • There have been a fresh airstrikes on the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf , al-Jazeera has just reported. • Three of Gaddafi’s private jets have reportedly headed to Cairo . One has already landed. Al-Jazeera suggested Libya might be sending a delegation to the Arab League, which is due to hold a meeting in the Egyptian capital on Saturday. It also reported that the delegation will be meeting with the ruling Egyptian military. AP said a high-ranking member of the Libyan government was carrying a message from Gaddafi. • The UN’s special rapporteur for torture has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the beginning of the uprising. Juan Mendez said Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. • Gaddafi has accused western powers of trying to get their hands on Libya’s oil and wealth . He also accused them of trying to re-colonise the country. The Libyan leader once more blamed foreign intervention for the uprising and said that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. He said a no-fly zone would be “useful” because it would open the eyes of the Libyan people to the true intentions of the west. 12.51pm: There has been fighting near near the east Libyan oil terminal of Es Sider, close to Ras Lanuf, reports Reuters: “The bombardment is further east from Es Sider, near where the rebels are now. They are firing back with rockets,” said Reuters correspondent Mohammed Abbas on the frontline. He said rebel forces moved out of Es Sider, a town they have controlled, after the bombardment. They have moved out of the town before only to retake it later. “This is really very heavy bombardment from Gaddafi forces,” said Abbas. 12.41pm: A fighter jet has been circling over Ras Lanuf but there have been no major clashes so far, reports Reuters. It says opposition forces have been staging periodic hit-and-run attacks on dug-in troops loyal to Gaddafi in the east of the country and resupplied their own frontline with guns and ammunition. A warplane circled a rebel checkpoint at the main gate to the rebel-held oil town of Ras Lanuf which has sustained repeated air strikes in the past days. There were six anti-aircraft guns, two mortar launchers and boxes of ammunition at the gate waiting to go forward. One fighter was carefully assembling home-made bombs with small fuses and tins of TNT explosive. “We’re in a defensive position right now because of the heavy artillery ahead. We moved forward another five km (three miles),” rebel Colonel Masoud Mohammed. The threat of heavy artillery and the defensive position was repeated by Colonel Bashir Abdul Qadr. On Wednesday, there was one rebel army truck mounted with a multiple rocket launcher near the front, which lies along a barren stretch of desert and scrub roughly 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli between the towns of Bin Jawad and Ras Lanuf. A Reuters correspondent also saw an armoured personnel carrier travelling away from the front. Another two sources, unarmed rebel volunteers, said there had been minor skirmishes at the front line at dawn, but no major military confrontations. – 12.15pm: A UN special investigator has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the start of the uprising, reports AP. The UN’s special rapporteur for torture, Juan Mendez, told reporters at the UN’s European headquarters in Geneva that Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. Mendez was asked whether he would investigate media reports that Gaddafi’s soldiers have been using ambulances to remove patients from hospitals and execute them but would not elaborate. 12.09pm: An update on the Libyan jet that has arrived in Cairo from AP: An Egyptian airport official says a high-ranking member of the Libyan government has landed in Cairo saying he has a message from Muammar Gaddafi. The official told The Associated Press that the head of Libya’s logistics and supply authority arrived on a private jet Wednesday afternoon. Libyan embassy staff told Egyptian officials that Major Gen Abdul-Rahman bin Ali al-Saiid al-Zawi was carrying a message from Gaddafi. 12.08pm: Al-Jazeera suggest that at least one of the flights might taking a Libyan delegation to negotiate with the Arab League, which is based in Cairo. A meeting of the Arab League is due to take place on Saturday but the league has ruled out any Libyan participation. The news station’s Rawya Rageh has been tweeting that all three planes are now headed to Egypt: The #Gaddafi family jet that landed in #Egypt had a military official on board who’ll be meeting with Egypt’s military rulers #Libya #Feb17 The two other #Gaddafi family jets that were initially headed to Europe now re-routed to #Egypt, as well #Libya #Feb17 11.54am: Despite some excitement on Twitter about the three Gaddafi family jets on the move, it should be pointed out that the planes have been on the move previously since the uprising began so people shouldn’t hold out too much hope as to their significance. The wife of Gaddafi’s son Hannibal, who is Lebanese, was reportedly refused permission to land in Lebanon last month, while a day later the dictator’s daughter Aisha denied she was trying to flee when a jet was turned back from Malta . Another flight was reported to Minsk in Belarus . 11.25am: Chris McGreal, in Benghazi, has been gauging the mood of the opposition forces. He says the bombardment over recent days has convinced the Libyan transitional national council that its forces are in for a protracted battle and of the need for foreign intervention but they are still adamant that they are not engaged in a civil war: Certainly the euphoria of the early days when the rebels pushed hundreds of km towards Tripoli and they thought that Gaddafi might fall within days, those days have gone. They realise that he’s going to fight on if he can and not only has the push towards Tripoli stalled, but it’s been reversed. They realise it’s going to be a long struggle… They’re looking increasingly to foreign governments to support them with no-fly zones, discussion of whether there will be weapons supplied, recognition of the revolutionary council as the legitimate government. At the moment the revolutionary council decided that they’re not regarding it as a civil war. They say that they see Gaddafi trying to to create a civil war in order to justify bombing cities. – 11.09am: Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist in Malta, told al-Jazeera taht three out of five of the Gaddafi family jets are in the air, headed to Vienna, Athens and Cairo respectively. His sources were air traffic control in Malta and Cyprus. 11.00am: The Greek defence ministry says that Gaddafi’s plane has crossed Greece en route to Egypt, al-Arabiya reports . No further details are available at present but if Gaddafi is aboard one wouldn’t imagine he would get a warm reception in Egypt, which only recently ousted its own dictator. 10.48am: Opposition forces in Ras Lanuf, the oil town in eastern Libya, have evacuated the hospital there because of fears that it could be the target of an attack, either from an airstrike or on the ground, Chris McGreal, the Guardian’s correspondent, who is in Benghazi, has just informed me. Ras Lanuf has repeatedly been a target for Gaddafi’s jets over the past few days with at least four airstrikes reported yesterday. 10.25am: The global civic advocacy network, Avaaz.org, has a petition on its website for a no-fly zone . It hopes to get one million signatures before the UN security council meeting on Friday. It currently has more than 640,000 signatures. The petition says: Dear United Nations security council delegates, We call on you to take immediate steps to impose a no-fly zone under Chapter VII of the UN charter to stop the aerial bombings of civilians in Libya and restore access for humanitarian flights to Libyan air space. Only through robust international action and oversight can the bloodshed in Libya be stopped. 10.09am: Despite Hillary Clinton’s expressed concern that the no-fly zone should get international backing , that does not necessarily mean a UN mandate – likely to prove tricky because of Russian and Chinese resistance – according to a report in the Washington Post . A Nato official told the paper international support could instead come from a regional bloc. The official said: If you have [support from] the Arab League, the African Union, NATO and potentially the European Union, you have every country within 5,000 miles of Libya. That gives you a certain level of legitimacy. 10.05am: Here’s video of Gaddafi’s speech , delivered to members of Libya’s Zentan tribe, in which he once more blamed foreign elements for the revolt against his leadership: – 9.55am: The oil refinery in Zawiyah has been shut down because of fierce fighting, Reuters reports. An official told the news agency: Heavy weapons have been fired nearby and we can’t run the refinery under these conditions. The Zawiyah refinery is the biggest provider of gasoline for cars in Libya, and has a total capacity of 120,000 barrels per day. The refinery has been operating at 70% capacity for the past two weeks. 9.30am – Yemen: Human Rights Watch says at least seven people were wounded in the capital Sana’a last night when security forces fired live ammunition and tear gas at peaceful anti-government protesters: A field doctor said one demonstrator was in critical condition from a bullet wound to his head and that six others were shot in the arms and legs. The doctor said more than 50 others suffered cramps, brief fainting spells and other physical problems from the tear gas. Pro-government gangs prevented one ambulance containing wounded from reaching the nearest government hospital, forcing the driver to divert to a private hospital, the field doctor said. A government statement said police tried to apprehend armed men at a checkpoint outside the protest area. But a witness said the incident began when uniformed members of Yemen’s central security forces tried to prevent protesters from using tents near the square, though demonstrators had been sleeping in such tents for days without incident. A few hundred protesters “gathered and started to scream at the government,” the witness said. “Suddenly the central security forces attacked the protesters with gunfire and tear gas.” The square was calm several hours later, the doctors and witnesses said. 9.26am: More details on the interview with Gaddafi broadcast on Libyan state television this morning (the interview was actually given yesterday), from al-Jazeera . The Libyan leader once more blamed foreigners for the revolt and said several foreign fighters were captured on Monday. He said: Yesterday, the mosque that the security forces regained power over, they had in this mosque, they had weapons and alcohol has well. Some of them come from Afghanistan, some of them come from Egypt, some of them come from Algeria, just to misguide our children. Meanwhile, he told Turkey’s state-run TRT Turk television that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. 9.17am: A resident in Zawiyah has told Reuters by phone: The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary. There are a lot of snipers. 8.53am: Here are some more details on the advance of Gaddafi tanks into Zawiyah, reported by Reuters. Interestingly, a rebel fighter claims the bombardment of the oil port was prompted by the death of one of Gaddafi’s cousins in fighting there, earlier this week. “We can see the tanks. The tanks are everywhere,” he told Reuters by phone from inside the city. The fighter, named Ibrahim, said forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were in control of the main road and the suburbs of Zawiyah. Rebel forces still controlled the square and the enemy was about 1,500m away, he said. Ibrahim said there were army snipers on top of most of the buildings, shooting whoever dared to leave their homes. He said half the city was destroyed by air attacks. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. Rebels had killed a high-ranking cousin of Gaddafi in fighting earlier in the week, and “that’s why he bombed the city. They wanted to retrieve the body and they did,” Ibrahim said. He said about 60 rebel fighters had gone to attack an army base on Tuesday about 20kms (12 miles) from Zawiyah. “None of them has returned and we don’t know if they’re dead or alive. We haven’t heard from them,” he said. 8.47am: Good morning. Welcome to live coverage of the continuing battles in Libya. We’ll also be keeping you up to date with what’s happening elsewhere in the Arab world. Here’s a summary of the latest developments: • Tanks of pro-Gaddafi forces Are closing in on the rebel-held main square of Zawiyah . A devastating assault by on the key refinery town, 30 miles west of the capital Tripoli, continued into the night, according to residents. One told Reuters of dozens of bodies on the streets after the bombardment. The government claims it has retaken the town but opposition forces appear to be in control of at least part of the town. Foreign reporters have been prevented from entering Zawiyah • David Cameron and Barack Obama have agreed to draw up “the full spectrum” of military responses to the crisis in Libya . The UK prime minister indicated that Britain has won important US support for a possible no-fly zone over the country. But the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, indicated it was not a decision for the US to take. She said: “We want to see the international community support it (a no-fly zone). I think it’s very important that this not be a US-led effort.” • Muammar Gaddafi has accused western powers of planning to seize Libya’s oil and wealth , in an interview broadcast on Libyan state TV today. He accused groups from Afghanistan, Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria of being behind the uprising in Libya . In another interview he said France wanted “to colonise Libya again”. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Muammar Gaddafi Protest Yemen Saudi Arabia Iran Kuwait Oman Bahrain Egypt Tunisia Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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Libya uprising

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Libya uprising

• Tanks move towards centre of Zawiyah • Airstrike hits oil terminal near Ras Lanuf • Gaddafi mounts diplomatic offensive • Gaddafi accuses west of being after Libya’s oil • UN launches investigation into torture by Gaddafi forces Click here for a summary of the latest developments 4.45pm: This section of the today’s blog is closing – live-blogging of events in Libya and elsewhere is now continuing here . 4.21pm: Hafiz Ghoga, a spokesman for the Benghazi-based National Libyan Council, Hafiz Ghoga, has told a news conference that opposition fighters have come under heavy fire in Bin Jawad. He said: The revolutionary forces have entered Bin Jawad and are now being subjected to heavy artillery and air attack. Near the frontline, rebel fighter Alamin Mashesh told Reuters: “I was just in Bin Jawad. We took it and now we are in control … We just burned five tanks with missiles and rocket propelled grenades.” Another opposition fighter, rebel Abdel Karim Mustafa, gestured to show uncertainty when asked if it was under rebel control. “We just went into Bin Jawad, but there are air strikes,” he said. 4.06pm: A live video stream has been posted of what is said to be a mass anti-demonstration protest in Benghazi, the eastern city that is the heart of the opposition movement and home of the transitional national council. 3.46pm: Libyan government emissaries have flown to Brussels to talk to European and NATO officials ahead of the organisations meetings on Thursday and Friday, the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said today. It seems that Gaddafi is on a diplomatic offensive but what his representatives are putting on the table, if anything, is unclear. From Reuters: “Two aircraft of the Libyan regime appear to have left Libya for Brussels with the intention of enabling emissaries of Gaddafi to meet representatives taking part in the meetings of the EU and NATO tomorrow and the next day,” Frattini said. He noted that the visits to Cairo and Brussels suggested that the situation was very fluid and he cautioned against taking any action which might be premature. “I don’t know what will be said in Cairo, I don’t know who will meet whom in Brussels but these movements are a fact that we have to take account of,” he said. Earlier, a Maltese official said Libyan emissaries had arrived on the Mediterranean island on Wednesday for talks with Maltese officials, and then flown to Portugal. There was no immediate confirmation from Lisbon but a source in Brussels said the plane was carrying a moderate member of Gaddafi’s government to meet Luis Amado, the Portuguese foreign minister. 3.41pm: An al-Jazeera video shows footage of one of Gaddafi’s fighter planes near Ras Lanuf, as well as the oil terminal that was bombed. – 3.27pm: The opposition movement has claimed it is in back in control of Bin Jawad, which the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend, Reuters reports: The rebel movement announced via loudspeakers in the centre of Benghazi that rebels now controlled Bin Jawad, a town near the front between rebels and Muammar Gaddafi’s forces about 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli. Crowds in Benghazi cheered. A Reuters correspondent at the frontline, who spoke to rebels, said their fighters had moved forward towards Bin Jawad from the town of Ras Lanuf after a heavy exchange of fire. But one rebel back from the front said they had not reached Bin Jawad. 3.08pm: A government spokesman in Tripoli has claimed there are 40 opposition fighters remaining in Zawiyah, at most. “Maybe 30-40 people, hiding in the streets and in the cemetery. They are desperate,” he told Reuters. But Khaeri Aboshagor, spokesman for the London-based Libyan League for Human Rights, said the town might prove hard to control entirely. “If they have taken the square, the resistance might diminish – it’s a symbolic place, and you could say whoever holds the square holds the town – but they will keep fighting. It’s a very spread out town and you can’t just hold it with 50 tanks and some pickup trucks.” 2.58pm: Apparently, Libyan state TV is claiming that al-Qaida bombed the oil terminal near Ras Lanuf, in its latest piece of propoganda. Al-Jazeera reported at least three bombs were dropped on the facility by Gaddafi’s forces. 2.46pm: There has been more fighting in Bin Jawad – the town the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend – according to al-Jazeera. It reports that the fighting is for control of the western parts of the town and a plane has been flying overhead. @Libyanfsl tweets (translation from Arabic) : February 17 rebels entered the city of heroes Bin Jawad after the arrival of the supply of Libyan troops #Feb17 #Libya 2.29pm: A Tunisian man who crossed the border on the way from Tripoli to Tunis in mid-afternoon said government forces have sealed off the western city of Zawiyah. Bachir al Tunesy told Reuters: The road was okay until we got close to Zawiyah. They’ve encircled the city and dug up the road leading to it so nobody can come in or out of Zawiyah. 2.12pm: At least three bombs have been dropped on an oil terminal outside Ras Lanuf has been hit by at least three bombs, al-Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland reports. The images on television show a huge plume of smoke coming out of the oil terminal. Rowland says there is “intense fighting” in the oil port. – 1.58pm: The home of Gaddafi’s son, Saif al-Islam, in Hampstead Garden Suburb, north London, has been occupied by squatters showing solidarity for the Libyan revolution, according to the local paper, the Hampstead and Highgate Express . – 1.50pm: The Guardian has a gallery of images from the Ras Jidr camp on the Tunisian border with Libya . It provides a glimpse into the conditions that greet the thousands of refugees who have fled Libya. Another good photo gallery is on the New York Times website , which has more than 200 photos from Libya from the past two weeks. 1.42pm: Forces loyal to Gaddafi hit storage tanks in the oil terminal of Es Sider in east Libya on Wednesday during a heavy bombardment of rebels in the area, rebel fighters told Reuters: Big, black plumes of smoke rose above the terminal. It was not immediately possible to independently confirm the report that the storage tanks were hit or to ascertain if the cause was the bombardment by Gaddafi’s forces or a stray rebel rocket. “We were standing over there in the direction of Es Sider. It was a fierce, random bombardment on us and then it hit the storage tanks,” rebel fighter Abdel Salam Mohamed told Reuters. 1.41pm: I reported earlier that the hospital in the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf has been evacuated. Apparently, it has been evacuated because the water to the town was cut by yesterday’s bombing and not because of an increased military threat as originally believed. 1.03pm: Here’s a summary of events so far today: • Gaddafi’s tanks have reportedly been moving towards the centre of Zawayiah . The city, 30 miles west of Tripoli, came under fierce attack yesterday and the tanks are believed to be moving towards Zawiyah’s opposition-held square. People in the city painted a grim picture of what is happening. A fighter named Ibrahim told Reuters by phone that tanks are “everywhere”. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. A resident said: “The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary.” • There have been a fresh airstrikes on the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf , al-Jazeera has just reported. • Three of Gaddafi’s private jets have reportedly headed to Cairo . One has already landed. Al-Jazeera suggested Libya might be sending a delegation to the Arab League, which is due to hold a meeting in the Egyptian capital on Saturday. It also reported that the delegation will be meeting with the ruling Egyptian military. AP said a high-ranking member of the Libyan government was carrying a message from Gaddafi. • The UN’s special rapporteur for torture has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the beginning of the uprising. Juan Mendez said Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. • Gaddafi has accused western powers of trying to get their hands on Libya’s oil and wealth . He also accused them of trying to re-colonise the country. The Libyan leader once more blamed foreign intervention for the uprising and said that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. He said a no-fly zone would be “useful” because it would open the eyes of the Libyan people to the true intentions of the west. 12.51pm: There has been fighting near near the east Libyan oil terminal of Es Sider, close to Ras Lanuf, reports Reuters: “The bombardment is further east from Es Sider, near where the rebels are now. They are firing back with rockets,” said Reuters correspondent Mohammed Abbas on the frontline. He said rebel forces moved out of Es Sider, a town they have controlled, after the bombardment. They have moved out of the town before only to retake it later. “This is really very heavy bombardment from Gaddafi forces,” said Abbas. 12.41pm: A fighter jet has been circling over Ras Lanuf but there have been no major clashes so far, reports Reuters. It says opposition forces have been staging periodic hit-and-run attacks on dug-in troops loyal to Gaddafi in the east of the country and resupplied their own frontline with guns and ammunition. A warplane circled a rebel checkpoint at the main gate to the rebel-held oil town of Ras Lanuf which has sustained repeated air strikes in the past days. There were six anti-aircraft guns, two mortar launchers and boxes of ammunition at the gate waiting to go forward. One fighter was carefully assembling home-made bombs with small fuses and tins of TNT explosive. “We’re in a defensive position right now because of the heavy artillery ahead. We moved forward another five km (three miles),” rebel Colonel Masoud Mohammed. The threat of heavy artillery and the defensive position was repeated by Colonel Bashir Abdul Qadr. On Wednesday, there was one rebel army truck mounted with a multiple rocket launcher near the front, which lies along a barren stretch of desert and scrub roughly 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli between the towns of Bin Jawad and Ras Lanuf. A Reuters correspondent also saw an armoured personnel carrier travelling away from the front. Another two sources, unarmed rebel volunteers, said there had been minor skirmishes at the front line at dawn, but no major military confrontations. – 12.15pm: A UN special investigator has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the start of the uprising, reports AP. The UN’s special rapporteur for torture, Juan Mendez, told reporters at the UN’s European headquarters in Geneva that Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. Mendez was asked whether he would investigate media reports that Gaddafi’s soldiers have been using ambulances to remove patients from hospitals and execute them but would not elaborate. 12.09pm: An update on the Libyan jet that has arrived in Cairo from AP: An Egyptian airport official says a high-ranking member of the Libyan government has landed in Cairo saying he has a message from Muammar Gaddafi. The official told The Associated Press that the head of Libya’s logistics and supply authority arrived on a private jet Wednesday afternoon. Libyan embassy staff told Egyptian officials that Major Gen Abdul-Rahman bin Ali al-Saiid al-Zawi was carrying a message from Gaddafi. 12.08pm: Al-Jazeera suggest that at least one of the flights might taking a Libyan delegation to negotiate with the Arab League, which is based in Cairo. A meeting of the Arab League is due to take place on Saturday but the league has ruled out any Libyan participation. The news station’s Rawya Rageh has been tweeting that all three planes are now headed to Egypt: The #Gaddafi family jet that landed in #Egypt had a military official on board who’ll be meeting with Egypt’s military rulers #Libya #Feb17 The two other #Gaddafi family jets that were initially headed to Europe now re-routed to #Egypt, as well #Libya #Feb17 11.54am: Despite some excitement on Twitter about the three Gaddafi family jets on the move, it should be pointed out that the planes have been on the move previously since the uprising began so people shouldn’t hold out too much hope as to their significance. The wife of Gaddafi’s son Hannibal, who is Lebanese, was reportedly refused permission to land in Lebanon last month, while a day later the dictator’s daughter Aisha denied she was trying to flee when a jet was turned back from Malta . Another flight was reported to Minsk in Belarus . 11.25am: Chris McGreal, in Benghazi, has been gauging the mood of the opposition forces. He says the bombardment over recent days has convinced the Libyan transitional national council that its forces are in for a protracted battle and of the need for foreign intervention but they are still adamant that they are not engaged in a civil war: Certainly the euphoria of the early days when the rebels pushed hundreds of km towards Tripoli and they thought that Gaddafi might fall within days, those days have gone. They realise that he’s going to fight on if he can and not only has the push towards Tripoli stalled, but it’s been reversed. They realise it’s going to be a long struggle… They’re looking increasingly to foreign governments to support them with no-fly zones, discussion of whether there will be weapons supplied, recognition of the revolutionary council as the legitimate government. At the moment the revolutionary council decided that they’re not regarding it as a civil war. They say that they see Gaddafi trying to to create a civil war in order to justify bombing cities. – 11.09am: Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist in Malta, told al-Jazeera taht three out of five of the Gaddafi family jets are in the air, headed to Vienna, Athens and Cairo respectively. His sources were air traffic control in Malta and Cyprus. 11.00am: The Greek defence ministry says that Gaddafi’s plane has crossed Greece en route to Egypt, al-Arabiya reports . No further details are available at present but if Gaddafi is aboard one wouldn’t imagine he would get a warm reception in Egypt, which only recently ousted its own dictator. 10.48am: Opposition forces in Ras Lanuf, the oil town in eastern Libya, have evacuated the hospital there because of fears that it could be the target of an attack, either from an airstrike or on the ground, Chris McGreal, the Guardian’s correspondent, who is in Benghazi, has just informed me. Ras Lanuf has repeatedly been a target for Gaddafi’s jets over the past few days with at least four airstrikes reported yesterday. 10.25am: The global civic advocacy network, Avaaz.org, has a petition on its website for a no-fly zone . It hopes to get one million signatures before the UN security council meeting on Friday. It currently has more than 640,000 signatures. The petition says: Dear United Nations security council delegates, We call on you to take immediate steps to impose a no-fly zone under Chapter VII of the UN charter to stop the aerial bombings of civilians in Libya and restore access for humanitarian flights to Libyan air space. Only through robust international action and oversight can the bloodshed in Libya be stopped. 10.09am: Despite Hillary Clinton’s expressed concern that the no-fly zone should get international backing , that does not necessarily mean a UN mandate – likely to prove tricky because of Russian and Chinese resistance – according to a report in the Washington Post . A Nato official told the paper international support could instead come from a regional bloc. The official said: If you have [support from] the Arab League, the African Union, NATO and potentially the European Union, you have every country within 5,000 miles of Libya. That gives you a certain level of legitimacy. 10.05am: Here’s video of Gaddafi’s speech , delivered to members of Libya’s Zentan tribe, in which he once more blamed foreign elements for the revolt against his leadership: – 9.55am: The oil refinery in Zawiyah has been shut down because of fierce fighting, Reuters reports. An official told the news agency: Heavy weapons have been fired nearby and we can’t run the refinery under these conditions. The Zawiyah refinery is the biggest provider of gasoline for cars in Libya, and has a total capacity of 120,000 barrels per day. The refinery has been operating at 70% capacity for the past two weeks. 9.30am – Yemen: Human Rights Watch says at least seven people were wounded in the capital Sana’a last night when security forces fired live ammunition and tear gas at peaceful anti-government protesters: A field doctor said one demonstrator was in critical condition from a bullet wound to his head and that six others were shot in the arms and legs. The doctor said more than 50 others suffered cramps, brief fainting spells and other physical problems from the tear gas. Pro-government gangs prevented one ambulance containing wounded from reaching the nearest government hospital, forcing the driver to divert to a private hospital, the field doctor said. A government statement said police tried to apprehend armed men at a checkpoint outside the protest area. But a witness said the incident began when uniformed members of Yemen’s central security forces tried to prevent protesters from using tents near the square, though demonstrators had been sleeping in such tents for days without incident. A few hundred protesters “gathered and started to scream at the government,” the witness said. “Suddenly the central security forces attacked the protesters with gunfire and tear gas.” The square was calm several hours later, the doctors and witnesses said. 9.26am: More details on the interview with Gaddafi broadcast on Libyan state television this morning (the interview was actually given yesterday), from al-Jazeera . The Libyan leader once more blamed foreigners for the revolt and said several foreign fighters were captured on Monday. He said: Yesterday, the mosque that the security forces regained power over, they had in this mosque, they had weapons and alcohol has well. Some of them come from Afghanistan, some of them come from Egypt, some of them come from Algeria, just to misguide our children. Meanwhile, he told Turkey’s state-run TRT Turk television that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. 9.17am: A resident in Zawiyah has told Reuters by phone: The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary. There are a lot of snipers. 8.53am: Here are some more details on the advance of Gaddafi tanks into Zawiyah, reported by Reuters. Interestingly, a rebel fighter claims the bombardment of the oil port was prompted by the death of one of Gaddafi’s cousins in fighting there, earlier this week. “We can see the tanks. The tanks are everywhere,” he told Reuters by phone from inside the city. The fighter, named Ibrahim, said forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were in control of the main road and the suburbs of Zawiyah. Rebel forces still controlled the square and the enemy was about 1,500m away, he said. Ibrahim said there were army snipers on top of most of the buildings, shooting whoever dared to leave their homes. He said half the city was destroyed by air attacks. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. Rebels had killed a high-ranking cousin of Gaddafi in fighting earlier in the week, and “that’s why he bombed the city. They wanted to retrieve the body and they did,” Ibrahim said. He said about 60 rebel fighters had gone to attack an army base on Tuesday about 20kms (12 miles) from Zawiyah. “None of them has returned and we don’t know if they’re dead or alive. We haven’t heard from them,” he said. 8.47am: Good morning. Welcome to live coverage of the continuing battles in Libya. We’ll also be keeping you up to date with what’s happening elsewhere in the Arab world. Here’s a summary of the latest developments: • Tanks of pro-Gaddafi forces Are closing in on the rebel-held main square of Zawiyah . A devastating assault by on the key refinery town, 30 miles west of the capital Tripoli, continued into the night, according to residents. One told Reuters of dozens of bodies on the streets after the bombardment. The government claims it has retaken the town but opposition forces appear to be in control of at least part of the town. Foreign reporters have been prevented from entering Zawiyah • David Cameron and Barack Obama have agreed to draw up “the full spectrum” of military responses to the crisis in Libya . The UK prime minister indicated that Britain has won important US support for a possible no-fly zone over the country. But the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, indicated it was not a decision for the US to take. She said: “We want to see the international community support it (a no-fly zone). I think it’s very important that this not be a US-led effort.” • Muammar Gaddafi has accused western powers of planning to seize Libya’s oil and wealth , in an interview broadcast on Libyan state TV today. He accused groups from Afghanistan, Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria of being behind the uprising in Libya . In another interview he said France wanted “to colonise Libya again”. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Muammar Gaddafi Protest Yemen Saudi Arabia Iran Kuwait Oman Bahrain Egypt Tunisia Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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Libya uprising

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Libya uprising

• Tanks move towards centre of Zawiyah • Airstrike hits oil terminal near Ras Lanuf • Gaddafi mounts diplomatic offensive • Gaddafi accuses west of being after Libya’s oil • UN launches investigation into torture by Gaddafi forces Click here for a summary of the latest developments 4.45pm: This section of the today’s blog is closing – live-blogging of events in Libya and elsewhere is now continuing here . 4.21pm: Hafiz Ghoga, a spokesman for the Benghazi-based National Libyan Council, Hafiz Ghoga, has told a news conference that opposition fighters have come under heavy fire in Bin Jawad. He said: The revolutionary forces have entered Bin Jawad and are now being subjected to heavy artillery and air attack. Near the frontline, rebel fighter Alamin Mashesh told Reuters: “I was just in Bin Jawad. We took it and now we are in control … We just burned five tanks with missiles and rocket propelled grenades.” Another opposition fighter, rebel Abdel Karim Mustafa, gestured to show uncertainty when asked if it was under rebel control. “We just went into Bin Jawad, but there are air strikes,” he said. 4.06pm: A live video stream has been posted of what is said to be a mass anti-demonstration protest in Benghazi, the eastern city that is the heart of the opposition movement and home of the transitional national council. 3.46pm: Libyan government emissaries have flown to Brussels to talk to European and NATO officials ahead of the organisations meetings on Thursday and Friday, the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said today. It seems that Gaddafi is on a diplomatic offensive but what his representatives are putting on the table, if anything, is unclear. From Reuters: “Two aircraft of the Libyan regime appear to have left Libya for Brussels with the intention of enabling emissaries of Gaddafi to meet representatives taking part in the meetings of the EU and NATO tomorrow and the next day,” Frattini said. He noted that the visits to Cairo and Brussels suggested that the situation was very fluid and he cautioned against taking any action which might be premature. “I don’t know what will be said in Cairo, I don’t know who will meet whom in Brussels but these movements are a fact that we have to take account of,” he said. Earlier, a Maltese official said Libyan emissaries had arrived on the Mediterranean island on Wednesday for talks with Maltese officials, and then flown to Portugal. There was no immediate confirmation from Lisbon but a source in Brussels said the plane was carrying a moderate member of Gaddafi’s government to meet Luis Amado, the Portuguese foreign minister. 3.41pm: An al-Jazeera video shows footage of one of Gaddafi’s fighter planes near Ras Lanuf, as well as the oil terminal that was bombed. – 3.27pm: The opposition movement has claimed it is in back in control of Bin Jawad, which the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend, Reuters reports: The rebel movement announced via loudspeakers in the centre of Benghazi that rebels now controlled Bin Jawad, a town near the front between rebels and Muammar Gaddafi’s forces about 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli. Crowds in Benghazi cheered. A Reuters correspondent at the frontline, who spoke to rebels, said their fighters had moved forward towards Bin Jawad from the town of Ras Lanuf after a heavy exchange of fire. But one rebel back from the front said they had not reached Bin Jawad. 3.08pm: A government spokesman in Tripoli has claimed there are 40 opposition fighters remaining in Zawiyah, at most. “Maybe 30-40 people, hiding in the streets and in the cemetery. They are desperate,” he told Reuters. But Khaeri Aboshagor, spokesman for the London-based Libyan League for Human Rights, said the town might prove hard to control entirely. “If they have taken the square, the resistance might diminish – it’s a symbolic place, and you could say whoever holds the square holds the town – but they will keep fighting. It’s a very spread out town and you can’t just hold it with 50 tanks and some pickup trucks.” 2.58pm: Apparently, Libyan state TV is claiming that al-Qaida bombed the oil terminal near Ras Lanuf, in its latest piece of propoganda. Al-Jazeera reported at least three bombs were dropped on the facility by Gaddafi’s forces. 2.46pm: There has been more fighting in Bin Jawad – the town the government claimed to have retaken over the weekend – according to al-Jazeera. It reports that the fighting is for control of the western parts of the town and a plane has been flying overhead. @Libyanfsl tweets (translation from Arabic) : February 17 rebels entered the city of heroes Bin Jawad after the arrival of the supply of Libyan troops #Feb17 #Libya 2.29pm: A Tunisian man who crossed the border on the way from Tripoli to Tunis in mid-afternoon said government forces have sealed off the western city of Zawiyah. Bachir al Tunesy told Reuters: The road was okay until we got close to Zawiyah. They’ve encircled the city and dug up the road leading to it so nobody can come in or out of Zawiyah. 2.12pm: At least three bombs have been dropped on an oil terminal outside Ras Lanuf has been hit by at least three bombs, al-Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland reports. The images on television show a huge plume of smoke coming out of the oil terminal. Rowland says there is “intense fighting” in the oil port. – 1.58pm: The home of Gaddafi’s son, Saif al-Islam, in Hampstead Garden Suburb, north London, has been occupied by squatters showing solidarity for the Libyan revolution, according to the local paper, the Hampstead and Highgate Express . – 1.50pm: The Guardian has a gallery of images from the Ras Jidr camp on the Tunisian border with Libya . It provides a glimpse into the conditions that greet the thousands of refugees who have fled Libya. Another good photo gallery is on the New York Times website , which has more than 200 photos from Libya from the past two weeks. 1.42pm: Forces loyal to Gaddafi hit storage tanks in the oil terminal of Es Sider in east Libya on Wednesday during a heavy bombardment of rebels in the area, rebel fighters told Reuters: Big, black plumes of smoke rose above the terminal. It was not immediately possible to independently confirm the report that the storage tanks were hit or to ascertain if the cause was the bombardment by Gaddafi’s forces or a stray rebel rocket. “We were standing over there in the direction of Es Sider. It was a fierce, random bombardment on us and then it hit the storage tanks,” rebel fighter Abdel Salam Mohamed told Reuters. 1.41pm: I reported earlier that the hospital in the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf has been evacuated. Apparently, it has been evacuated because the water to the town was cut by yesterday’s bombing and not because of an increased military threat as originally believed. 1.03pm: Here’s a summary of events so far today: • Gaddafi’s tanks have reportedly been moving towards the centre of Zawayiah . The city, 30 miles west of Tripoli, came under fierce attack yesterday and the tanks are believed to be moving towards Zawiyah’s opposition-held square. People in the city painted a grim picture of what is happening. A fighter named Ibrahim told Reuters by phone that tanks are “everywhere”. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. A resident said: “The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary.” • There have been a fresh airstrikes on the eastern oil town of Ras Lanuf , al-Jazeera has just reported. • Three of Gaddafi’s private jets have reportedly headed to Cairo . One has already landed. Al-Jazeera suggested Libya might be sending a delegation to the Arab League, which is due to hold a meeting in the Egyptian capital on Saturday. It also reported that the delegation will be meeting with the ruling Egyptian military. AP said a high-ranking member of the Libyan government was carrying a message from Gaddafi. • The UN’s special rapporteur for torture has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the beginning of the uprising. Juan Mendez said Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. • Gaddafi has accused western powers of trying to get their hands on Libya’s oil and wealth . He also accused them of trying to re-colonise the country. The Libyan leader once more blamed foreign intervention for the uprising and said that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. He said a no-fly zone would be “useful” because it would open the eyes of the Libyan people to the true intentions of the west. 12.51pm: There has been fighting near near the east Libyan oil terminal of Es Sider, close to Ras Lanuf, reports Reuters: “The bombardment is further east from Es Sider, near where the rebels are now. They are firing back with rockets,” said Reuters correspondent Mohammed Abbas on the frontline. He said rebel forces moved out of Es Sider, a town they have controlled, after the bombardment. They have moved out of the town before only to retake it later. “This is really very heavy bombardment from Gaddafi forces,” said Abbas. 12.41pm: A fighter jet has been circling over Ras Lanuf but there have been no major clashes so far, reports Reuters. It says opposition forces have been staging periodic hit-and-run attacks on dug-in troops loyal to Gaddafi in the east of the country and resupplied their own frontline with guns and ammunition. A warplane circled a rebel checkpoint at the main gate to the rebel-held oil town of Ras Lanuf which has sustained repeated air strikes in the past days. There were six anti-aircraft guns, two mortar launchers and boxes of ammunition at the gate waiting to go forward. One fighter was carefully assembling home-made bombs with small fuses and tins of TNT explosive. “We’re in a defensive position right now because of the heavy artillery ahead. We moved forward another five km (three miles),” rebel Colonel Masoud Mohammed. The threat of heavy artillery and the defensive position was repeated by Colonel Bashir Abdul Qadr. On Wednesday, there was one rebel army truck mounted with a multiple rocket launcher near the front, which lies along a barren stretch of desert and scrub roughly 550 km (340 miles) east of Tripoli between the towns of Bin Jawad and Ras Lanuf. A Reuters correspondent also saw an armoured personnel carrier travelling away from the front. Another two sources, unarmed rebel volunteers, said there had been minor skirmishes at the front line at dawn, but no major military confrontations. – 12.15pm: A UN special investigator has opened a probe into allegations of torture used by Gaddafi’s forces since the start of the uprising, reports AP. The UN’s special rapporteur for torture, Juan Mendez, told reporters at the UN’s European headquarters in Geneva that Gaddafi’s use of torture and illegal detention in the past is “very well-documented”. Mendez was asked whether he would investigate media reports that Gaddafi’s soldiers have been using ambulances to remove patients from hospitals and execute them but would not elaborate. 12.09pm: An update on the Libyan jet that has arrived in Cairo from AP: An Egyptian airport official says a high-ranking member of the Libyan government has landed in Cairo saying he has a message from Muammar Gaddafi. The official told The Associated Press that the head of Libya’s logistics and supply authority arrived on a private jet Wednesday afternoon. Libyan embassy staff told Egyptian officials that Major Gen Abdul-Rahman bin Ali al-Saiid al-Zawi was carrying a message from Gaddafi. 12.08pm: Al-Jazeera suggest that at least one of the flights might taking a Libyan delegation to negotiate with the Arab League, which is based in Cairo. A meeting of the Arab League is due to take place on Saturday but the league has ruled out any Libyan participation. The news station’s Rawya Rageh has been tweeting that all three planes are now headed to Egypt: The #Gaddafi family jet that landed in #Egypt had a military official on board who’ll be meeting with Egypt’s military rulers #Libya #Feb17 The two other #Gaddafi family jets that were initially headed to Europe now re-routed to #Egypt, as well #Libya #Feb17 11.54am: Despite some excitement on Twitter about the three Gaddafi family jets on the move, it should be pointed out that the planes have been on the move previously since the uprising began so people shouldn’t hold out too much hope as to their significance. The wife of Gaddafi’s son Hannibal, who is Lebanese, was reportedly refused permission to land in Lebanon last month, while a day later the dictator’s daughter Aisha denied she was trying to flee when a jet was turned back from Malta . Another flight was reported to Minsk in Belarus . 11.25am: Chris McGreal, in Benghazi, has been gauging the mood of the opposition forces. He says the bombardment over recent days has convinced the Libyan transitional national council that its forces are in for a protracted battle and of the need for foreign intervention but they are still adamant that they are not engaged in a civil war: Certainly the euphoria of the early days when the rebels pushed hundreds of km towards Tripoli and they thought that Gaddafi might fall within days, those days have gone. They realise that he’s going to fight on if he can and not only has the push towards Tripoli stalled, but it’s been reversed. They realise it’s going to be a long struggle… They’re looking increasingly to foreign governments to support them with no-fly zones, discussion of whether there will be weapons supplied, recognition of the revolutionary council as the legitimate government. At the moment the revolutionary council decided that they’re not regarding it as a civil war. They say that they see Gaddafi trying to to create a civil war in order to justify bombing cities. – 11.09am: Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist in Malta, told al-Jazeera taht three out of five of the Gaddafi family jets are in the air, headed to Vienna, Athens and Cairo respectively. His sources were air traffic control in Malta and Cyprus. 11.00am: The Greek defence ministry says that Gaddafi’s plane has crossed Greece en route to Egypt, al-Arabiya reports . No further details are available at present but if Gaddafi is aboard one wouldn’t imagine he would get a warm reception in Egypt, which only recently ousted its own dictator. 10.48am: Opposition forces in Ras Lanuf, the oil town in eastern Libya, have evacuated the hospital there because of fears that it could be the target of an attack, either from an airstrike or on the ground, Chris McGreal, the Guardian’s correspondent, who is in Benghazi, has just informed me. Ras Lanuf has repeatedly been a target for Gaddafi’s jets over the past few days with at least four airstrikes reported yesterday. 10.25am: The global civic advocacy network, Avaaz.org, has a petition on its website for a no-fly zone . It hopes to get one million signatures before the UN security council meeting on Friday. It currently has more than 640,000 signatures. The petition says: Dear United Nations security council delegates, We call on you to take immediate steps to impose a no-fly zone under Chapter VII of the UN charter to stop the aerial bombings of civilians in Libya and restore access for humanitarian flights to Libyan air space. Only through robust international action and oversight can the bloodshed in Libya be stopped. 10.09am: Despite Hillary Clinton’s expressed concern that the no-fly zone should get international backing , that does not necessarily mean a UN mandate – likely to prove tricky because of Russian and Chinese resistance – according to a report in the Washington Post . A Nato official told the paper international support could instead come from a regional bloc. The official said: If you have [support from] the Arab League, the African Union, NATO and potentially the European Union, you have every country within 5,000 miles of Libya. That gives you a certain level of legitimacy. 10.05am: Here’s video of Gaddafi’s speech , delivered to members of Libya’s Zentan tribe, in which he once more blamed foreign elements for the revolt against his leadership: – 9.55am: The oil refinery in Zawiyah has been shut down because of fierce fighting, Reuters reports. An official told the news agency: Heavy weapons have been fired nearby and we can’t run the refinery under these conditions. The Zawiyah refinery is the biggest provider of gasoline for cars in Libya, and has a total capacity of 120,000 barrels per day. The refinery has been operating at 70% capacity for the past two weeks. 9.30am – Yemen: Human Rights Watch says at least seven people were wounded in the capital Sana’a last night when security forces fired live ammunition and tear gas at peaceful anti-government protesters: A field doctor said one demonstrator was in critical condition from a bullet wound to his head and that six others were shot in the arms and legs. The doctor said more than 50 others suffered cramps, brief fainting spells and other physical problems from the tear gas. Pro-government gangs prevented one ambulance containing wounded from reaching the nearest government hospital, forcing the driver to divert to a private hospital, the field doctor said. A government statement said police tried to apprehend armed men at a checkpoint outside the protest area. But a witness said the incident began when uniformed members of Yemen’s central security forces tried to prevent protesters from using tents near the square, though demonstrators had been sleeping in such tents for days without incident. A few hundred protesters “gathered and started to scream at the government,” the witness said. “Suddenly the central security forces attacked the protesters with gunfire and tear gas.” The square was calm several hours later, the doctors and witnesses said. 9.26am: More details on the interview with Gaddafi broadcast on Libyan state television this morning (the interview was actually given yesterday), from al-Jazeera . The Libyan leader once more blamed foreigners for the revolt and said several foreign fighters were captured on Monday. He said: Yesterday, the mosque that the security forces regained power over, they had in this mosque, they had weapons and alcohol has well. Some of them come from Afghanistan, some of them come from Egypt, some of them come from Algeria, just to misguide our children. Meanwhile, he told Turkey’s state-run TRT Turk television that Libyans would “take up arms and fight” if a no-fly zone was imposed. 9.17am: A resident in Zawiyah has told Reuters by phone: The situation is not so good. They have surrounded the square with snipers and tanks … It’s very scary. There are a lot of snipers. 8.53am: Here are some more details on the advance of Gaddafi tanks into Zawiyah, reported by Reuters. Interestingly, a rebel fighter claims the bombardment of the oil port was prompted by the death of one of Gaddafi’s cousins in fighting there, earlier this week. “We can see the tanks. The tanks are everywhere,” he told Reuters by phone from inside the city. The fighter, named Ibrahim, said forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were in control of the main road and the suburbs of Zawiyah. Rebel forces still controlled the square and the enemy was about 1,500m away, he said. Ibrahim said there were army snipers on top of most of the buildings, shooting whoever dared to leave their homes. He said half the city was destroyed by air attacks. “There are many dead people and they can’t even bury them. Zawiyah is deserted. There’s nobody on the streets. No animals, not even birds in the sky,” he said. Rebels had killed a high-ranking cousin of Gaddafi in fighting earlier in the week, and “that’s why he bombed the city. They wanted to retrieve the body and they did,” Ibrahim said. He said about 60 rebel fighters had gone to attack an army base on Tuesday about 20kms (12 miles) from Zawiyah. “None of them has returned and we don’t know if they’re dead or alive. We haven’t heard from them,” he said. 8.47am: Good morning. Welcome to live coverage of the continuing battles in Libya. We’ll also be keeping you up to date with what’s happening elsewhere in the Arab world. Here’s a summary of the latest developments: • Tanks of pro-Gaddafi forces Are closing in on the rebel-held main square of Zawiyah . A devastating assault by on the key refinery town, 30 miles west of the capital Tripoli, continued into the night, according to residents. One told Reuters of dozens of bodies on the streets after the bombardment. The government claims it has retaken the town but opposition forces appear to be in control of at least part of the town. Foreign reporters have been prevented from entering Zawiyah • David Cameron and Barack Obama have agreed to draw up “the full spectrum” of military responses to the crisis in Libya . The UK prime minister indicated that Britain has won important US support for a possible no-fly zone over the country. But the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, indicated it was not a decision for the US to take. She said: “We want to see the international community support it (a no-fly zone). I think it’s very important that this not be a US-led effort.” • Muammar Gaddafi has accused western powers of planning to seize Libya’s oil and wealth , in an interview broadcast on Libyan state TV today. He accused groups from Afghanistan, Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria of being behind the uprising in Libya . In another interview he said France wanted “to colonise Libya again”. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Muammar Gaddafi Protest Yemen Saudi Arabia Iran Kuwait Oman Bahrain Egypt Tunisia Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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Libya uprising – live updates

• Reports that Bin Jawad has fallen to pro-Gaddafi forces as unrest in Libya continues. • Gaddafi loyalists marching Ras Lanuf, with air strikes reported. Follow live updates here 10.40am: The rebel National Libyan council said have said there is no room for broad dialogue with Gaddafi’s government, and any talks must be on the basis he quits. Jadallah Azous Al-Talhi, a Libyan prime minister in the 1980s who is originally from eastern Libya, appeared on state television reading an address to elders in the rebel city of Benghazi calling for national dialogue to end the bloodshed. Asked about the address, rebel official Ahmed Jabreel told Reuters: “Talhi is a close acquaintance of mine and he is widely respected in Libya as a man who stood up to Gaddafi. But we have made it clear all along that any negotiations must be on the basis that Gaddafi will step down. There can be no other compromise.” 10.15am: Good morning, welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the continuing unrest in Libya. • Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have reportedly retaken the previously rebel held town of Bin Jawad and are advancing on the oil refinery town of Ras Lanuf . The Libyan army was seen moving down the strategic Mediterranean coastal road east of the Bin Jawad, heading towards Ras Lanuf some 60 km (40 miles) away, witnesses told Reuters. “I went to Bin Jawad and about 20 km (13 miles) beforehand I saw Gaddafi forces, a large truck and army vehicles, and a fighter jet, they were coming slowly in this direction,” Ahmed al-Araibi, a driver said, with two other witnesses confirming similar movements. The taking of Ras Lanuf had represented a major victory for the rebels on Friday but their advance towards Gaddafi’s hometown of Sirte on the road to Tripoli was stopped in its tracks at Bin Jawad where rebels retreated under fire. • The UN secretary general has called for an end to indiscriminate attacks on civilians in Libya and warned of “carnage” in the days ahead . Ban Ki-moon has also dispatched a team to Tripoli to assess the humanitarian situation in the wake of the Libyan regime’s “disproportionate use of force”. Ban’s intervention on Sunday came as rebel forces continued to battle Gaddafi’s troops for control of key towns and cities, and Britain assessed the embarrassing fallout from the botched SAS mission to establish contacts with rebel leaders. • Libya’s rebel commanders have freed two MI6 officers and six SAS soldiers captured by farm guards on Thursday morning, after the British government vouched for their identities . The group was immediately flown to the frigate HMS Cumberland, which remains stationed off the coast of Libya. Seven of the group had been dropped by helicopter into farmland near the rebel capital Benghazi on a mission to establish contact with anti-regime forces. The eight Britons had been detained and questioned since Thursday by rebel leaders who had suspected they were mercenaries. • Elsewhere in the Middle East public protests have been banned in Saudi Arabia following demonstrations by minority Shia groups. The ruling comes after two weeks of Shia demonstrations in Saudi Arabia, during which 22 people were arrested. A statement issued by the country’s council of senior clerics said: “The council … affirms that demonstrations are forbidden in this country. The correct way in sharia [law] of realising common interest is by advising, which is what the Prophet Muhammad established. “Reform and advice should not be via demonstrations and ways that provoke strife and division, this is what the religious scholars of this country in the past and now have forbidden and warned against.” Arab and Middle East protests Libya Protest Egypt Tunisia Yemen Bahrain Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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NY Times Columnist Tom Friedman Calls for Tax to Keep Gas at $4 per Gallon

On Sunday's Face the Nation, New York Times columnist Tom Friedman denounced the proposed White House plan to use the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to curb rising gas prices: “That would rank in my top five worst ideas of 2011 so far…. one thing we should finally be doing is using this opportunity to have a credible energy policy that begins to reduce our addiction to oil.” Friedman's idea of “credible energy policy” was to force Americans to continue to pay higher gas prices: “Gasoline is almost $4 a gallon. We know that's a red line where people really start to change their behavior. At a minimum, I'd be talking about a tax that basically says we're going to keep it at $4. If it goes below we'll true it up, if it goes above that we're not going to touch it.” As TimesWatch's Clay Waters earlier reported on NewsBusters, for years Friedman has been obsessed with the idea of implementing higher gas taxes.

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The Obama adminstration is reluctant to take any obvious action to help rebels in Libya—so it’s pressuring Saudi Arabia to do so instead, according to reports. Officials have asked the Saudis to airlift American weapons—paid for by the Saudis—into Benghazi. The Saudis haven’t yet responded to the…

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Turkey and Iran may be winners, and the US a loser in the end – but first Arab societies must ‘win’ by making revolution work David Cameron’s suggestion that Britain may arm Libyan rebels opposed to Muammar Gaddafi vividly illustrates the dangerously fine line western leaders must tread as revolutionary unrest sweeps the Arab world. Despite recent violence, Libya is not yet in a state of civil war. But arming the opposition is a sure way to guarantee it soon could be. Thus a forcible intervention designed to help may have the opposite effect to that intended. Cameron’s ingenuous ideas about ending the Gaddafi era, outlined to the House of Commons this week, were prompted in part by a desire to ensure Britain is on the “winning” side when the history of the 2011 Arab awakening is written. This echoes the fatuous debate in Washington over whether Barack Obama “lost” Egypt when he abandoned Hosni Mubarak. Through their latest statements, the US and Britain are trying to assure, among other things, good post-revolution relations with successor regimes. But it’s clear, with the upheavals that began in Tunisia in December still spreading , that western military intervention in specific countries to hasten that end could be both hazardous and counter-productive. On the whole, affected populations say they do not want it , or only in very limited form. Gaddafi, for example, claims the US and Britain are bent on recolonisation and stealing Libya’s oil. He would like nothing better than to portray the rebellion as a western-inspired, anti-Arab plot. In terms of “winners” and “losers”, the US and close allies like Britain and Israel are already firmly positioned in the latter category. Washington has lost, or is losing, key alliances with pro-western leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen and some Gulf states. Where autocracies remain entrenched, as in Saudi Arabia, confidence in the western allies has been badly shaken, not least by the way they dumped Mubarak and suddenly ramped up the rhetoric of “universal values”. Successful revolutions will not guarantee a return to cordiality. “If democracy does take root in the Middle East – and the jury is still out – the regimes that emerge may well be much tougher customers than the autocracies they replace,” said Charles Kupchan of the US Council on Foreign Relations . “Western observers and policy-makers had better stop operating under the illusion that the spread of democracy to the Middle East also means the spread of western values.” The twin forces of political Islam and nationalism would wield ever greater clout in more open, post-revolutionary Arab states, he suggested. In short, the strategic outlook has changed permanently. Nor will it be clear, for a considerable while, who western governments are dealing with. “The regimes that emerge may call themselves democracies and the world may go along with the lie, but the test of a system is how the power relationships work behind the scenes” US analyst, Robert Kaplan , said. “The Arab world must create from the dust of tyrannies legitimate political orders. It is less democracy than the crisis of central authority that will dominate the next phase of Middle Eastern history.” If there are any state “winners” so far in this rapidly shifting geo-strategic chess game, they are Turkey and Iran, Saudi and other analysts suggest. “Viewed through the prism of a zero-sum conflict between a US-led alliance of Arab autocrats and Israel against an Iran-led ‘resistance’ camp, the Arab rebellion has been nothing short of catastrophic for the anti-Iran forces, ” Tony Karon wrote in The National . But this conclusion, he warned, was “based on the flawed premise that a setback for the US is automatically a gain for Iran. The Arab declaration of independence from Washington is anything but a declaration of loyalty to Tehran” – despite Iranian claims. A more comfortable thought, for western leaders at least, is that moderate, secular, neo-Islamist-led Turkey may provide a paradigm for emerging post-revolutionary Arab societies. Turkish commentators certainly see it this way. Turkey’s reform experience “could assist them in building a platform for channelling the aspirations and expectations of people to reflect better governance and transparency”, Abdullah Bozkurt said in Today’s Zaman. “Turkey can certainly be an inspiration for a lot of people in these countries.” Such sentiments reflect the newfound confidence of a former Middle Eastern empire that has successfully reinvented itself, one century on, as an ambitious and supposedly benign regional power. But even help from such a quarter may initially be too much for the Arab world’s opposition forces and successor regimes at this delicate moment. First and foremost, they themselves must “win” by making their revolutions work – for it is they, more than any outsiders, who will suffer the consequences of failure. Foreign policy US foreign policy Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Egypt Saudi Arabia Arab and Middle East protests Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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Raw Video: Terror Plot Suspect Appears in Court

A college student from Saudi Arabia accused of buying chemicals online as part of a plan to blow up key US targets, including the home of former President George W. Bush, appeared in federal court in Texas on Friday. (Feb. 25)

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