Frontline Blog

Tuesday 26 April 2011

Gunfire exchange between Cambodian, Thai troops continues in fifth day

Posted On 18:16 by El NACHO 0 comments

The gunfire exchange between Cambodian and Thai troops over the disputed border area at the 13th century Ta Moan temple and Ta Krabei temple in Oddar Meanchey province still continues as of 9:40 p.m. on Tuesday, said Pich Sokhin, the governor of Oddar Meanchey province.

The Tuesday's fight began at 1:40 p.m. at the 11th century Preah Vihear temple and spread to burst out at the Ta Moan temple and Ta Krabei temple at 2:10 p.m.

"It's the longest fighting today, now it has been going on for more than 7 hours, and it's still continuing," the governor told Xinhua by telephone on Tuesday night, adding that the casualties are not available yet.

He said that Thailand has been using small guns and artilleries to fire on Cambodian troops and territory.

"We have exchanged some small weapons and big ones such as BM21 in order to protect our territory from invasion," he said.

"It's reported that some of our troops are injured," he said. "And our troops reported that more Thai troops have been reported killed and injured in today's fighting."

Cambodia said that Thai troops have launched attacks on Cambodia to capture the 13th century Ta Moan temple and Ta Krabei temple, which lie 150 kilometers west of the Preah Vihear Temple.

"So far, our troops are still in firm and full control of the temple of Ta Moan and the temple of Ta Krabei," he added.

He said that as of Tuesday evening, the number of Cambodian evacuees has increased to 28,180 people.

Meanwhile, the electricity in the whole Oddar Meanchey province is cut on Tuesday night due to the fighting and some evacuees who take refuge in Samrong district in the province have continued to move to other places in order to escape from Thai artillery shelling, he added.

The latest in a series of deadly clashes between Cambodian and Thai troops have occurred for five straight days from April 22-26 at the 13th century Ta Moan temple and Ta Krabei temple in Oddar Meanchey province and on April 26 at the 11th century Preah Vihear temple, the World Heritage site.

The clashes left at least a dozen of both sides' troops killed and more than 30 injured.

The fighting has not only cost lives, damaged the temples, but also forced tens of thousands of civilians of both countries to flee for safe shelters.

The border between Thailand and Cambodia has never been completely demarcated.

Although the International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that the Temple of Preah Vihear belonged to Cambodia, the row over the 4.6-square-km territory around the temple has never been resolved.

The conflict has occurred just a week after Cambodia's Preah Vihear temple was enlisted as a World Heritage Site on July 7, 2008, since then both sides have built up military forces along the border, and periodic clashes happened, resulting in the deaths of troops on both sides.

 


Monday 25 April 2011

head of the infantry says the SAS is facing a recruitment crisis

Posted On 23:01 by El NACHO 0 comments

The head of the infantry says the SAS is facing a recruitment crisis, caused at least in part by the demands of the operations in Afghanistan.

In a letter leaked to the Daily Telegraph, Brigadier Richard Dennis said many eligible soldiers were put off applying because they did not have the time to train for demanding selection tests.

He said the "unrelentingly demanding" operations of the regular army, mean as few as a third of slots for the special forces have been filled.

Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, who is a former infantry officer, said family life also plays a part in men not signing up for selection.


Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was unhurt in a NATO airstrike on his Bab al-Aziziyah compound

Posted On 18:59 by El NACHO 0 comments

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was unhurt in a NATO airstrike on his Bab al-Aziziyah compound early on Monday that left three people dead, a government spokesman said, calling it an assassination attempt.

Spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said it appeared to have been an attempt on Gaddafi's life, but those who died were office workers and security guards while 45 people were wounded. He said the building housed political offices.

"How is this act of terrorism protecting civilians in Libya?" he said to visiting journalists at the compound, where books spilled from an office into twisted metal and crumbled concrete. "This is a cowardly attempt to pursue one person."

He said Gaddafi was not in hiding, but was in a safe place.

"He is well, he is healthy, he is in high spirits," Ibrahim said.

Libyan state television showed pictures of Gaddafi meeting people in a tent. It said the pictures had been taken on Monday.


Syria Rolls Tanks Into Cities as Security Crackdown Kills At Least 18

Posted On 18:58 by El NACHO 0 comments

Witnesses say several thousand Syrian army troops, flanked by special forces, shot their way into the southern city of Daraa before dawn Monday, causing numerous casualties. Tanks reportedly began the assault, shelling the city as they moved in from four sides.

Videos distributed by human rights activists show black smoke over the city center and fires burning as shell-fire crackled in the background.

Reports say Syrian special forces stormed private homes to make arrests, Witnesses say snipers began shooting from rooftops and many victims remain lying in the streets.

Jordanian authorities said the main highway crossing between Jordan and Syria was closed to traffic and that two border posts were not allowing anyone to enter Syria.

Syrian rights activists say that security forces also encircled the Damascus suburbs of Douma and Madaamiya, arresting hundreds of people.

The crackdown came as Syrian government media condemned what was called the "crimes of armed gangs" and "outside plots to divide the country."  Syrian television reported that 15 members of the army and security forces were killed in recent violence.

 


470 prisoners, including Taliban commanders and fighters, fled overnight through a tunnel from Sarposa jail outside Kandahar.

Posted On 18:57 by El NACHO 0 comments

second time in just three years, inmates have managed to escape one of Afghanistan's biggest prisons. At least 470 prisoners, including Taliban commanders and fighters, fled overnight through a tunnel from Sarposa jail outside Kandahar.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, told BBC Pashto that the tunnel was more than 360m (1,180ft) long and took five months to complete.

He said the tunnel led from a house north-east of the prison, which "our friends" had rented, to the political wing, where Taliban were held. It bypassed security checkpoints and the main Kandahar-Kabul road.

"We had proper digging equipment. There was so much earth from the tunnel that we carried it away gradually and sold it in the market."


The tunnel led to a mud-walled compound with a brown gate and shops on either side
"We had the support of skilled professionals - people who were trained engineers, who advised us on the digging," he added. "We managed to hit the spot where the prisoners were kept."

Police showed journalists the hole in the cement floor of the prison cell. The opening was about 1m (3ft) in diameter. The tunnel dropped straight down for about 1.5m (5ft) and appeared to go in the direction of a mud-walled compound with a brown gate and shops on either side.

There are guard towers at each corner of the prison compound, which is lit at night and protected by a ring of concrete barriers topped with razor wire. The entrance can only be reached by passing through several checkpoints.

The Taliban spokesman said three militants inside the prison had known about the plan, and that they had ushered prisoners to the tunnel.




Mohammad Abdullah, one of the inmates at Sarposa who Taliban spokesmen said had helped organise the escape, said "friends" had managed to obtain copies of the keys to the cells beforehand, suggesting collusion by the guards.

"When the time came at night, we managed to open the doors for friends who were in other rooms," he told the Associated Press.

Zabiullah Mujahid added: "In order to make sure it went smoothly, they only woke people up a few at a time, room by room. This was to keep the escape secret and to make sure the guards didn't know what was going on.

"People escaped in small numbers, room by room - this avoided overcrowding and noise. It was all very professional."


The tunnel dropped straight down for about 1.5m (5ft) from the cell floor
He said there had been no guards inside the cell where the tunnel emerged.

"At the other end, in the house where the tunnel started, we positioned suicide bombers so that if something happened, if fighting broke out, they could respond," he added.

He said 541 prisoners were able to escape during the operation, which began at about 2300 local time on Sunday and ended at 0330 on Monday morning.

Officials declined to provide details on any of the escaped inmates, but another Taliban spokesman said about 106 of the inmates were commanders - four of them former provincial chiefs.

The escapees were taken in vehicles to a "safe places" and then the Taliban alerted the media about what had just happened, Zabiullah Mujahid added. The prison authorities knew nothing about the escape until then, he claimed.

Officials at Sarposa prison say they discovered the breach at 0400.


In June 2008, the Taliban orchestrated the escape of more than 900 prisoners at Sarposa
The governor of Kandahar province, Tooryalai Wesa, said the breakout was "absolutely the fault of the ignorance of the security forces".

"This was not the work of a day, a week or a month of activities, this was actually months of work they spent to dig and free their men."

The police have mounted a massive search operation for the inmates. Officers had already rearrested 26 and shot two who tried to flee, Mr Wesa added.

But Zabiullah Mujahid denied that some of them had been found.

"These claims that they have recaptured people are untrue. They are just saying that to justify their negligence," he said.

In June 2008, the Taliban orchestrated the escape of more than 900 prisoners at Sarposa, including hundreds of militants, in an attack that killed 15 guards. A suicide bomber was used to blast open the gates.


Thursday 21 April 2011

”Restrepo” director Tim Hetherington killed in Libya

Posted On 09:58 by El NACHO 0 comments

Fighting in Libya's besieged rebel city of Misrata killed at least 10 civilians including an Oscar-nominated British filmmaker, and NATO urged non-combatants to avoid troops so it could step up air strikes.

Among the dead were British photojournalist Tim Hetherington, co-director of Oscar-nominated war documentary "Restrepo," and American photographer Chris Hondros, killed when a group they were in came under mortar fire.

Seven Libyan civilians and a Ukrainian doctor were also killed during fierce fighting in Libya's third largest city, medics said.

France promised the insurgents on Wednesday it would intensify air strikes on Libyan government forces and dispatch military liaison officers, echoing a move by Britain, to help organize poorly trained insurgents.

Rebels said they were battling for control of a major road in Misrata, a port of 300,000 people and the insurgents' last bastion in the west of the country, where civil war ignited in February over demands for an end to Gaddafi's 41-year rule.

 


Cornish photographer has been seriously injured working in Libya.

Posted On 09:56 by El NACHO 0 comments

Guy Martin, 28, from Falmouth, was covering fighting in the besieged city of Misrata when he was hit by shrapnel from a mortar.

It is thought Mr Martin suffered leg and stomach injuries. He is in a serious but stable condition in hospital.

Another British photographer, Tim Hetherington, and US photographer Chris Hondros, were killed.

Mr Martin was working with Panos Pictures agency when he was hurt.

He underwent hours of surgery at a local hospital, his girlfriend Polly Fields told BBC Radio Cornwall.

"We've had some positive news overnight," she said.

"They have confirmed that Guy has been stabilised. He had a wound to his stomach.

"He was in surgery for about six to eight hours. He's come out of that now. Now it's a case of getting him stable enough so he can be evacuated from Misrata."

Miss Fields said Mr Martin was travelling with a group of photographers when they came under mortar fire.

Mr Martin has worked for national and international publications in many countries including Iraq, Sudan and Russia. Earlier this year he covered the uprising in Egypt.

His work has appeared in a number of national newspapers including the Guardian, the Observer and the Sunday Times.

 


Tuesday 19 April 2011

Spain: U.N. won't bless expanded armed intervention in Libya

Posted On 20:03 by El NACHO 0 comments

A second U.N. Security Council authorizing expanded armed intervention in Libya is "impossible," Spain's defense minister said here Tuesday, adding that the goal of the current military operation should be to "create spaces for politics."

The Spanish government wants to see strongman Moammar Gadhafi depart Libya "as soon as possible," but regime change is not the aim of the U.N.-approved military operation, Carme Chacon told the defense committee of the lower house of Parliament.

She appeared before the committee to ask for a two-month extension of Spain's role in enforcing the no-fly zone over Libya, as well as possible Spanish assistance for U.N.-authorized operations providing humanitarian aid.

The minister said that the Spanish government wants both Gadhafi to step down and a cease-fire to be declared.

But she insisted that the goal of the military operation is to protect the civilian population by establishing a no-fly zone and a naval embargo to prevent arms and mercenaries from entering Libya.

"That is the mission of the (Spanish) armed forces...and nothing else," Chacon said.

The defense minister acknowledged that Libya runs the risk of becoming a "failed state," something that she said must be "avoided at any price" by supporting diplomatic endeavors.

Now, she said, the allies are asking Spain to continue helping maintain the no-fly zone for two more months, since a total of three months is a period that has been considered "reasonable" by both the United Nations and NATO.

She said that any new mission of humanitarian aid, in case the United Nations requests it, will consist for the Spanish armed forces of escort duties for the evacuation of civilians by air or sea, and the provision of ships for carrying food, medicine and other needed goods.



Minister claims France and UK 'violating' UN mandate as Nato airstrikes hit pro-Gaddafi communication centres

Posted On 20:01 by El NACHO 0 comments

The Anglo-French decision to send a team of military advisers to Libyan opposition forces in Benghazi is a "clear violation" of the UN security council remit, Muammar Gaddafi's deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kayim, has told the Guardian. "No one can legitimise such actions. They will get nothing in return apart from more casualties."

He accused Nato and the international coalition of overstepping the limits of the UN security council resolution authorising military action to protect civilians, saying they were "siding with the rebels. Everything they have been doing since the start is outside the mandate."

Libya's response came as fighting continued in Misrata and efforts intensified to bring in humanitarian aid to the population and evacuate those trapped in the besieged city. The Libyan government denied there was any bombardment by its forces.

Kayim said: "I think this is a big trap for Britain and France. They are dealing with the wrong groups. I can't understand why Britain and France are so keen to get themselves into trouble and in this trap."

The two western countries would find themselves allied with al-Qaida forces, he said, which pro-Gaddafi forces claim are embedded with the rebels.

The Anglo-French move followed Nato airstrikes which destroyed three telecommunications installations around the city of Sirte on Monday, according to the Libyan government.

Nato's goal was to cut off communications, Kayim said. "The aim is clear: to enable the rebels to advance and to cut communications between [government] troops." A large area around Sirte was without communications although the city centre was still functioning, he said.

Nato confirmed that communications infrastructure had been targeted and the headquarters of a Libyan army brigade. "Last night we conducted deliberate multiple strikes against command and control facilities of the Gaddafi regime, including communications infrastructure and a 32nd brigade headquarters located 10km south of Tripoli," Brigadier General Mark van Uhm said at Nato headquarters in Brussels.

The airstrikes on communications centres came "at the same time as the British government sends very sophisticated tele communications equipment to the rebels to enable them to organise themselves", Kayim told a press conference in Tripoli. He added: "If Nato really cared about civilians, they have to stop the airstrikes and stop siding with the rebels. Their aim is to push the country into a civil war. That's clear from day one."

He warned against any deployment of ground troops to protect humanitarian missions, as floated by the EU. "If there is any deployment of any armed personnel on Libyan ground, there will be fighting. The Libyan government will not take it as a humanitarian mission, it will be taken as a military mission," he said. "The Libyan people will not stay silent. They will join the armed forces and fight."

He said the Libyan government was doing its utmost "to help people and supply them with food", but he repeatedly declined to answer questions about whether Libya would agree to a pause in military action to allow humanitarian aid to reach the besieged city of Misrata.

"There is no need for such things. There is no bombardment from the armed forces on Misrata, none at all. There are pockets of resistance, but other areas are peaceful. There is no fighting in Misrata."

His claim contradicted witness accounts from inside the city and a Nato statement that Gaddafi's forces were shelling Misrata indiscriminately. Nato said its operations had inflicted "quite significant damage" to Libya's heavy weaponry while warning that Gaddafi's forces still had "considerable" resources left.

"But there is a limit to what can be achieved with airpower to stop fighting in a city. We are taking every precaution to avoid causing civilian casualties by our own air operations," said Van Uhm.

Admiral Giampaolo di Paola, chairman of Nato's military committee, speaking in Rome, said it was proving "very difficult" to strike against government forces in Misrata without inflicting civilian casualties. "It's not a conventional war," he added.

Witnesses in Misrata report that government snipers were firing from tall buildings and mosques.

The Libyan opposition claimed that 10,000 people had been killed since the start of the uprising, and more than 50,000 injured. It was unclear how casualty figures had been documented.

Kayim claimed the international coalition was exaggerating the number of casualties in Misrata: "This is all shit."

Opposition forces in Misrata say the city may be lost within days without increased military action from Nato, and they have appealed for troops to protect the passage of humanitarian aid through the bombarded port. The city is surrounded by government forces on all land sides; the port is the only means of access to and from the area controlled by opposition forces.

They say that around 1,000 people have been killed since the siege began in late February. More than 300 have been confirmed dead in the city's hospitals.

The UN's World Food Programme said on Tuesday it had sent eight trucks loaded with wheat flour and high-energy biscuits into government-controlled western Libya to reach areas affected by fighting. Battles between opposition forces and government troops have continued near the Tunisian border.

 


SAS raids were possible for specific missions.

Posted On 19:58 by El NACHO 0 comments

British Army officers are being sent to Libya to advise rebels fighting Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's forces.
The UK group will be deployed to the opposition stronghold of Benghazi, Libya's second city, in a mentoring role to help leaders co-ordinating attacks on the dictator's army.
The announcement came after a Royal Navy submarine launched cruise missiles on Libyan targets, with RAF warplanes attacking communication masts.
The handful of experienced officers will join a British team in Benghazi working with the opposition National Transitional Council (NTC), which UK Foreign Secretary William Hague described as "legitimate political interlocutors".
Mr Hague said the Army officers would help prevent attacks on civilians, in line with the United Nations Security Council resolution authorising military action against Gaddafi's forces.
He said: "These additional personnel will enable the UK to build on the work already being undertaken to support and advise the NTC on how to better protect civilians.
"In particular they will advise the NTC on how to improve their military organisational structures, communications and logistics, including how best to distribute humanitarian aid and deliver medical assistance."
The Foreign Secretary added: "Our officers will not be involved in training or arming the opposition's fighting forces. Nor will they be involved in the planning or execution of the NTC's military operations or in the provision of any other form of operational military advice."
Britain has supplied rebels with body armour and telecommunications equipment and the Government on Monday pledged £2 million to help thousands of stranded civilians flee war-torn Misrata by boat.
Speaking later to Sky News, Mr Hague again ruled out a ground invasion to unseat Gaddafi, but admitted further SAS raids were possible for specific missions.


The SAS are very use to working in small groups and they are the type of force that would be ideally suited to this sort of role. But we have to beware of mission creep.

Posted On 19:56 by El NACHO 0 comments

"The SAS are very use to working in small groups and they are the type of force that would be ideally suited to this sort of role. But we have to beware of mission creep."
Another defence source, speaking anonymously, said: "History has shown us that air power alone will not win campaigns.
"In the first Gulf War, Bosnia and Kosovo, air power played a vital role but a ground force was needed to achieve the mission. So the question for the UN is what to do next? It is clear now that some sort of ground campaign is needed.
"The question is, who should lead the ground campaign? The rebels do not have the capability, by using privatemilitary companies you run the risk of being accused of hiring mercenaries and under whose mandate would they operate?
"So the responsibility will fall to the UK, the US and France. Libya is heading for a bloody civil war and who ever leads the ground force will find themselves in the middle of it."


Britain said Tuesday it is sending military advisers to help organise Libyan rebels, even as western powers denied they could soon break their taboo against putting foreign boots on the ground.

Posted On 19:53 by El NACHO 0 comments

Britain said Tuesday it is sending military advisers to help organise Libyan rebels, even as western powers denied they could soon break their taboo against putting foreign boots on the ground.
The announcement came as France strongly warned against sending any coalition troops into Libya, where a two-month revolt against Moamer Kadhafi's regime has stalled and civilian casualties are mounting.
Foreign Secretary William Hague insisted the addition of about 12 military advisers to Britain's diplomatic team in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi did not breach a UN resolution authorising air strikes against Kadhafi's forces.
"They're not boots on the ground, this is not British ground combat forces going in... There is going to be no ground invasion of Libya," Hague told BBC television.
Hague said the British advisers would not arm or train the rebels, but would help them develop organisational structures, communications and logistics and coordinating humanitarian aid and medical supplies.
"They're people with the expertise in those sorts of things. They're not there, I stress, to train fighting forces, to arm fighting forces or of course to take part in any fighting themselves," he added.
The rebels "clearly lack that organisational experience and, yes, we do think that with that experience they will be able to save lives, in Ajdabiya, perhaps in Misrata," he said.
With thousands clamouring to escape the besieged rebel city of Misrata, Britain said it would charter ships to pick up 5,000 migrant workers after a ferry rescued nearly 1,000 on Monday.
In Paris, French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Tuesday that he was "entirely hostile" to the idea of sending coalition ground troops into Libya -- even special forces to guide air strikes.
Juppe brushed off a call from Axel Poniatowski, the influential chairman of the French parliament's foreign affairs committee, for elite allied forces to be deployed to help identify targets for coalition jets.
"I remain, for my part, entirely hostile to the deployment of forces on the ground," Juppe said.
He also played down reports that French troops were already liaising with rebel commanders at their Benghazi headquarters, insisting there was only a small French security team in the city to protect the French envoy.
A senior French diplomatic source admitted to AFP that a French officer had indeed been assigned to the rebel "control room" in Benghazi.
Juppe also called on NATO allies to help British and French jets break the siege of Misrata.
NATO jets and cruise missiles struck Kadhafi's command and control centres late Monday in an apparent bid to increase the pressure on Kadhafi, but the alliance acknowledged the limits of air power.
Dutch Brigadier General Mark van Uhm, speaking in Brussels, conceded that Kadhafi's tactic of using human shields and hiding tanks and other heavy weapons, especially around Misrata, has deterred some NATO missions.
Libyan rebel leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil however urged the coalition to push ahead and topple Kadhafi.
"Kadhafi will never give up power except by force," Jalil said in Rome after talks with Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.
Coalition powers have called for Kadhafi to stand down but have steered clear of suggesting that the UN Security Council resolution passed on March 19 enables them to topple him themselves.
Frattini said the opposition could be aided with military equipment and foreign oil sales, but like other western powers haunted by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan he too opposed an invasion of Libya.
"We don't have many alternatives. One of the alternatives is the use of ground troops. Italy is not in favour of sending ground troops," he said.
Frattini cited Jalil as saying that 10,000 people had been killed and up to 55,000 wounded in the conflict so far.


Monday 18 April 2011

David Cameron has raised the prospect of UK troops operating inside Libya

Posted On 09:09 by El NACHO 0 comments

The Prime Minister insisted that there would be no "occupation" of Libya, but repeatedly refused to rule out short-lived ground-level operations by British forces. Mr Cameron's words, in a television interview, led to renewed warnings of "mission creep" in Libya.
After more than four weeks of air strikes by Nato, Col Gaddafi's regime survives and the rebels trying to oust him have made little significant progress towards Tripoli. The Libyan government assault on the town of Misurata has added to pressure on Western leaders to intensify their intervention, and Mr Cameron confirmed that he was examining options for doing more to help the rebels.
"We have to ask ourselves what more can we do to protect civilian life and to stop Gaddafi's war machine unleashing such hell on his own people," he said.
Britain has already given body armour and communications technology to the rebels. "We're looking at those things and what else we can do," Mr Cameron said.
It is understood that British Special Forces soldiers are already operating inside Libya and some military experts have suggested those troops could be asked to help train and lead rebel forces.

 


Sunday 17 April 2011

Bahraini opposition leader has strongly criticized Bahrain's intensified pressure on peaceful protesters, describing the brutal crackdowns as “genocide.”

Posted On 13:33 by El NACHO 0 comments



“This is a crime against humanity, it is a genocide it is a sectarian apartheid,” said Saeed al-Shahabi of the London-based Bahrain Freedom Movement, in a Press TV interview on Saturday.

He went on to describe the brutal crackdowns in Bahrain as instances of “sectarian cleansing.”

Since the protests erupted in Bahrain three months ago, many Bahraini doctors have been arrested, tortured or sacked from their jobs, the human rights activist said.

This is aimed at discouraging the medical staff from treating anti-government protesters.

The Bahraini regime has also cut off scholarships for many Bahraini students studying overseas, leaving them in a dire state, Shahabi noted.

This comes amid heightened tensions across Bahrain, where government troops have launched a brutal crackdown on anti-government protesters that demand an end to the decades-long rule of the Al Khalifa dynasty.

On Saturday, clashes were reported between security forces and anti-government protesters in Bahrain's southern city of Sitra.

According to reports, government troops have also stormed the town of Al-Diraz, Sar village and neighboring areas.

Meanwhile, security forces are reported to have arrested over 800 people.

The Bahrain Center for Human Rights in Manama has reported that the people detained by the government forces are tortured. The rights group said that there have been bruises and lashing marks on the bodies of those detainees who have died while in government custody, after they were collected by their families.

In March, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait deployed their troops to Bahrain to reinforce the brutal armed clampdowns against mass protests.

Scores of protesters have been killed and many others gone missing during the harsh crackdowns.

Moreover, most Bahraini media outlets have been blocked and several mosques have been demolished by the government.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have condemned the Bahraini and Saudi regimes for their heavy-handed tactics against the Bahraini population.


Forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi fired rockets at rebel positions near the eastern city of Ajdabiya Sunday.

Posted On 13:31 by El NACHO 0 comments

Forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi fired rockets at rebel positions near the eastern city of Ajdabiya Sunday.

It is not immediately clear if there were any casualties from the shellings, which come a day after fighting west of the city left at least seven dead and 27 wounded.  

Fighting was reported Saturday in at least two other Libyan cities.  Rebels clashed with pro-Gadhafi forces in the oil town of Brega.

Witnesses also reported heavy fighting in the western city of Misrata.   Rebels have accused pro-government forces of using dangerous cluster bombs in the city - a charge that pro-Gadhafi forces deny.  

A rebel spokesperson told the Reuters news agency that Mr. Gadhafi's forces fired at least 100 of the widely banned explosives into an industrial area of the city on Saturday.   

Cluster munitions explode into numerous smaller explosives that can cause widespread and indiscriminate destruction.   They have been banned by most countries because they are so imprecise and dangerous.  Libyan authorities have denied using the explosives.

Meanwhile, the International Organization for Migration says a second boat was scheduled to leave for Misrata Saturday to rescue stranded migrants.  The relief group says the boat will also deliver hundreds of tons of humanitarian aid to Libya.

The new clashes follow diplomatic efforts this past week to try to ease the conflict, including a NATO meeting in Berlin and a meeting in Cairo that included Arab, African and European delegates.


Saturday 16 April 2011

Pro-government forces in Libya have been accused by a human rights campaign group of using cluster bombs

Posted On 07:42 by El NACHO 0 comments

Pro-government forces in Libya have been accused by a human rights campaign group of using cluster bombs, which are banned by more than 100 countries.

Human Rights Watch said one of its photographers had seen three mortar-launched projectiles explode over a residential area of Misrata.

A Libyan government spokesman denied the allegation.

Government troops have intensified their siege of Misrata, the only west Libyan city still in rebel hands.

The BBC's Orla Guerin reports from inside the battle-scarred city that local residents fear a massacre without greater action by Nato air forces to break the siege.


Saturday 9 April 2011

French helicopters were fired upon during an evacuation mission

Posted On 12:29 by El NACHO 0 comments

A military spokesman in Ivory Coast says that French helicopters were fired upon during an evacuation mission by forces supporting the country's strongman, who refuses to emerge from a bunker at his residence.
Cmdr. Frederic Daguillon, military spokesman for the French base in Ivory Coast, said Saturday that no soldiers were injured in the attack, but that French helicopters fired back at forces supporting Laurent Gbagbo and destroyed at least one armored vehicle.
He said the diplomatic evacuation mission was aborted.
France's embassy was also hit by two mortars and a rocket fired by Gbagbo's forces.
Forces supporting the democratically elected president have tried to force Gbagbo from his bunker but he refuses to emerge or cede power.


rating guarding Britain’s flagship nuclear submarine who shot dead a Royal Navy officer and left another critically injured was wrestled to the ground by civic dignitaries.

Posted On 10:10 by El NACHO 0 comments

Able seaman Ryan Donovan, who was wearing body armour and camouflage gear, fired several rounds before he was overpowered by Royston Smith, the leader of Southampton city council.
Cllr Smith, 46, said he reacted after he felt a bullet whistle past his head.
Sources said the rating, a London-born warfare specialist trained in tracking vessels, had just collected the rifle from the submarine’s weapons store as he came on guard duty, and was due to take up his sentry position on the gangplank when the row erupted.
The 22 year-old sailor who was held at the scene on suspicion of murder is understood to have opened fire with an SA80 assault rifle at 12.12pm after a row broke out in the control room of HMS Astute, which was berthed in the city.
On Friday night the dead officer, in his 30s, was named by sources as Lt-Cdr Ian Molyneux, the vessel’s weapons engineering officer.


Monday 4 April 2011

US extends airstrikes as Libyan rebels retreat

Posted On 01:06 by El NACHO 0 comments


The United States has agreed to extend air strikes in Libya into Monday as the oil town of Brega saw heavy fighting, with rebel forces advancing only to fall back after an ambush by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi.

The US air strikes, part of a coalition effort to protect civilians from Gaddafi's forces, would continue through Monday at NATO's request, because of "recent poor weather in Libya", the Pentagon says.

The US military had planned to begin withdrawing its combat jets and Tomahawk missiles from the air campaign against Libya's regime this weekend, as its NATO allies were to take the lead in bombing Gaddafi's forces.


Defected Libyan military commanders and their units are taking the lead in the fight against forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi,

Posted On 00:57 by El NACHO 0 comments

in a rebel bid to stanch setbacks on the front lines and facilitate greater cooperation with coalition forces.

But as the army has stepped up its role, a leadership squabble has emerged among two rebel commanders. That could pose an early test to the strength of the civilian rebel leadership's control over the military, since some military commanders appear to disagree with the leadership decisions made by the civilian leaders.


The two rival commanders are the rebel-appointed Army Chief of Staff Abdel Fattah Younis, the former Minister of Interior under Col. Gadhafi, and Col. Khalifa Hiftar, the former commander of Libyan forces in Chad during Libya's war there in the 1980s. Mr. Hiftar later defected and sought asylum in the U.S., residing in rural Virginia until he returned to Libya in mid-March, shortly before the coalition air campaign began.

The rebel leadership proclaimed Mr. Hiftar commander of the army after his return, but backtracked over the weekend. A rebel government spokesman and National Council member, Abdel Hafeez Goga, said Gen. Younis was the lone commander of the military and that Mr. Hiftar had no official role.

Defected army commanders said they began assuming control of the rebel ranks over the weekend, after the rebels' temporary governing body, the Transitional National Council, asked them to do so Thursday.

Rebel military leaders said the deployment of trained military forces led by experienced military commanders will bring increased discipline and battlefield smarts to a ragtag fighting corps that is high on enthusiasm, but light on experience.

In Tripoli, Growing Murmurs Of Dissent
The consequences of having large numbers of ill-trained overenthusiastic youth on the front lines was painfully evident in a friendly-fire incident Friday night, when a coalition airstrike hit a rebel position, killing 13 rebel fighters and wounding seven.

Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Ghatrani, a rebel army commander in Benghazi, said the errant airstrike was a result of jubilant youth firing rifles into the air in celebration while a coalition fighter jet was overhead. The jet mistook the rebels' celebratory fire for antiaircraft rounds from pro-Gadhafi forces.

Still, Gen. al-Ghatrani said the army has has begun the transition from a "training and consulting" role for young rebel fighters into a command and lead fighting role.

"The army has stepped up to the front in coordination with the rebel volunteers," he said. "Organized trained army units have begun advancing. Untrained rebels will be given new responsibilities in the rear."

Scores of disorganized rebel fighters continued to mob the front lines Sunday, making rushed advances and panicked retreats, witnesses said. But uniformed military personnel have begun trying to regulate the flow of volunteer fighters, setting up checkpoints and turning away untrained volunteers.

Rebel fighters appear to have successfully stabilized the front lines for the first time in weeks. They halted Mr. Gadahfi forces' eastward advance on Friday at the oil city of Brega, regrouped, reorganized and counterattacked the city on Friday night.

In the past 48 hours, they appear to have successfully driven Mr. Gadhafi's forces out of parts of the city and retaken portions of the eastern half, mounting what appears to be a slower and more measured advance.

On Sunday, there were also reports by Arab news channels of continued heavy shelling of Misrata, the lone rebel outpost in western Libya, where Col. Gadhafi's forces still largely hold sway.


Saturday 2 April 2011

Mohammed Ismail, an aide to Saif al Islam Gaddafi, visited London in recent days on what was described as a private visit.

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Prime Minister David Cameron's spokesman confirmed that the UK authorities had been in contact with Libyan officials but insisted "there are no deals".
"The next steps need to be an end to violence and Gaddafi needs to go", said the spokesman.
A Foreign Office spokeswoman earlier neither confirmed nor denied the report, saying: "We are not going to provide a running commentary on our contact with Libyan officials."
Noman Benotman, a Libya expert and senior analyst at the Quilliam think tank, said he had heard Ismail proposed a scenario under which Gaddafi's sons would take over, or at least have a role in a new government, and their father would step aside.
"It's too late for that," Benotman said.
Ismail is now believed to be back in Libya.


10 Libyan rebels are reported to have been killed when a coalition plane enforcing the no-fly zone fired on their convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya late on Friday night.

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10 Libyan rebels are reported to have been killed when a coalition plane enforcing the no-fly zone fired on their convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya late on Friday night.

A BBC correspondent at the scene said the attack came after rebels in five vehicles fired an anti-aircraft gun into the air.

Meanwhile, Libya's government has rejected a rebel ceasefire offer.

Spokesman Moussa Ibrahim dismissed the idea as "mad".

Troops loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi would never withdraw from the rebel-held cities they were besieging, he said.

He also condemned recent coalition air strikes as "a crime against humanity" and said there had been civilian casualties in one attack on Thursday.


Gaddafi aide Moussa Koussa faces more questions

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Moussa Koussa's career

1979-80: De facto ambassador in London
1994: Appointed head of foreign intelligence
2009: Appointed foreign minister; reportedly resigns 30 March 2011
Profile: Gaddafi's intelligence chief
Lockerbie father hails defection
Questioned about whether the UK was backing the opposition, Dr Fox said the UN resolution "gives us the freedom to assist those who are helping protect the civilian population.

Scottish prosecutors want to question Moussa Koussa over the 1988 Lockerbie bombing

The UK is still seeking information from ex-Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa, who fled to London on Thursday, Defence Secretary Liam Fox has said.

Asked what should happen now to Mr Koussa, Dr Fox told the BBC he would not provide daily updates but "clearly we want to get information from him".

He said he wanted the message to reach the Libyan regime that its leader, Muammar Gaddafi, should go.

Mr Koussa told officials he was no longer willing to represent the regime.

Scottish prosecutors have asked to interview Mr Koussa about the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, which left 270 people dead.

Asked whether Mr Koussa would stand trial if evidence was found linking him to Lockerbie, Dr Fox said: "It's very clear in Britain that our judicial process moves independently from government."

Previously, Prime Minister David Cameron has insisted that Mr Koussa had not been offered immunity from prosecution.

In the interview with BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Dr Fox objected to describing those fighting pro-Gaddafi forces as the "rebels", insisting they were "opposition forces" because the regime has no legitimacy.




The wife of the Libyan foreign minister who defected to Britain earlier this week has been seized by Colonel Gaddafi and is being interrogated by his "internal security" officials,

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She is thought to have been captured amid eyewitness reports of a fierce gunfight at Col Gaddafi's central Tripoli compound as the regime stepped in to stop further defections.
Yesterday, local residents recalled how the most fierce firefight yet seen in central Tripoli had erupted within hours of the regime confirming that the Foreign Minister had defected.
"The blocks in that area are the homes to high ranking official of the state who must live close to Col Gaddafi. People say that some of them were trying to flee with their families when they came under attack from the guards," said a local resident.
"They gave as they got but there was a panic that the regime had to cover up."
"In the morning they were still cleaning up the blood," he said. "It was a big operation."


Friday 1 April 2011

senior aide to Saif al-Islam, Col Gaddafi’s son, had been sent to London for secret talks according to reports, in an indication that the regime was looking for an exit strategy.

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There was even specualtion that Saif himself may have already left Libya in Mr Koussa’s convoy but such a suggestion was dismissed.
The Foreign Office did not comment on the report which asserted that British officials met with Mohammed Ismail.
The meeting was one of a number conducted between the two nations in the last two weeks, according to the Guardian and is believed to have addressed the possibility of an exit strategy for Gaddafi.
Despite a low profile in Libya and internationally, Mr Ismail is a key aide to Saif al-Islam and represented the nation in arms purchase negotiations, cables leaked on the WikiLeaks website have disclosed.
The report comes as David Cameron was put under pressure to ensure that the Libyan defector who arrived in Britain earlier this week co-operates with authorities investigating the Lockerbie bombing, the murder of Pc Yvonne Fletcher and potential war crimes.

Moussa Koussa, the Libyan foreign minister, who fled to Britain on Wednesday, is described as having "electrifying" information on Col Muammar Gaddafi's role in terrorist atrocities across Europe.
The Prime Minister said he would not block any attempts by the police to question Mr Koussa.
Mr Cameron stressed that Mr Koussa had not been offered a deal in return for fleeing to Britain and had not been granted immunity from prosecution. But if the defector is arrested and charged with crimes, it may undermine attempts by Western governments to encourage others in Col Gaddafi's inner circle to flee from Libya, a key aim of current diplomatic efforts.
Mr Koussa may also be reluctant to co-operate fully with British officials if he is not given guarantees about his future.
Last night, the Scottish prosecuting authorities investigating the Lockerbie bombing formally requested access to Mr Koussa, a right-hand man to Col Gaddafi for more than 30 years.
International prosecutors investigating war crimes in Libya are also expected to seek interviews with the defector. Yesterday, the Libyan rebel leadership demanded he be returned to the country to face war-crime charges.
Mr Koussa, who was likened yesterday to Rudolf Hess by a Conservative MP, is being interrogated by MI6 at an unknown location. It is not clear whether information obtained by MI6 will be made public.
Senior Whitehall sources indicated that Scotland Yard was unlikely to get involved "at the moment".
The Libyan foreign minister was identified yesterday by Jack Straw, the former Labour foreign secretary, as a key source for British and American intelligence for more than a decade.
Last night Ali Abdessalam Treki, a Libyan former foreign minister and UN General Assembly president, also defected. Ibrahim Dabbashi, Libya's deputy UN ambassador, said that most high-level Libyan officials were trying to defect but were having trouble leaving due to tight security. A senior figure at the Libyan Embassy in London also defected.
In other developments yesterday:
• The head of Nato ruled out arming the Libyan rebels less than 24 hours after Mr Cameron admitted that the plan was under consideration. The US defence secretary said that another country, rather than America, should be take charge of "assisting" the rebels.
• America warned that Col Gaddafi was "not about to break", citing reports that regime troops were laying landmines around rebel-held areas.
• British special forces were said to be operating beside the CIA on the ground in Libya despite official denials that land troops were in action.
• The Vatican claimed to have evidence that coalition air strikes had killed dozens of civilians in Tripoli.
• The Libyan government said that Col Gaddafi and his family would remain in Libya "until the end" despite growing speculation they would seek exile.
Last night, details of Mr Koussa's dramatic escape from Libya began to emerge. According to Foreign Office sources, Mr Koussa's arrival was in doubt up until the final few hours before he touched down at Farnborough Airfield in a private jet chartered by the British military.
He told the regime that he was travelling to Tunisia to seek medical treatment for high blood pressure. The British Government was informed that he wished to head to this country but there was concern that he would instead fly on to Italy, another destination he was said to have favoured.
One government source said: "We absolutely did not want to lose him. It was vital that he did not go to Italy."
While Mr Koussa was airborne, Mr Cameron is said to have spoken to American officials and secured their backing for allowing him into Britain.
As well as Lockerbie, officials are keen to question Mr Koussa about links to the IRA. Col Gaddafi is widely suspected of supplying arms to the terrorists at the height of IRA's bombing campaign in the 1980s.
Mr Koussa, who was previously in charge of the Libyan intelligence service has been described as the “master of terror” who was previously expelled from Britain for endorsing the assassination of dissidents in London. Western intelligence has linked him to planning the Lockerbie bombing.
Over the past few months, Mr Cameron has played a leading role in calling for key Gaddafi regime figures to face war-crime trials. The Prime Minister has also spoken of his disgust at the release of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the Libyan intelligence officer convicted of the Lockerbie bombing.
Last night Lord Fraser of Carmyllie, the former Lord Advocate who initiated and oversaw the Lockerbie case, suggested that a “snatch squad” should be sent to Tripoli to try to secure any Libyan papers on the atrocity. He said it was unlikely Mr Koussa had brought documents with him but added that he had always had “dark suspicions” that the bomb plot came from the “heart of government”.
“I think we should send in a snatch squad to secure what papers they have before they are shredded,” said the Tory peer. Yesterday, at a press conference, Mr Cameron stressed that Mr Koussa would not be offered a “deal”.
The Prime Minister said: “Let me be clear, Moussa Koussa is not being granted immunity, there is no deal of that kind.
“And the point I would make about the dreadful events over Lockerbie: that investigation is still open and the police and the prosecuting authorities are entirely independent of government and they should follow their evidence wherever it leads and the Government will assist them in any way possible.”
MPs from all political parties yesterday insisted that it was vital that Koussa did not escape justice. Robert Halfon, a Conservative MP who has tabled several parliamentary motions on Lockerbie, said: “I think what has happened is comparable to Rudolf Hess coming here during the Second World War.
“The fact is that this man is most likely a war criminal, allegedly been responsible for the deaths of British citizens, allegedly the organiser of the Lockerbie bombing, he’s part of the Gaddafi totalitarian regime and in my view and that of many others he needs to go to the international court to face trials for war crimes.”


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