Obama says West will finish Libya fight, as Misrata mined

DNE
DNE
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TRIPOLI: The United States and France are united in their resolve to finish the job in Libya, US President Barack Obama said Friday as NATO reported that Moamer Qaddafi’s forces had laid landmines in Misrata.

In a dramatic shift, meanwhile, Russia joined the call of Western powers for Qaddafi to step down but the outgoing head of the Arab League Amer Mussa said he doubted the embattled leader would leave voluntarily.

"We are joined in our resolve to finish the job," Obama said after talks with French President Nicolas Sarkozy at the G8 summit in the French resort of Deauville.

But the US leader warned that the "UN mandate of civilian protection cannot be accomplished when Qaddafi remains in Libya directing his forces in acts of aggression against the Libyan people."

G8 leaders from Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States called in the draft of their final summit statement for Qaddafi to step down.

"Qaddafi and the Libyan government have failed to fulfill their responsibility to protect the Libyan population and have lost all legitimacy.

He has no future in a free, democratic Libya. He must go," the draft summit statement said.

Ahead of the summit, Russia — which has criticized the NATO air war on Qaddafi’s regime — was seen as reluctant to take a hard line, but it too toughened its stance on Libya during the Deauville meeting.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said: "Yes, we are ready to admit… he needs to go. We believe that Colonel Qaddafi has forfeited legitimacy due to his actions… indeed we need to help him go."

But the Arab League’s Mussa said there was a yawning gap between Tripoli and the rebel National Transitional Council on the question of Qaddafi, with the rebels demanding he go immediately and the regime saving his exit for "later."

"Knowing the man, I don’t think he’s going to step down," he said.

A Western diplomat meanwhile said Qaddafi has become increasingly paranoid about NATO air strikes and that he "appears to be moving from hospital to hospital, spending each night in a different one."

"He is moving from one place that we won’t bomb to another place that we won’t bomb," the diplomat said citing British intelligence reports.

NATO accused Qaddafi’s forces of laying landmines in Misrata, the main rebel-held city in western Libya.

"This morning’s reports showed that a minefield was laid in the Misrata area," Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, the commander of the NATO mission in Libya, told a Brussels news conference.

"Anti-personnel landmines, in contravention to international law, had been laid in the Misrata area to prevent the population from moving," he said.

"Mines do not make a difference whether it is a child or an adult."

Bouchard also said NATO was gearing up to deploy French and British attack helicopters against Qaddafi’s forces as soon as possible.

He welcomed the arrival of four French Tattack helicopters and four British Appaches as particularly "timely."

The low-flying helicopters would allow NATO to conduct an "effective and aggressive" mission against Qaddafi’s forces and make it easier to pinpoint vehicles involved in attacks against civilian populations, he said
Two international rights groups, meanwhile, said on Friday Qaddafi’s forces are indiscriminately attacking towns in the Nafusa mountains of western Libya, sending residents fleeing, with some being forced to live in caves.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a report released Friday that Qaddafi’s forces have been pounding towns in the Nafusa mountains of western Libya, firing Grad rockets, which are an "an inherently indiscriminate weapon," and "forcing people to leave the area and even live in caves."

"Grad rocket attacks are launched almost every day into residential areas with no discernible military target," said Sarah Lea Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

Another advocacy group, Amnesty International, said the Nafusa mountain towns have been "under siege and under fire" since early March but fighting between rebels and troops loyal to the regime intensified mid-April sending thousands of people fleeing to neighboring Tunisia.

The London-based rights watchdog said it also had documented cases of "enforced disappearances," particularly of young men who are believed to have been snatched by Qaddafi’s forces.

On Thursday, the Libyan regime said Tripoli wanted a monitored ceasefire.

"We have asked the United Nations and the African Union to set a date and specific hours for a ceasefire, to send international observers and take the necessary measures" to end combat, Prime Minister Baghdadi Al-Mahmoudi said.

But NATO insisted it would keep up its air raids in Libya until Qaddafi’s forces stop attacking civilians and until the regime’s proposed ceasefire is matched by its actions.

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