BREAKING: Gaddafi will not be pursued if he leaves in 72
hours<http://www.libyafeb17.com/2011/03/breaking-gaddafi-will-not-be-pursued-if-he-leaves-in-72-hours/>
Posted on March 8,
2011<http://www.libyafeb17.com/2011/03/breaking-gaddafi-will-not-be-pursued-if-he-leaves-in-72-hours/>
by Admin <http://www.libyafeb17.com/author/admin/>

Mustafa Abdul Jalil, head of the Transitional Council in Libya has told Al
Jazeera tha Gaddafi will not be pursued if he leaves and stops the bombings
in 72 hours.


  Rebels set demands for Gaddafi exit
Head of Libyan opposition says Gaddafi 'will not be pursued' if he quits
within 72 hours and stops bombing countrymen.
 Last Modified: 08 Mar 2011 15:04 GMT
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Rebels will not pursue Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi over crimes they say he
has committed if he steps down from his post in the next 72 hours, the head
of the rebel National Libyan Council has told Al Jazeera.

"If he leaves Libya immediately, during 72 hours, and stops the bombardment,
we as Libyans will step back from pursuing him for crimes," Mustafa Abdel
Jalil, head of the opposition National Council, told Al Jazeera on Tuesday.

He said the deadline would not be extended beyond 72 hours.

"Based on our love for our country we have proposed to the [Gaddafi's]
indirect negotiators that a solution can be reached," Jalil told Al Jazeera.

"Conditions are that firstly he stops all combat in the fields, secondly
that his departure is within 72 hours; thirdly we may waive our right of
domestic prosecution ... for the crimes of oppression, persecution,
starvation and massacres.

"We will have to wait and see what the regime's response is."

Libyan state television on Tuesday denied reports that the Libyan leader
tried to strike a deal with opposition forces seeking his removal. An
official from the Libyan foreign ministry described the reports as "absolute
nonsense".

However, a spokesman for the opposition National Council in the eastern
rebel stronghold of Benghazi confirmed that a representative had sought to
negotiate Gaddafi's exit.

Gaddafi was reported to have sent a representative to Benghazi on Sunday
night to discuss a conditional plan to step down, Al Jazeera learned. The
offer was provided on the condition that Gaddafi would be able to keep his
assets and avoid prosecution.
  *LIVE BLOG* <http://blogs.aljazeera.net/live/africa/libya-live-blog-march-8>

The Libyan leader is said to be willing to step down in return for dropping
war crimes charges against him and guaranteeing a safe exit for him and his
family. He also reportedly wants guarantees from the UN that he will be
allowed to keep his money.

*Appeal for dialogue*

On Monday evening, a leading member of the government appealed to rebel
leaders for dialogue, another sign that Gaddafi may be ready to compromise
with opponents challenging his rule.

Jadallah Azous Al-Talhi, a Libyan prime minister in the 1980s, appeared on
state television on Monday reading an address to elders in Benghazi, asking
them to "give a chance to national dialogue to resolve this crisis, to help
stop the bloodshed, and not give a chance to foreigners to come and capture
our country again".

The appeal did not detail any concessions that Gaddafi's administration
would be prepared to make. The rebels said they will settle for nothing less
than an end to Gaddafi's four decades in power.

The fact that Al-Talhi's appeal was broadcast on tightly-controlled state
television indicated that it was officially endorsed.

Until now Gaddafi and his entourage have shown little public appetite for
dialogue, describing the rebels as armed youths under the influence of drugs
who have been manipulated by al-Qaeda and foreign powers.

Tripoli last week appointed an envoy to take humanitarian aid to Benghazi
but it was not clear if the envoy had a mandate to negotiate with the
rebels.

*Strengthening military positions*

Security forces loyal to Gaddafi have strengthened their military position
in the last few days, squeezing rebel-held towns in the west and checking
the advance of rebel militias westwards towards the capital, Tripoli.

There has been intense fighting in Ras Lanuf - a key Libyan oil terminal in
the centre of the country - amid reports of several air strikes on Tuesday.

Families residing there began heading eastward in an apparent attempt to
flee the fighting in that strategic port town, our correspondent there said.
Several people were reported to have been killed in battles a day earlier,
including a family trying to flee the fighting.

Gaddafi supporters are moving eastward in an effort to push the rebels back
and recapture fallen towns, with reports emerging on Monday that they took
control of the central Libyan town of Bin Jawad, but which on Tuesday was
reportedly back in the hands of rebels.

There was also fierce fighting in the eastern city of Misurata, located
between Tripoli and Gaddafi's hometown Sirte, with reports of at least 18
people killed on Monday.

Valerie Amos, UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and
emergency relief co-ordinator, said in a statement that the Benghazi Red
Crescent reported that Misurata was also under attack by government forces
again.

"Humanitarian organisations need urgent access now,'' she said. "People are
injured and dying and need help immediately."

Witnesses also told Al Jazeera that Az-Zawiyah, west of Tripoli, was under
heavy attack by government forces.

For now, the Gaddafi government has managed to halt the rebel advance that
began last week when fighters ventured beyond the opposition-controlled
eastern half of the country.

*Rebels plead for help*

The rebel forces say they will be outgunned if the government continues to
unleash its air attacks on them and are pleading for the international
community to impose a no-fly zone to prevent this.

"We don't want a foreign military intervention, but we do want a no-fly
zone," rebel fighter Ali Suleiman told AP.

"We are all waiting for one,'' he said. The rebels can take on "the rockets
and the tanks, but not Gaddafi's air force''.

The US president said on Monday that the US and its NATO allies were still
considering a military response to the violence even as Britain and France
were drafting a UN resolution that would establish a no-fly zone.

Barack Obama said the US will stand with the Libyan people as they face
"unacceptable'' violence. He also sent a strong message to Gaddafi, saying
he and his supporters will be held responsible for the violence there.
  
<http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/spotlight/libya/><http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/spotlight/libya/>
*Read more of our Libya
coverage<http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/spotlight/libya/>
*

William Hague, the UK foreign minister, said Britain is "working closely
with partners on a contingency basis on elements of a resolution on a no-fly
zone".

However, a British diplomat at the UN clarified that the draft resolution is
being prepared in case it is needed but no decision has been made to
introduce it at the Security Council.

The six US-allied Gulf Arab nations on Monday said they back a UN-enforced
no-fly zone over Libya to protect civilians. The Gulf states also condemned
the killings by pro-government forces in Libya as "massacres".

Arab foreign ministers are to hold crisis talks on Friday to discuss
imposing a no-fly zone over Libya, Arab League
officials said.

Hundreds if not thousands of people have died since Libya's uprising began
on February 14 in an effort to end Gaddafi's more than 41-year rule,
although tight restrictions on media make it near impossible to get an
accurate number.

The number of people who have fled the violence in Libya since last month
has passed 215,000 according to the International Organisation for
Migration, most of them foreign workers. The exodus is creating a
humanitarian crisis across the border with Tunisia.

The UN refugee agency warned on Tuesday that there was a critical shortage
of long haul flights to evacuate foreign migrants who have fled Libya to
their home countries in Asia and Africa.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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