Libyan  rebel stand in a training camp in Zintan, in the region of Nalut.  Libya’s tribes urged Muammar Qadhafi today to cede power, as rebels  backed by Nato air strikes said they forced the strongman’s missiles out  of range of the lifeline port of Misrata.  
TRIPOLI:  The United States took steps to throw a financial lifeline to rebels  controlling eastern Libya while forces loyal to Muammar Qadhafi focused  their firepower on pockets of resistance in the west.
Rebels  said Qadhafi’s forces fired Russian-made Grad rockets, which rights  groups, say should not be used in civilian areas, at the rebel-held  western towns of Misrata and Zintan following Nato strikes to free  Misrata’s port. In Zintan, the rebels struck back.
“Rebels  attacked posts belonging to Qadhafi forces east of Zintan in the early  evening. The posts have been used to fire rockets into Zintan,” the  spokesman, called Abdulrahman, told Reuters.
“The rebels destroyed at least three tanks and captured two others.”
Remoter  areas of western Libya also came under fire from forces loyal to  Qadhafi, trying to break an uprising against his four-decade rule that  has put most of the east in rebel hands since it began in mid-February.
“Many  in the Western Mountains in towns such as Yefrin, Zintan and Kabau are  being killed by this indiscriminate shelling,” senior rebel National  Council spokesman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga told a news conference in Benghazi  in the east.
The United States voiced confidence in the  Benghazi-based main opposition council Wednesday as the US Treasury  moved to permit oil deals with the group, which is struggling to provide  funding for the battle-scarred areas under its control.
The order  by the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control may  help to clear up concerns among potential buyers over legal  complications related to ownership of Libyan oil and the impact of  international sanctions.
The first major oil shipment from  rebel-held east Libya, reported to be 80,000 tonnes of crude, was  expected to arrive in Singapore on Thursday for refuelling but oil  traders told Reuters finding a buyer was not straightforward, with many  of the usual traders still worried about legal complications.
A  tanker booked for Italian oil company Eni to carry crude to Italy from  Qadhafi-held territory in Libya never arrived in port and left empty  last week because the sanctions meant the government would not have got  paid, trade sources said.
“They didn’t want the crude to go,  because they wouldn’t have gotten any money for it,” an industry source  said on Wednesday, adding, “They could use it to refine into gasoline.”
Fighting Out Of Sight
Residents  say pro-Qadhafi forces have been surrounding mountain-top towns in  western Libya, cutting them off from food, water and fuel supplies and  unleashing indiscriminate bombardments on their homes with rockets and  mortars.
Libyan officials deny targeting civilians, saying they  are fighting armed gangs and al Qaeda sympathisers who are terrorising  the local population.
Rebels who seized a remote post on the  western border with Tunisia hurriedly dug trenches after hearing that  forces loyal to Qadhafi were on their way to re-take the crossing.
The  sound of distant explosions could occasionally be heard coming from the  Libyan side of the border, signs of a battle that has been going on for  weeks in the Western Mountains region, largely out of sight of the  outside world.
The rebel spokesman in the Western Mountains town  of Zintan, scene of some of the region’s most intense fighting, said  there was heavy bombardment there on Wednesday, that at least 15 people  were wounded and five houses destroyed.
Misrata also came under  fire from Grad missiles, the rebels said, after Nato air strikes forced  Qadhafi’s troops away from the port, the only connection the besieged  city has with the outside world.
Both the rebels and the European Union said the shelling of the Misrata port threatened a vital supply and rescue route.
“We  are receiving reports of hospitals being overwhelmed by a growing  number of wounded,” EU Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva said in a  statement.
An aid ship took advantage of a brief lull in the  fighting to rescue Libyans and a French journalist wounded in the  fighting in Misrata, along with migrant workers, from the western rebel  enclave and headed for Benghazi, centre of the rebel heartland in the  east.
“Despite heavy shelling of the port area about 935 migrants  and Libyans have been rescued and are now safely en route to Benghazi,”  the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said.
A UN  human rights group is in Libya to investigate accusations pro-Qadhafi  forces have violated human rights and attacked civilians.



 



 
 
 
 






 
 
 
