Gaddafi to stay in Libya, FM resigns
April 01, 2011 00:00:00
TRIPOLI, Mar 31 (agencies): - Libya's government on Thursday shrugged off the departure of foreign minister Mussa Koussa, saying Moamer Gaddafi's regime "does not depend on individuals," in its first admission of the defection.
"This is a struggle for the whole nation. It's not dependant on individuals or officials" regardless of their ranking, government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told reporters.
"I'm not confirming anything... silence is our weapon," he said.
Asked whether colonel Gaddafi and his children are still in Libya, he said: "Be assured, we are all here. We will all be here until the end. It is our country. We are strong on all fronts."
Koussa arrived at Farnborough Airfield, west of London, from Tunisia on Wednesday, after he resigned and travelled "under his own free will," according to Britain's Foreign Office.
In London, the UK said it has not offered Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa immunity from prosecution following his unexpected arrival in the country.
Foreign Secretary William Hague said Mr Koussa had resigned and the Gaddafi regime was "crumbling from within".
He urged others close to Col Gaddafi to "embrace the better future for Libya".
British officials are questioning Mr Koussa, a former head of intelligence who was close to Col Gaddafi.
The development comes as Libyan rebels continue to retreat from recently captured towns along the eastern coast.
A column of retreating rebel fighters came under heavy fire between Brega and Ajdabiya on Thursday. The rebels had earlier lost the key oil port of Ras Lanuf and the nearby town of Bin Jawad.
In the west, the rebel-held town of Misrata is still reportedly coming under attack from pro-Gaddafi troops.
Since the uprising began in February, a number of senior Libyan officials have joined the opposition to Col Gaddafi.
They include the interior minister, the justice minister and the ambassadors to the US, the UN, France and India.
A Foreign Office spokesperson said on Wednesday: "Moussa Koussa is one of the most senior figures in Gaddafi's government and his role was to represent the regime internationally - something that he is no longer willing to do."
Mr Koussa at Farnborough Airport, in Hampshire, on what is believed to have been a British military plane.
A Libyan spokesman denied that Mr Koussa had defected and said he was on a diplomatic mission. The BBC's Nick Springate, who is near the frontline outside Brega, says the rebels' lead vehicle was destroyed by heavy artillery on Thursday. Other vehicles in the convoy have fled back towards Ajdabiya.
The lack of military leadership and hardware is stopping this determined force of unprofessional soldiers moving forward and actually taking on the pro-Gaddafi forces.
Maj Gen Suleiman Mahmoud, the second-in-command for the rebels, told the agencies that rebels forces needed time, patience and help to organise themselves.
"Our problem [is] we need help - communication, radios, we need weapons," he said, adding that the rebels had a strategy but fighters did not always obey orders
Meanwhile, US media reports say President Barack Obama has authorised covert support for the Libyan rebels.
The CIA and White House have both declined to comment on the reports.
The US and the UK have suggested the UN resolution authorising international action in Libya could also permit the supply of weapons.
However France - which helped push through the UN resolution authorising "all necessary measures" to protect civilians from Col Gaddafi's forces - says it is not planning to arm the rebels.
On Thursday French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet said such assistance was "not compatible" with the resolution.
Nato took sole command of international air operations over Libya on Thursday. It said it had the means to enforce the UN resolution.
The alliance also said it was investigating reports of civilian casualties in Western air strikes on Tripoli.