TRIPOLI, May 14 (Reuters) - Libyan state television carried brief audio tape remarks it said were by Muammar Gaddafi in which he taunted NATO as a cowardly crusader whose bombs could not kill him.
The comments were aired on Friday after Italy's foreign minister said Gaddafi had very likely left the Libyan capital and probably been wounded by NATO air strikes, an account Tripoli dismissed.“I tell the cowardly crusader (NATO) that I live in a place they cannot reach and where you cannot kill me,” said the man on the audio tape, whose voice sounded like Gaddafi's.
“Even if you kill the body you will not be able to kill the soul that lives in the hearts of millions,” he said, adding he had received a “massive” number of calls after a NATO air strike on his Bab al-Aziziyah compound in Tripoli on Thursday.
Government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said Gaddafi was unharmed and in Tripoli, leading the country and in good spirits.
NATO allies including the United States, Britain and France are bombing Libya as part of a U.N. mandate to protect civilians. They say they will not stop until the downfall of the Libyan leader, who took power in a coup 41 years ago.
Explosions rocked the capital of the North African country overnight, a Reuters witness said.
Rebels have mounted a three-month-old uprising against Gaddafi's rule and control Benghazi and the oil-producing east of Libya. Thousands of people have been killed in the fighting.
A NATO air strike on the eastern Libyan city of Brega on Friday that the Libyan government said killed 11 people and wounded 45, was directed against a “command and control bunker”, the alliance said in a statement in Brussels.
“We are aware of allegations of civilian casualties in connection to this strike, and although we cannot independently confirm the validity of the claim, we regret any loss of life by innocent civilians when they occur,” said NATO.
It said the building struck had been clearly identified as a command-and-control centre.
WASHINGTON MEETING
U.S. President Barack Obama gave the rebels his stamp of approval on Friday by having rebel leaders visit the White House for talks.
A delegation from the Transitional Council led by Mahmoud Jebril met U.S. national security adviser Tom Donilon. White House spokesman Jay Carney called the Transitional Council “a credible and legitimate interlocutor for the Libyan people”.
U.S. recognition of the council as the representative of the Libyan people was under review, he said. |