Africa:: Libya Unrest
Libya rebels claim 'Misurata is free'
At least 10 dead and dozens hurt in street battles as government troops reported to be withdrawing from besieged city.
Rebels have declared Misurata "free" amid reports that government troops have been ordered to withdraw from Libya's besieged western port city.
"Misurata is free, the rebels have won. Of Gaddafi's forces, some are killed and others are running away," rebel spokesman Gemal Salem told Reuters news agency by telephone from the city.
Soldiers captured by rebel fighters on Saturday said the army had been ordered to retreat from the western port city.
"The rebels attacked us while we were withdrawing from Misurata near a bridge this morning," said Ayad Muhammad, a young soldier.
At least 10 people were killed in street battles in the city on Saturday, a doctor told AFP at a hospital overwhelmed by an influx of casualties including government soldiers.
"Since eight o'clock this morning, we have received 10 dead and 50 wounded, which is usually the number for a full day," Khalid Abu Salra said at the main Hikma hospital in Libya's third-largest city.
"We're overwhelmed, overwhelmed. We lack everything: personnel, equipment and medicines."
Hundreds of civilians have been killed in the fighting in Libya's third-largest city.
Tactical change
Saturday's upsurge in the battle for Misurata comes after the Gaddafi government said its soldier had been issued an "ultimatum" by local tribes to stop the rebellion in the city, 200 kilometres east of the capital Tripoli.
Libyan officials late on Friday acknowledged that the siege had been broken when rebels seized the port and NATO air strikes had taken their toll.
"The tactic of the Libyan army is to have a surgical solution, but it doesn't work, with the air strikes it
doesn't work," Khaled Kaim, the Libyan deputy foreign minister, said in the capital, Tripoli.
"The situation in Misurata will be eased, will be dealt with by the tribes around Misrata and the rest of Misurata's people and not by the Libyan army."
Abdelsalam, a rebel spokesman in Misurata, said pro-Gaddafi tribes were in a minority in the area.
"There are two small pro-Gaddafi settlements outside Misurata. They make less than one per cent of the population of Misurata and the surrounding area.
"Those people know that when Gaddafi's regime falls, they will fall with it," Abdelsalam added, predicting the government would boost their strength by paying mercenaries to pose as tribesmen.
Hours after the government's announcement of a shift in tactics in Misurata, NATO bombs struck what appeared to be a bunker near Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziya compound in central Tripoli.
Reuters reporters who were part of a guided government tour for foreign reporters said the area was surrounded by a wall and guarded by watchtowers and soldiers.
They saw two large holes in the ground where the bombs had torn through soil and reinforced concrete, to pierce what appeared to be an underground bunker.
There was mixed reaction to the government's announcement about changing tactics.
Mustafa bin Sweid, a doctor at Misurata hospital, was sceptical about the government's withdrawal announcement, saying: "We don't believe anything that Gaddafi's people say. Just listen to the sounds of the mortars … they're lying."
Another doctor told Reuters on condition of anonymity that Gaddafi's forces were on the defensive, adding: "I don't think they would do this for tactical reasons. They're humiliated."
On Friday, rebels in Misurata seized control of a downtown office building that had been a base for Gaddafi's snipers and other troops after a furious two-week battle.
An aid ship chartered by the International Organisation for Migration delivered 160 tonnes of food and medicine to Misurata on Saturday before evacuating around 1,000 stranded refugees, mostly Nigerians.
Source: Agencies
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