Audio By Carbonatix
Anti-Gaddafi fighters have breached the former Libya leader's hometown of Sirte from the east for the first time, as their three-day long assault continues.
Soldiers traded rocket fire with Gaddafi loyalists as they edged from the eastern suburbs into the city.
The advance comes two days after the soldiers, loyal to the National Transitional Council, attacked from the west before retreating again.
Sirte is one of the last remaining strongholds of Gaddafi loyalists.
The BBC's Alastair Leithead, in Sirte, says civilians have been streaming out of the city - some of them were not aware that Tripoli had fallen.
Many of them were terrified, he says, having been told that rebel fighters would slit their throats if they ventured out of the city.
Our correspondent says the remaining civilians are in increasing danger, caught in the middle of intensifying fighting.
Gaddafi loyalists have been fiercely protecting the city from NTC advances in recent weeks.
The NTC troops were forced to retreat on Saturday after getting very close to the centre from the west.
Sirte is a sprawling city and much of the fighting has been conducted over a long distance, with artillery and tank shells and Nato air strikes.
Sirte and Bani Walid, about 250km (155 miles) further west, are the only two major cities still holding out against the NTC.
Fighting is continuing around Bani Walid, with one rebel commander telling the AFP news agency he expected the final battle for control to be within the next two days.
"Since this morning we have been hitting Gaddafi's forces non-stop with heavy artillery, tanks and anti-aircraft guns," Commander Mohamed al-Seddiq told the agency.
"We are facing heavy resistance, that's why we are using the heavy artillery and not sending in any infantry for now."
The NTC still has not found Col Gaddafi, who ruled the country for more than 40 years.
But several of his children and members of his inner circle have fled abroad.
His daughter Aisha fled to Algeria, and told journalists last week that her father was in good spirits and fighting alongside his supporters.
The Algerian newspaper El-Khabar reported on Monday that a group of Gaddafi supporters, possibly including Aisha, had now left the country for Egypt.
The report has not yet been confirmed.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Charge Ofori-Atta and stop the public commentary – Frank Davies tells AG
15 minutes -
NPP race: Massive turnout in Gushegu as delegates endorse Bawumia
20 minutes -
Ashaiman traders protest main market redevelopment, fear losing stalls and livelihoods
27 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: The CEO’s role in strengthening goal setting and OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) across the Organisation
28 minutes -
Protect it, fix inefficiencies: BoG Governor on Gold-for-Reserves
32 minutes -
Ghana to host 2026 Africa Aquatics Championships in May
41 minutes -
IGP and Management Board tour police recruitment centres in Greater Accra to assess process
43 minutes -
BoG pushes back on IMF claims, says FX reforms are fixing not creating problems
47 minutes -
Stability came at a cost – BoG defends billions lost in Domestic Gold Purchase Programme
52 minutes -
Ofori-Atta’s lawyer slams AG over public disclosure of ‘inconclusive’ offshore probe
57 minutes -
Retribution and Karma: Amanda Clinton links Ofori-Atta’s woes to 2018 banking sector collapse
1 hour -
Borderless Africa petition surpasses 10K signatures, campaign intensifies
1 hour -
QNET Ghana hosts New Year media soirée, unveils plans for bigger V-Africa event
2 hours -
Lom Nuku Writes : What the US$1.47 billion energy debt payment really means for Ghana
2 hours -
GTEC approves University of Ghana fees for 2025/2026, maintains facility user fee
2 hours
