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| World leaders gathered in Paris to welcome Libyan rebels |
World
leaders unblocked 15 billion dollars in funds Thursday to help Libya's
victorious rebels rebuild their shattered country as fugitive strongman Moamer
Kadhafi called for guerilla warfare.
Forty-two
years to the day since Kadhafi stormed to power in a coup, senior envoys from
over 60 countries met the leaders of the revolution that overthrew him to
endorse the fledgling regime and offer practical support.
But in a
meeting in Paris they also put the leaders of the rebels' National Transitional
Council (NTC) on notice to pursue a path of reconciliation, even as Kadhafi
issued a message of defiance from his desert hiding place.
"Prepare
yourselves for a gang and guerrilla war, for urban warfare and popular
resistance in every town ... to defeat the enemy everywhere," he said in
an audio tape aired on Arab satellite television.
The Elysee
Palace guestlist was a victory in itself for the NTC, as once sceptical Russia
and China and Libya's reluctant neighbour Algeria agreed to back the new
administration.
French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, the rebels' most prominent backer from the outset,
announced that billions of dollars in Libyan assets frozen abroad will now be
unblocked.
"Around
15 billion dollars have been immediately unfrozen ... we want to give back to
the Libyans the money that was frozen and that was stolen from them," he
said.
Speaking
alongside the rebels' leaders, Sarkozy urged the NTC to begin a "process
of reconciliation and forgiveness."
NTC
president Mustafa Abdel Jalil said the Libyan people "proved their courage
and their determination" in their fight to topple Kadhafi, but he also
pleaded for stability.
"Now
everything is in your hands," he said in a message to the Libyan people.
"It's up to you to accomplish what we promised: stability, peace and
reconciliation."
The rebels
have issued an ultimatum for Kadhafi and his followers to surrender, and have
amassed troops around his hometown of Sirte for a final battle.
At the
Paris conference, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the
alliance would continue its six-month operation in Libya for as long as the
civilian population was in danger.
Kadhafi,
who might once have marked his coup anniversary with pomp and ceremony, was
reduced to releasing his latest bluster on tape, vowing: "We will not
surrender. We are not women and we are going to keep on fighting."
In Tripoli,
rebel commander Abdullah Naqir announced the creation of the council of
Tripoli's revolutionaries to defend the capital, restore order and hunt down
Kadhafi loyalists.
While the
mood in Paris was upbeat, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sounded a note
of caution, urging the rebels to beware of extremism in their own ranks and
prevent weapons from falling into the wrong hands.
"The
international community, led by the UN, needs to help the Libyan people and its
leaders pave a path to a sustainable, inclusive democracy that banishes
violence as a political tool and promotes tolerance," she said.
UN chief
Ban Ki-moon said he would work with the Security Council to agree terms for an
immediate United Nations mission to deal with a possible humanitarian crisis
and help rebuild the state.
"Our
most immediate challenge is humanitarian," he said.
"Roughly
860,000 people have left the country since February, including skilled guest
workers. Public services are under severe strain, including hospitals and
clinics ... There is a major water shortage."
Russia --
which opposed NATO's military support for the rebels' battle to overthrow him
-- said it recognised the NTC as Libya's "ruling authority".
China,
which also had reservations about the air campaign, did not go so far, but said
it respected the NTC's "significant position."
Continental
heavyweight South Africa, however, continued to snub the NTC. President Jacob
Zuma boycotted the talks and said he was "not happy" with NATO's
campaign.
The African
Union has not recognised the NTC.
The
Algerian turnabout may prove of more immediate practical help in cutting off a
potential Kadhafi escape route.
Libya's
larger neighbour has been accused of supplying Kadhafi with arms and, after
members of the fallen leader's family fled there, it was seen as a likely
escape route for the strongman and his loyal sons.
But
Algeria's Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci welcomed the NTC promise to set up a
"government representative of all regions" and added: "When it
has done so, we'll recognise it."
The talks
began against the backdrop of a new Kadhafi rant in which he urged his
supporters to keep up their resistance to the rebellion.
"The
aim is to kill the enemy wherever he may be, whether he be Libyan or
foreign," he said in a message from a secret location.
Kadhafi and
his son Seif al-Islam have gone underground since rebels stormed into Tripoli
on August 20.
"If
they want a long battle, let it be long. If Libya burns, who will be able to
govern it? Let it burn," declared Kadhafi.
Rebel
officials say Kadhafi may be in the town of Bani Walid, south of the capital
and still held by loyalist troops, but other reports suggest he could be in his
hometown Sirte or Ghadames, near the Algerian border.
AFP

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