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Battle rages in cities outside besieged Tripoli

ZAWIYAH, Libya – Rebels are fighting battles in coastal cities on either side of the besieged Libyan capital Tripoli in a drive to topple Muammar Qadhafi after six months of war.

Mortar and rocket rounds crashed on Saturday into the center of Zawiyah, a city on the coastal highway 50km west of Tripoli that the rebels captured this week in one of the boldest advances of their uprising.
 
Shells struck the central hospital around dawn, blasting holes in the walls and inside were scenes of destruction. There was fighting around the hospital on Friday.
 
In the central square, residents were burning and stamping on a green Qadhafi flag. "Qadhafi is finished. Civilians are starting to come back to the cities. Libya is finally free," said one, who gave his name as Abu Khaled.
 
In a nearby alley, residents had gathered to stare at the bodies of two Qadhafi soldiers lying in the street. Gunfire and explosions could be heard in the distance.
 
The rebels' capture of Zawiyah has transformed the conflict by cutting Tripoli off from its main road link to the outside world, putting unprecedented pressure on the 41-year rule of Qadhafi.
 
Rebels said the main Qadhafi force had retreated about 10km east to the town of Jaddayim, close to Tripoli's outskirts, and were shelling Zawiyah from there.
 
East of the capital, where fighting has been bloodier and rebel advances far slower, opposition forces fought street battles in the city of Zlitan but suffered heavy casualties, a Reuters reporter said. A rebel spokesman said 32 rebel fighters were killed and 150 wounded.
 
Qadhafi's spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said late on Friday the government's military retained the upper hand in both Zawiyah and Zlitan.
 
The sudden imposition of a siege around Tripoli has trapped its residents behind the front line and cut it off from fuel and food. The International Organization for Migration said on Friday it would organize a rescue operation to evacuate thousands of foreign workers, probably by sea.
 
Some 600,000 of the 1.5 million to 2.5 million foreign workers in Libya fled the country early in the conflict, but many thousands stayed in Tripoli, which until this week was far from fighting and a two-hour drive from the Tunisian border.
 
INTELLIGENCE CHIEF'S HOUSE BOMBED
 
In a possible psychological blow to Qadhafi's government, rebels said his former deputy Abdel Salam Jalloud had defected to rebel-held territory in the Western Mountains.
 
Jalloud was a member of the junta that staged a 1969 coup bringing Qadhafi to power and was once seen as Qadhafi's second in command, but fell out of favor in the 1990s. It was not immediately clear what impact his defection would have.
 
"He is definitely here in Zintan. He is under the control of the military council here," said Massoud Ali, a local rebel spokesman. Rebels showed Reuters a video of a person they identified as Jalloud standing among them.
 
Libyan Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim would not comment on Jalloud's whereabouts but said if Jalloud had left Libya he hoped he would help bring a negotiated end to the conflict.
 
With rebels pushing on the ground, NATO has pressed on with its campaign from the air and its warplanes pounded targets in the capital overnight.
 
Qadhafi's government has blamed NATO bombings for scores of civilian deaths and said 27 people were killed in the most recent raids on Tripoli. NATO accuses Qadhafi's forces of housing military assets near civilians.
 
Libyan officials brought journalists on Friday to a residential district where a compound of several large buildings was blasted to pieces. Neighbours said it belonged to Abdullah al-Senussi, Qadhafi's brother-in-law and head of intelligence. A government official said Senussi was not there at the time.
 
The siege of Tripoli and the prospect of a battle for the capital itself have give new urgency to the question of Qadhafi's fate. The leader and his officials have repeatedly vowed that he will never leave the country, but rebels say they will not stop fighting until he departs.
 
The two sides held talks early this week in neighbouring Tunisia, attended by a former French prime minister, but announced no breakthroughs. The severing of the road link between Tripoli and Tunisia makes further talks difficult.
 
NBC News reported Gaddafi was making preparations to leave Libya with his family for possible exile in Tunisia, but that it was unclear if he would follow through. NBC said the information came from US officials who cited intelligence reports.
 
Deputy Foreign Minister Kaim reiterated the government stance that Qadhafi would not depart Libya but said Libya was in favor of any negotiations to end the fighting.
 
"But the United States and other key players have to give their blessing to these negotiations," he said.

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