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NATO bombs Qadhafi office, Misrata rebels advance

Tripoli — NATO bombs destroyed Libyan leader Muammer Qadhafi's office in his immense Tripoli residence on Monday, while rebels pushed forward against the strongman's troops in the besieged city of Misrata.

Heavy explosions had shaken the center of Tripoli shortly after midnight as warplanes overflew the Libyan capital.

A Libyan official accompanying journalists at Qadhafi's compound said 45 people were wounded, 15 seriously, in the bombing. He added that he did not know whether there were victims under the rubble.

"It was an attempt to assassinate Colonel Qadhafi," he affirmed.

Saif Al-Islam, Qadhafi's son, described the bombing as "cowardly."

"This cowardly attack on Muammer Qadhafi's office may frighten or terrorise children but we will not abandon the battle and we are not afraid," he said, claiming that NATO's battle was "lost in advance."

NATO warplanes had already late Friday targeted the Bab al-Aziziya district, where the presidential compound is located.

At around 3:00 a.m. (0100 GMT) smoke was still rising from part of the building that was hit, watched by dozens of people shouting slogans praising the Guide.

A meeting room facing Qadhafi's office was badly damaged by the blast.

In Misrata, 215km (132 miles) east of Tripoli, Libyan rebels made significant gains Sunday in a key street in the besieged city, where residents have lived under a rain of shells and sniper fire for 50 days.

"I spent 50 days home with my family hiding from sniper fire," said Muftah Emeitiq, 45, adding that he was happy to be finally free thanks to the rebel advance.

Misrata was still rocked by a salvo of Grad rockets and bursts of automatic weapons on Sunday, despite a pledge by the Libyan regime to halt its fire in the port city where the humanitarian situation has stirred international concern.

But rebel gains on Tripoli street — one of the main arteries of the city and the stronghold of troops loyal to Kadhafi until Friday — allowed residents to venture out after days stuck at home.

Rebels had killed or captured the majority of snipers behind deadly assaults and ambushes on the street but still encountered some pushback from regime forces.

Rebel leader Taher Bashaga said: "It will take some time, I think, but then it will all go well and Misrata will be free for ever, God willing."

Two captured pro-Qadhafi soldiers told AFP that loyalist forces were losing their grip in the battle for Misrata.

"Many soldiers want to surrender but they are afraid of being executed" by the rebels, said Lili Mohammed, a Mauritanian hired by Qadhafi's regime to fight insurgents in Libya's third largest city.

Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim said the army had suspended operations against rebels in Misrata, but not left the city, to enable local tribes to settle the battle "peacefully and not militarily."

But Colonel Omar Bani, military spokesman of the rebels' Transitional National Council (TNC), said Qadhafi was "playing a really dirty game" aimed at dividing his opponents.

"It is a trick, they didn't go," Bani said in the eastern rebel stronghold of Benghazi. "They have stayed a bit out of Tripoli Street but they are preparing themselves to attack again."

Libyan authorities want the conflict to look like a civil war between rival tribes, he argued.

"Most of the tribes around the Misrata area are inter-related so they won't fall for that trap," said Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, another TNC spokesman.

The city suffered its heaviest toll in 65 days of fighting on Saturday, with 28 dead and 100 wounded compared to a daily average of 11 killed, according to an Doctor Khalid Abu Falra at Misrata's "overwhelmed" main private clinic.

Qadhafi's regime is accusing the United States, which launched its first Predator drone strikes over the weekend, of "new crimes against humanity" for deploying the low-flying, unmanned aircraft.

Drone strikes have so far targeted a rocket launcher targeting Misrata and an SA-8 surface-to-air missile in Tripoli, according to NATO officials.

In eastern Libya, a lull in the fighting has given families some respite in their search for loved ones who have gone missing in and around the strategic crossroads city of Ajdabiyah.

"As things calm down, people are building up the courage to come out and report," said Najim Miftah, a volunteer who has a binder of missing people that has doubled in two days with more than 70 new records.

An aid ship delivered 160 tonnes of food and medicine to Misrata on Saturday and evacuated around 1000 stranded migrant workers and wounded civilians to Benghazi on its return.

The fourth such rotation brought to 4100 the number of people of 21 different nationalities evacuated by the International Organization for Migration from Misrata since the launch of a humanitarian program on 14 April, the organization said.

Massive protests in February — inspired by the revolts that toppled long-time autocrats in Egypt and Tunisia — escalated into war when Qadhafi's troops fired on demonstrators and protesters seized several eastern towns.

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