The Libyan official news agency Jana says the international coalition raids on the outskirts of Tripoli had "targeted a residential area, military sources said. "The colonialist aggressor bombing in Tripoli Tajoura area has led to a residential neighborhood (...), which has resulted in many civilian deaths," the agency said.
To show the world the certainty of his statements, several Libyan officials have moved to a group of reporters at a hospital in the capital to teach the charred bodies of 18 people, including military and civilian, who may have been killed by the Allied attack. Jana also says that a "third bombing" of the coalition was "against the rescue teams were working to recover bodies and injured in the first two raids in a residential area of Tajoura.
Several ambulance sirens were heard Wednesday night at the center of Tripoli and in the neighborhood of Tajoura, according to AFP journalists. Other sources speak of a powerful explosion near the capital. The Arab network Al Jazeera also said that the alliance continues its attacks against the regime and for half an hour we heard explosions in the southwest of the Libyan capital.
In television images were shot from Gaddafi's air defenses. The same military source quoted by the agency ensures that the bombing Jana also affect military and civilian targets in the town of Jafra, 600 kilometers south of Tripoli. Later, the Libyan Deputy Foreign Kaaim Khaled said in a press conference that the attacks were also directed against "civilian and military installations" in Tripoli in Misrata (east of Tripoli), south of Benghazi and Jemil, a small city 120 kilometers southwest of Tripoli.
Western aircraft have attacked for the fifth night in Libya, but failed to prevent Muammar Gaddafi tanks firing on rebel held cities or take their armored vehicles from a strategic point in the east. Government snipers Misrata, the third capacity of Libya continued to fire indiscriminately at them, residents said.
A rebel spokesman said said the sniper had killed 16 people. The allies have carried out 175 missions in the last 24 hours, and the United States has carried out 113 of them, said a U.S. commander. Britain has said it launched Tomahawk guided missiles from a submarine class against Libyan air defenses as part of the coalition.
French Defense Minister, Gerard Longuet, said his country destroyed about 10 armored vehicles Libyans for three days. The Libyan government denied that its army is engaged in any offensive operation and says its troops are fighting only when attacked. But a resident Zinta, southwest of Tripoli, said they are gathering more troops and tanks to shell the city in rebel hands.
Rebel forces in the east continue to be held outside the strategic city of Ajdabiya, after trying to regain it for three days.
To show the world the certainty of his statements, several Libyan officials have moved to a group of reporters at a hospital in the capital to teach the charred bodies of 18 people, including military and civilian, who may have been killed by the Allied attack. Jana also says that a "third bombing" of the coalition was "against the rescue teams were working to recover bodies and injured in the first two raids in a residential area of Tajoura.
Several ambulance sirens were heard Wednesday night at the center of Tripoli and in the neighborhood of Tajoura, according to AFP journalists. Other sources speak of a powerful explosion near the capital. The Arab network Al Jazeera also said that the alliance continues its attacks against the regime and for half an hour we heard explosions in the southwest of the Libyan capital.
In television images were shot from Gaddafi's air defenses. The same military source quoted by the agency ensures that the bombing Jana also affect military and civilian targets in the town of Jafra, 600 kilometers south of Tripoli. Later, the Libyan Deputy Foreign Kaaim Khaled said in a press conference that the attacks were also directed against "civilian and military installations" in Tripoli in Misrata (east of Tripoli), south of Benghazi and Jemil, a small city 120 kilometers southwest of Tripoli.
Western aircraft have attacked for the fifth night in Libya, but failed to prevent Muammar Gaddafi tanks firing on rebel held cities or take their armored vehicles from a strategic point in the east. Government snipers Misrata, the third capacity of Libya continued to fire indiscriminately at them, residents said.
A rebel spokesman said said the sniper had killed 16 people. The allies have carried out 175 missions in the last 24 hours, and the United States has carried out 113 of them, said a U.S. commander. Britain has said it launched Tomahawk guided missiles from a submarine class against Libyan air defenses as part of the coalition.
French Defense Minister, Gerard Longuet, said his country destroyed about 10 armored vehicles Libyans for three days. The Libyan government denied that its army is engaged in any offensive operation and says its troops are fighting only when attacked. But a resident Zinta, southwest of Tripoli, said they are gathering more troops and tanks to shell the city in rebel hands.
Rebel forces in the east continue to be held outside the strategic city of Ajdabiya, after trying to regain it for three days.
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