Muammar Gaddafi has remained in hiding Monday that the rebels have consolidated their hold over much of the Libyan capital of the party of the environment and violent shootouts in the pockets ofTripoli who refused to buckle to the opposition.
Heavy fighting raged outside Bab Al Qadhafi compound-Azizia in the south of Tripoli, and a rebel leader said the insurgents suffered heavy losses overnight and this morning. Forces of opposition told Al Jazeera, which controls about 80% of the city, showing a precarious victory.
NATO announced that it would continue air strikes against military Kadafi. But to do that in Tripoli dense urban environment is at high risk of civilian casualties.
Photos: The revolt in Libya
Kadafi tanks and snipers took up strategic positions in several neighborhoods and it was unclear if erratic leader, who ruled the country for 42 years, was able to attack.
Senior rebel commander told Reuters: "Snipers are a serious problem there are a large number of martyrs .."
The latest information is "that most of Tripoli is now directed to release the Libyan forces, even if the fighting continues, and some of it is extremely difficult," British Prime Minister, David Cameron said on Monday in London. "His regime is disintegrating and is in full retreat."
But attention quickly to the way the Interim National Council, the governing body of the rebels would manage a nation battered and divided by six months of fighting that swept deserts, oil refineries and coastal roads. The rebels have been subject to tribal divisions, and Western officials are concerned about power struggles and revenge.
Kadafi The government said 1,300 people were killed and 3,000 wounded since Saturday. These figures could not be independently confirmed. TheInternational leaders of the ICC and the rebels were negotiating the fate of Gaddafi's son and heir apparent of time, Seif el Islam, was arrested Sunday and faces charges of war crimes.
The rebels said the second son, Muhammad, was delivered. News reports that the opposition forces had been invaded by a thirty-second basis for the elite brigade commander of the third son of Khamis. Headquarters, where the rebels looted weapons and ammunition, is about 15 km from the capital. Its loss would be a serious strategic setback for the Libyan army, rebels and a great symbolic victory.
Although Kadafi has not been seen in public for weeks, a series of audio broadcasts Sunday added a surreal air of the advancing rebels, and the celebrations in the center of Tripoli. "The tribes are now in Tripoli in March to defend and clean," said the Libyans. "How can you give Tripoli to burn?"
Strong pressure on all the Sunday Kadafi has led the government to provide for a ceasefire, warning that the atrocities could occur if the rebel offensive was not arrested. But even though the complaint was filed, Kadafi was mocking the rebels that the mice, and the journalist's state television brandishing a gun in the air and vowed to kill the rebels.
The government calls for "an immediate cessation of the NATO aggression against our nation and for all parties to sit down and start a peaceful solution to this crisis," spokesman Ibrahim Moussa said during ' a news conference in Tripoli. "We believe that if the international community to listen to this call, many people will be killed and the terrible crimes committed."
Speaking late Sunday night, said Ibrahim Libyan forces fight the rebels, whom he described as "vindictive, hateful" between the districts of Tripoli Janzour tribes, Gargaresh and elsewhere. "NATO will be held morally and legally responsible of death "happening that night, he said.
Each side was claiming the upper hand on Sunday. The opposition forces advancing from Zawiya city, about 30 miles west of Tripoli, he retired after fierce battles. They met Jaddayim and placed in a second attack. The rebel leader said their supporters had gathered in the capital as part of a coordinated action, but the government has called for "armed gangs" had been defeated.
Employees of "The West moved from one city to the next suitor, but are not in control, fleeing like rats," Gaddafi said in an audio program on Libyan television early Sunday. "People are embracing my image. I am your leader, I am your father."
But the rebels have said that hundreds of loyalists and Kadafi soldiers had abandoned their posts. They said that opposition supporters took over the eastern district of Tripoli, the capital while the rest of the inhabitants fled in the middle of lack of food and gas.
The rebels also said they sent fighters, weapons and ammunition by sea fromMisurata, a town east of Tripoli, which had been cut off and under siege for much of the conflict.
NATO spokesman Colonel Roland Lavoie, told reporters in Brussels that events move quickly complicates the choice of the objectives of the alliance air strikes. "There is a more traditional line that was in the other phases of the conflict," said Lavoie.
Operating under the mandate of the Security Council of the UN to protect civilians, NATO has conducted months of air strikes to weaken the forces Kadafi.
"The sooner Gaddafi realizes he can not win a battle against his own people, the best - so that the Libyan people can be spared further bloodshed and suffering," said the alliance said in a statement Sunday evening.
He promised to work with rebel leaders on a transition to a new government.
U.S. officials said Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Obama, who is on vacation in Martha's Vineyard has received regular updates.
"Tripoli is slipping out of sight of a tyrant," Obama said in a statement. "Kadafi must recognize the fact that he is no longer driving in Libya. He needs to give up power once and for all."
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