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NATO frets at report of civilian deaths in Libya raid

NATO is looking into reports of civilian deaths in a coalition air strike near Brega after rebels claimed victory in the battle for the key Libyan oil town.

A rebel spokesman in the town of Misrata, 214 kilometres east of Tripoli, also reported fierce fighting there on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Scottish detectives and prosecutors plan to meet with Foreign Office officials Monday to discuss Libyan foreign minister Mussa Kussa, who defected to Britain, as part of the
Lockerbie bombing probe.

In Libya, the chief rebel spokesman told reporters that coalition warplanes had killed 13 people, four of them civilians, in an air raid some 15 kilometres east of Brega on Friday.

"Thirteen dead, seven injured by friendly fire. It was a regrettable occurrence," Abdulhafiz Ghoga said, calling them "unintentional deaths".

"The leadership is working on preventing a re-occurrence."

Earlier, a civilian rebel official said the dead civilians were an ambulance driver and three medical students from Libya's second city of Benghazi, the rebel stronghold in the east.

They had been part of a rebel convoy of five or six vehicles, said Issa Khamis, liaison officer for the rebels' transitional government in the town of Ajdabiya, east of Brega.

A spokeswoman for NATO, which leads the international coalition enforcing the no-fly zone over Libya and protecting civilians from attack, said the alliance was looking into the reports.

"We are always concerned by reports of civilian casualties. NATO's mission is to protect civilians and civilian areas from the threat of attack," said Oana Lungescu. But she noted that no formal investigation had been launched.

Friday's air strike came as rebels shot tracer fire into the air to celebrate the entry of an advance column into Brega.

"It was a mistake" by the rebels, Khamis said. "The aircraft thought they were coming under attack and fired on the convoy."

Ghoga also said Brega had now fallen.

"Brega is fully under the control of the rebels," he told the news conference.

Fighting was still ongoing earlier Saturday both inside and outside Brega.

Rebels with only light arms were being told to stay back, and several said forces loyal to embattled Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were holed up in the university in Brega, 800 kilometres east of Tripoli.

Loyalist forces "are surrounded inside the university. The rebels have surrounded them and they can't get out," said fighter Abdel Khalak Ali, 20, who was ordered to pull back because he had only a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

A correspondent saw seven bodies of Gaddafi loyalists and at least 10 burnt-out pick-up trucks on the road between Ajdabiya and Brega, 80 kilometres to the west, bearing witness to the bitter fighting.

Jubilant rebels told how a strike by coalition aircraft took out at least two vehicles in a convoy of seven heavily armed pick-ups, and they finished off the rest with rocket-launchers in an ambush from a eucalyptus grove.

The vehicles of the pro-Gaddafi convoy and even the bodies were looted during the night and stripped of anything useful.

The rebels had already taken any serviceable guns and ammunition as they seek to counter the huge superiority in weaponry of Gaddafi's forces.

Brega has been the scene of intense exchanges over the past few days when pro-Gaddafi forces returned after being driven out by the insurgents.

But it has been unclear since Thursday who actually held the town.

In the rebel-held town of Misrata, a rebel spokesman reported both close-quarters clashes and tank and artillery fire.

He said Gaddafi's forces tried to enter Misrata from three fronts, but were pushed back. Two rebels were killed, he reported.

The spokesman said snipers fired at anyone on the street, and reported a civilian car driver shot dead. Rebel fighters killed seven snipers, he added.

"These are true crimes which must be stopped. Gaddafi troops are endangering civilian lives and using prohibited weapons," he charged.

Southwest of Tripoli, the town of Ketla was targeted by dozens of Grad rockets by Gaddafi loyalists on Friday and Saturday, killing more than 30 people, residents reported.

In Benghazi, Transitional National Council leader Mustafa Abdul Jalil said on Friday the opposition was ready for a truce, provided regime forces end their assaults on rebel-held cities.

Government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim dismissed the offer outright.

"The rebels never offered peace. They don't offer peace, they are making impossible demands," he told reporters, calling the truce proposal a "trick".

"We will not leave our cities. We are the government, not them," Ibrahim said, adding however that the government was always ready to negotiate and wanted peace.

A rebel spokesman, Mustafa Gheriani, said Tripoli's rejection of the offer showed Gaddafi "wants no peace -- he wants to inflict as much damage on the Libyan people as possible before leaving power."

The fate of Libyan foreign minister Mussa Kussa remained unclear.

Kussa, a former head of Libyan intelligence and one-time member of Gaddafi's inner circle, flew to Britain from Tunisia on Wednesday and said he was resigning as foreign minister.

But Kussa was not offered immunity. Prime Minister David Cameron has urged police to follow the trail of evidence over the 1988 jumbo jet bombing wherever it leads.

Libyan agent Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi is the only man convicted over the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie in December 1988, which killed 270 people.

Megrahi, who has terminal cancer, was released from a Scottish jail on compassionate grounds in August 2009, and received a hero's welcome in Libya.

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