Libya protesters & Gaddafi forces fight on coast road
Gaddafi sends message to Obama: report
Libyan protesters reported heavy fighting with the forces of Muammar Gaddafi on the Mediterranean coast road on Wednesday as both sides tried to break a stalemate in the seven-week war.
The Libyan leader sent a message to U.S. President Barack Obama "following the withdrawal of America from the crusader colonial alliance against Libya," Libya's official news agency JANA said on Wednesday.
No further details were given.
Mohammed al-Masrafy, a member of an opposition special forces unit, said clashes began at 6 am (0400 GMT) after Gaddafi's forces were resupplied with ammunition and moved eastwards out of the oil port of Brega.
He told Reuters after returning to the eastern town of Ajdabiyah there was heavy fighting with machineguns and other weapons.
"The rebel army is about 60 kms from here," he said. That would put them about 20 kms from Brega, the focus of a week-long see-saw battle. Gaddafi's forces mounted a sustained assault on Tuesday that pushed the rebels about half way back to Ajdabiyah, gateway to their stronghold of Benghazi.
As rebels in pick-ups piled with weapons headed west from Ajdabiyah and civilians fleeing the fighting passed them in the opposite direction, anger mounted over alleged lack of air strikes by NATO.
"What is NATO waiting for? We have cities that are being destroyed. Ras Lanuf, Ben Jawad, Brega, and Gaddafi is destroying Misrata completely," said Said Emburak, 43, a resident of Ajdabiyah.
Opposition army leader Abdelfattah Yunis has accused NATO of being too slow to order airstrikes, saying Gaddafi's forces have been allowed to slaughter civilians in the besieged and isolated western city of Misrata.
NATO denies the pace of air strikes has abated since it took over from a coalition led by the United States, Britain and France on Mar. 31.
The conflict in the east has reached stalemate with Western air power preventing Gaddafi landing a knockout blow and the rebels' rag-tag army unable to push closer towards Tripoli.