United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged the global body's Security Council to take "decisive action" over the Libya crisis. He said violations of human rights have been carried out by Muammar Gaddafi's regime, and more than 1,000 have died.
In Libya, reports say anti-government protesters in the capital Tripoli came under heavy gunfire on Friday. Witnesses reported deaths and injuries as militiamen and government troops confronted protesters as they emerged from mosques following Friday prayers and started demonstrating in several areas of the city.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon: ''It is time for the Security Council to consider concrete action'' At the same time, Libyan state TV showed Colonel Gaddafi speaking from the Tripoli's old city ramparts, urging the crowd to arm themselves and defend the nation and its oil against the anti-Gaddafi elements who have taken control of large parts of the country. "We shall destroy any aggression with popular will," he said. "With the armed people, when necessary we will open the weapons depots. So that all the Libyan people, all the Libyan tribes can be armed. Libya will become a red flame, a burning coal."
The US sanctions announced late on Friday by President Obama block transactions involving assets of Col Gaddafi and several close family members. "These sanctions therefore target the Gaddafi government, while protecting the assets that belong to the people of Libya," Mr Obama said in a statement.
Earlier, at a hastily organized news conference at the UN in New York, Libyan deputy ambassador Ibrahim Dabbashi described Col Gaddafi, who has been in power for 42 years, as a "madman". He warned that thousands would die in Tripoli because the Libyan leader would never flee and would fight to the end.
Diplomats at the UN Security Council say Britain and France have drawn up a draft resolution with a package of measures aimed at isolating Libya's political and military leaders. As well as targeted sanctions, this could include an arms embargo, and a proposed referral of the situation in Libya to the International Criminal Court.
Journalist Jeremy Bowen entered the Libyan capital at the invitation of the Libyan government. Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of the Libyan leader, told him that the reports of extreme violence were an "exaggerated media campaign" run by "hostile Arab TV channels". It was not true that Libya had bombed civilians, Mr Gaddafi said, although he did say that the air force had bombed ammunition dumps that were in enemy hands.
Visitors to Tripoli would not hear gunfire but might hear fireworks, Mr Gaddafi said. He criticized the protesters, some of whom wanted an Islamic "Afghan solution" to the country's problems. He admitted that the east of Libya was "a big mess". People were behind his father, Mr Gaddafi said, and would come out into the streets to support him.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration was acting "to put pressure on the regime" to cease the violence. "Colonel Gaddafi has lost the confidence of his people," he added.
Outside the airport there's a sad sight. Several thousand people queuing in the darkness and rain, trying to get flights out. Some people told reporters they were from Syria, others appear to be from the Indian sub-continent, the kind of migrant workers upon whom this economy has been depending. There's a fair amount of traffic on the streets. There were some reports of shooting near the airport.
Much of the east of the country is in the hands of anti-Gaddafi protesters and units of the Libyan military that have crossed over to them. 22,000 people had fled Libya via Tunisia, and a further 15,000 via Egypt. There are widespread reports of refugees being harassed and threatened with guns and knives.
There is also a food crisis inside Libya that the UN World Food Programme (WFP) expects to worsen. The WFP says Libya's food supply chain is at risk of collapse because imports have not been getting into the country and food distribution is hampered by violence.
A US-chartered ferry carrying Americans evacuated from Libya arrived in Malta on Friday evening. Britain has sent a second ship, the destroyer HMS York, to deploy to the sea area near Libya; the frigate HMS Cumberland has picked up more than 200 people and is taking them to Malta. India is sending warships to the region to evacuate its nationals. Hundreds of sub-Saharan Africans are said to be fleeing southern Libya into Niger. Many more are stranded in Libya, where they say they are being attacked by people accusing them of being mercenaries fighting for Col Gaddafi.
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