.
BBC Home > BBC News > Middle East

Libya protests: Obama condemns 'outrageous' crackdown

23 February 11 20:31 ET
Munitions in a state security building taken over by anti-government protesters in Benghazi, 23 February 2011

US President Barack Obama has denounced the violent crackdown by the Libyan authorities on peaceful protesters as "outrageous and unacceptable".

Mr Obama said the world had to speak with "one voice", and that the US was drawing up a range of options for action in consultation with its allies.

The Libyan government would be held accountable for its actions, he added.

His comments came as Muammar Gaddafi battled to keep control of western Libya, including the capital, Tripoli.

Opposition protesters - supported by many defecting government troops - have consolidated their control of the east of the country.

Residents of Tripoli have said they are too frightened to venture out, because of fears that pro-government forces will shoot them on sight.

Thousands of foreigners are meanwhile still trying to flee Libya through ports, airports, and the Tunisian and Egyptian borders.

The overall death toll has been impossible to determine. Human Rights Watch says it has confirmed nearly 300 deaths, but the International Federation for Human Rights says at least 700 people have been killed.

'Full range of options'

In his first public comments on unrest in Libya, Mr Obama did not criticise Col Gaddafi directly but did condemn strongly the use of violence by his supporters to suppress those demanding he step down.

"The suffering and bloodshed is outrageous and unacceptable," he said from the White House. "So are threats and orders to shoot peaceful protesters and further punish the people of Libya."

"These actions violate international norms and every standard of common decency. This violence must stop."

Mr Obama said he had ordered his administration team to prepare the "full range of options" for dealing with the crisis, including unspecified actions that the United States could take alone or with its allies.

"In a volatile situation like this one, it is imperative that the nations and peoples of the world speak with one voice," he added.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is set to travel to Geneva on Monday, where foreign ministers will convene a session of the UN Human Rights Council.

In Brussels, EU ambassadors said the bloc was ready to impose further measures against Libya if necessary.

The BBC's Kim Ghattas in Washington says Mr Obama sounded determined and outraged, but offered little in terms of concrete action to help end the violence - other than sending Mrs Clinton to Europe.

Our correspondent says sanctions and the freezing of assets are a possibility, but they are unlikely to help end the violence in the short term.

And Mr Obama's request for the international community to speak with one voice suggests there are divisions about how to deal with Col Gaddafi, she adds.

Celebrations

Earlier, jubilant demonstrators took to the streets of the eastern cities of Benghazi and Tobruk waving flags, honking horns and setting off fireworks in what correspondents described as a giant party.

"We have been suffering for 41 years," Hamida Muftah, a resident of Benghazi, told Reuters. "Gaddafi has killed people... We are a very rich country, but most of the people are poorer than poor."

A number of military units in the east now say they have unified their command in support of the protesters, while a growing number of towns have set up informal opposition governments to fill the power vacuum.

The government has not yet attempted to regain control of the east, except around the town Ajdabiya, where security forces and militia are reportedly clashing with protesters along the road to Col Gaddafi's hometown of Surt.

Witnesses said Tripoli was largely deserted, with many fearing pro-government forces would shoot them if they ventured out.

"Anti-government protesters have disappeared. The streets are quiet. There are many, many deaths," one resident told BBC Arabic.

Two naval gunships are reported to have been deployed along the coast.

Col Gaddafi has urged his supporters to attack the "cockroaches" protesting against his rule, and "cleanse Libya house by house".

Despite the threats, opposition supporters said they were making plans for their first co-ordinated demonstration in the capital on Friday.

Reports from Misurata - Libya's third city, 210km (130 miles) from the capital - say security forces opened fire on demonstrators, killing several.

Clashes were also reported in the western towns of Zawiya and Sabratha, where witnesses said troops and foreign mercenaries had been deployed after demonstrators burned government buildings.

Despite the violence, Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, went on television on Wednesday evening to say that everything was "normal".

"The ports, schools and airports are all open," he said. "The problem lies in the eastern regions. Life is normal. Brothers, Libyans should come together in this national battle."

State media also claimed that the country's long-serving Interior Minister, Gen Abdel Fattah Younes al-Abidi, had been kidnapped by "gangs" after he said he had resigned after the people of Benghazi were shot at.

A French doctor working in Benghazi, Gerard Buffet, told the BBC that he had operated day and night for four days on people injured by bullets, mortars and rockets.

"On the third day the planes above the city shot on the people. The police made a wall of dead people around the police building," he said.

Meanwhile, a massive evacuation operation is in full swing as other nations try to rescue thousands of their citizens caught up in the chaos.

The US, China and many European countries have sent in planes, ships and ferries to help people flee. Thousands of people, many of them African migrants, have also poured across Libya's land borders, in vans piled high with furniture and luggage.

The International Organisation for Migration says several governments have asked it to help evacuate their citizens.

The price of oil has jumped sharply in reaction to the continuing crisis in Libya. In New York, it passed $100 a barrel for the first time since 2008.

Are you in Libya? Are you taking part in demonstrations? Are you trying to leave? Send us your comments using the form below:

Name

Your E-mail address

Town & Country

Phone number

Comments

In most cases a selection of your comments will be published, displaying your name as you provide it and location unless you state otherwise. But your contact details will never be published. When sending us pictures, video or eyewitness accounts at no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Terms & Conditions

Share this

Related BBC sites

.