Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi vows not to resign, denounces protesters as ‘greasy rats’

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CAIRO — A defiant Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi vowed Tuesday not to resign and denounced the anti-government
protesters who have challenged his regime as “greasy rats” and
“drug-fueled mice” who deserve to be executed.

“These gangs are cockroaches,” he said. “They’re nothing. They’re not 1 percent of the Libyan people.”

In a lengthy address on state TV, Gadhafi, who has ruled since 1969, stood in the ruins of a barracks in Tripoli
that was bombed by U.S. warplanes in 1986. He waved his fist and
shouted, vowing to die a martyr and urging his supporters to rise up to
help the military crush the popular uprising.

The U.N. Security Council called an emergency meeting as Libya
descended into further chaos Tuesday amid reports that Gadhafi’s regime
used warplanes, helicopter gunships and foreign mercenaries against
mounting anti-government demonstrations, witnesses and diplomats said.

The Security Council met in closed-door session in New York to discuss the crackdown against mostly unarmed opposition forces in and around Tripoli, the Libyan capital.

Condemnation poured in from around the world, including from many of Libya’s own top diplomats. Libya’s ambassadors to the United States, China, India and Malaysia resigned. The deputy ambassador to the U.N. denounced the attacks as genocide.

Tripoli is burning,” Ali Aujali, who stepped down as Libya’s ambassador to Washington, told ABC News. He said he no longer wanted to serve a “dictatorship.”

“We have never seen a government bomb its own people like this,” Ali Essawi, who quit as envoy to India, told al-Jazeera television. The envoy said Gadhafi “lost his legitimacy” and called for him to step down.

A defiant Gadhafi also appeared briefly on state TV
in the early morning hours to deny reports that he had fled the
country. He did not refer to the protests.

“Don’t believe the dogs in the media,” the mercurial
strongman said, holding a large umbrella and wearing a cap with furry
ear flaps. “I’m still here.”

Most communications were down, and reliable
information was sketchy. But numerous reports suggested pro-regime
militiamen and paid African mercenaries were firing indiscriminately
into crowds, sealing off neighborhoods and shooting from rooftops.

In the Fashloum district, an impoverished area that
is an anti-government stronghold, militiamen shot any “moving human
being” with live ammunition and blocked ambulances so the wounded were
left in the streets, an unnamed resident told the Associated Press.

Refugees poured out of the country through border crossings into Egypt in the east and Tunisia in the west. Many said they were robbed by armed gangs or government militia on the roads.

Aid convoys with doctors, medical workers and supplies waited in lines to cross into Libya. There were said to be critical shortages of blood.

Opposition forces consolidated control over eastern Libya, burning police stations, military commands and intelligence offices, according to witnesses and media reports.

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(c) 2011, Los Angeles Times.

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Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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