Speaking from the Misurata hospital, a rebel spokesman said that one resident was killed and four were wounded on Friday, seven were killed
Thursday and 20 the day before. “Please, scream for Misurata!” said the spokesman, Mohamed, whose last name was withheld for the protection
of his family. “We are going under!”
A reporter for CNN entered the city by boat and described the main remaining hospital as “short of everything” and “overwhelmed.” The
reporter said doctors were performing surgery in the hallways, against the constant sound of gunfire from government tanks, artillery and
mortars.
Apparently responding to the reports of high-level defections and Mr. Ismail’s London talks, the leaders of the rebels trying to oust
Colonel Qaddafi issued a set of demands for a cease-fire. At a news conference in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, Mustapha Abdul Jalil, the
leader of the rebel National Council, demanded that Colonel Qaddafi’s forces lift their sieges of rebel-held cities like Misurata and
Zintan, remove gunmen placed on rooftops and guarantee the right of Libyans to hold peaceful protests in the western half of the country.
“At that point, we’ll see how all the Libyan people want freedom,” Mr. Abdul Jalil said.
Asked about the possibility that a cease-fire could lead to a divided country, with Colonel Qaddafi controlling the west and the rebels the
east, Mr. Abdul Jalil said, “It’s not possible.”
“Qaddafi and his family need to leave,” he said. “It’s nonnegotiable.”
The Qaddafi government dismissed the statement as a ploy. “The rebels never offered any peace,” said the government’s spokesman, Musa
Ibrahim. “You are not offering peace if you are making impossible demands. It is a trick.”
“I could come to the rebels and say: ‘I offer you peace. Get out of Benghazi on a ship!’ ” he added. “You can’t do that.”
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TRIPOLI, Libya — A senior aide to one of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s sons has held secret talks in London with British authorities, a friend
of the aide said Friday, as his government dismissed rebel talk of a cease-fire as a thinly veiled invitation to surrender.
Multimedia
Outside Benghazi, Libya, opposition supporters cheered as rocket launchers headed to the front near Brega on Thursday, a day of inconclusive
fighting in the east. More Photos »
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The London talks were led by Mohamed Ismail, a senior aide to Seif al-Islam el-Qaddafi, a British-educated son of Colonel Qaddafi and the
colonel’s heir apparent. Mr. Ismail’s trip came just days after the flight to London of one of the colonel’s closest allies, Moussa
Koussa, sent tremors of anxiety through the Qaddafi government.
A friend of Mr. Ismail’s, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters, said the aide was on an
official mission, and British officials said Friday that after several days in London he had already returned to Tripoli.
But the exact timing and purpose of Mr. Ismail’s mission was not divulged, and the mystery surrounding his trip added to a sense of tension
and uncertainty in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, after two weeks of Western airstrikes intended to protect rebel-held territory and pressure
the Qaddafi government.
Bursts of gunfire broke out before dawn in the streets near Colonel Qaddafi’s compound, and two witnesses said they saw “pools of blood”
on the ground, but the cause of the firefight could not be determined. The Qaddafi government has been distributing weapons to many Libyan
citizens for use in their own defense, and its armed militia and plainclothes police are omnipresent in Tripoli.
The Qaddafi forces also easily dispersed a renewed rebel attempt to advance along the eastern coast while continuing their shelling of the
rebel-held city of Misurata in the west. Residents speaking by telephone said government forces fired tank and artillery shells at an
industrial district near the city’s port, apparently in an attempt to shut it down, destroying storehouses of food in the process.
Western warships had recently opened the port by chasing away Libyan coast guard vessels, and the arrival of the first-aid shipments promised
to make it a lifeline for the besieged city.
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BEIJING - A senior official of the Communist Party of China (CPC) said Wednesday China would continue open recruitment of senior managerial
personnel of State-owned enterprises (SOEs) from within the country and abroad.
Li Yuanchao, head of the Organization Department of the CPC Central Committee, made the remarks during a meeting regarding the open
recruitment of senior managers and overseas talents in 2010.
The meeting was organized by the Department and the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), which oversees the
operation of the centrally administered SOEs.
Li stressed the importance of attracting talent from home and abroad to fill positions in the centrally administered SOEs, a major player in
China's economy.
Business revenue of the 121 centrally administered SOEs was an equivalent to about 42 percent of China's gross domestic product last year,
while the taxes turned in by those SOEs accounted for about 17 percent of the nation's total fiscal revenue.
Li also urged the SOEs to give recruits the opportunity to show their initiative and creativity.
China has opened senior management posts to domestic and overseas applicants since 2001, and has selected 128 senior managers for the
centrally administered enterprises.
In 2010, 1,410 candidates from home and abroad applied for vacant posts and 31 of them were appointed, including three who were appointed as
general managers of their respective SOEs.
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