Libyan opposition forces had refused to talk to a British delegation who entered the country without prior arrangement and who were being sent back to London, the forces' national council said on Sunday.
"We do not know the nature of their mission. We refused to discuss anything with them due to the way they entered the country," spokesman Abdul Hafiz Ghoqa told reporters in Benghazi.
"Now we're trying to negotiate a way for them to go back home."
The opposition fighters also said they were not contacted over Chavez peace plan.
UK foreign secretary William Hague said a small British diplomatic team sent to Benghazi in eastern Libya to initiate contacts with the rebel-backed opposition, and that "experienced difficulties" there, have now left the county.
"We intend, in consultation with the opposition, to send a further team to strengthen our dialogue in due course. This diplomatic effort is part of the UK's wider work on Libya, including our ongoing humanitarian support," he said in a statement.
"We continue to press for Gaddafi to step down and we will work with the international community to support the legitimate ambitions of the Libyan people," he added.
The battle of Misrata
On the military front, the revolutionaries beat back the fiercest attack so far by Muammar Gaddafi's forces on the town of Misrata on Sunday, residents told Reuters, and a doctor said at least 18 people were killed.
Government forces used tanks and artillery in what appeared to be their most concerted effort yet to retake the town, 200 km (125 miles) east of the capital Tripoli, but were pushed back by rebels fighting Gaddafi's 41-year old rule.
"Today Misrata witnessed the toughest battle since the beginning of the revolution. Horrible attacks," one resident, who did not want to give his name, told Reuters by phone.
"They came from three sides and managed to enter the town from the west and south but when they reached the center of Misrata the rebels pushed them back," he said.
A spokesman for the opposition forces in Benghazi in the east told reporters Gaddafi's troops had been beaten back in Misrata and in Zawiyah, a town to the west of the capital.
Another Misrata resident said Gaddafi's forces had retreated to a military airbase 7 km from the town.
Misrata, with a population of about 300,000 is the largest population center controlled by Gaddafi opponents outside the opposition-held east of the country.
If opposition soldiers are able to continue their fitful advance westwards, Misrata could be a stepping stone to reaching the capital, Gaddafi's principal stronghold.
"The revolutionaries captured 20 soldiers and seized a tank. The town is now fully in the control of the youths," the second resident said.
A doctor at Misrata's main hospital said at least 18 people, including a baby girl, had been killed in the attack.
"Today the attack was fierce, I have not seen anything like that in my whole life," he said.
"We have 18 martyrs but the figure is not final. We also have many people wounded, I can not even count them," he said.
Residents said that by early evening, the situation was calm but opposition fighters were combing the town, looking for any remaining pro-Gaddafi forces.
"You can feel the tension in the city, revolutionaries are searching the streets, the squares and the alleys to see if there are any hidden mercenaries," said one man who was coming back form the funeral of a neighbor killed in the fighting.
"We just buried him now, he is a martyr and will go to heaven, but Gaddafi and his people will not even smell heaven," he said, crying.
Other locals in Misrata, which has been under rebel control for over a week, earlier said the government attack was led by units of a militia led by Khamis, a son of the Libyan leader.
"They are destroying everything they find. They are using artillery and tanks," said a man who gave his name as Mohamed.
Until now there have only been skirmishes on the outskirts of the city, with residents reporting occasional outbreaks of fighting around the airport, and at an air base near the city.
Source:http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/03/06/140446.html
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