Doctors, diplomats say thousands dead in Libya
Updated 1:55 p.m. ET
Militiamen loyal to Muammar Qaddafi clamped down in Tripoli, but cracks in his regime spread elsewhere across the nation, as the protest-fueled rebellion controlling much of eastern Libya claimed new gains closer to the capital. Two pilots let their warplane crash in the desert, parachuting to safety, rather than bomb an opposition-held city.
The opposition said it had taken over Misrata, which would be the largest city in the western half in the country to fall into its hands. Clashes broke out over the past two days in the town of Sabratha, west of the capital, where the army and militiamen were trying to put down protesters who overwhelmed security headquarters and government buildings, a news website close to the government reported.
Two air force pilots jumped from parachutes from their Russian-made Sukhoi fighter jet and let it crash, rather than carry out orders to bomb opposition-held Benghazi, Libya's second largest city, the website Quryna reported, citing an unidentified officer in the air force control room.
One of the pilots -- identified by the report as Ali Omar Qaddafi -- was from Qaddafi's tribe, the Gadhadhfa, said Farag al-Maghrabi, a local resident who saw the pilots and the wreckage of the jet, which crashed in a deserted area outside the key oil port of Breqa.
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International outrage mounted after Qaddafi on Tuesday went on state TV and in a fist-pounding speech called on his supporters to take to the streets to fight protesters. Qaddafi's retaliation has already been the harshest in the Arab world to the wave of anti-government protests sweeping the Middle East.
"People are very terrified now today because now Qaddafi is giving them an ultimatum that within 24 hours he will bomb the whole city," CBS News' George Baghdadi reports from outside of Benghazi. "I spoke with many who told me horrifying stories about how helicopters were shooting, and how gunmen were firing from moving cars and shooting at the homes to terrify the population."
Baghdadi said that Libyans are heling foreign journalists get into the country to document the brutality unfolding.
CBS News correspondent Mandy Clark entered the country Wednesday.
"We've been offered rides to anywhere we want to go. People want news crews in here to report what's happening. They're offering as many people as they can lifts to get to where they need to go," Clark told CBS Radio News.
Clark said that while she had difficult passing through security on the Egyptian side of the border, Libya militiamen were extremely friendly, repeatedly saying that international media were "welcome."
She also reports that she saw many citizens giving the sign of victory and waving old flags that represent Libya before the Qaddafi regime.
"I think what you're seeing is a division within Libya that starts to look more like a civil war - the east versus the center of the country. I think what Qaddafi is going to try to do is consolidate his power in Tripoli, ensure that his loyal forces, as well as mercenaries which he may be employing from Africa, are able to crack down on protesters," CBS News national security consultant Juan Zarate said on "The Early Show."
Qaddafi's apparently fractured power base - his crackdown has been denounced by several members of Libya's diplomatic corps - is exemplified by the split in the military, some of whom have supported protesters while others have used violence against them.
"He has weakened the military as an institution or at least controlled it in ways that have allowed it not to serve as a challenge to power. And so, in some ways it's a fractured organization - one that has regional and tribal loyalties," Zarate said. "You've seen defections in the east where the protesters have gained power. But you've also seen, for example, loyalists in Tripoli defending the regime. And so the military in some ways is not going to be the bulwark that we saw in Egypt."
The U.S. was evacuating embassy employees and their families, other American citizens and some other foreigners by ferry Wednesday to
Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said estimates of some 1,000 people killed in the violence in Libya were "credible," although he stressed information about casualties was incomplete. The New York-based Human Rights Watch has put the death toll at nearly 300, according to a partial count.
But a doctor who had recently returned from Benghazi, Dr. Gerard Buffet, told France's LeFigaro that he believed 2,000 people had been killed there between Thursday and Sunday.
"Our ambulances counted 75 the first day, 200 the second, after that more than 500," said Buffet, who worked at the Benghazi Medical Center for about a year and a half.
A former Libyan envoy to the Arab League, Abdel Monein al-Huni told AFP Wednesday that Qaddafi "is worse than Saddam" and that he expects the Libyan president to be removed from power in the next few days, but not before more bloodshed occurs.
"Quaddafi has made up his mind -- either kill or be killed," Huni said. "I think we will be witnessing awful butcheries."
Meanwhile, Libyan state television continued an unrelenting propaganda campaign, saying the country was free from unrest and that no casualties had occurred. It offered a plane to foreign journalists for a tour of sites where massacres were "alleged" to be taking place.
Qaddafi's speech appeared to have brought out a heavy force of supporters and militiamen that largely prevented major protests in the capital Tuesday night or Wednesday. Through the night, gunfire was heard, said one woman who lives near downtown.
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"Mercenaries are everywhere with weapons. You can't open a window or door. Snipers hunt people," she said. "We are under siege, at the mercy of a man who is not a Muslim."
During the day Wednesday, more gunfire was heard near Qaddafi's residence, but in many parts of the city of 2 million residents were venturing out to stores, some residents said. The government sent out text messages urging people to go back to their jobs, aiming to show that life was returning to normal. The residents spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.
But Libya's upheaval, just over a week old, has shattered the hold of Qaddafi's regime across much of the country. Protesters claim to hold towns and cities along nearly the entire eastern half of the 1,000-mile Mediterranean coastline, from the Egyptian border. In parts, they have set up their own jury-rigged self-administrations.
At the Egyptian border, guards had fled, and local tribal elders have formed local committees to take their place. "Welcome to the new Libya," a graffiti spray-painted at the crossing proclaimed. Fawzy Ignashy, a former soldier, now in civilian clothes at the border, said that early in the protests, some commanders ordered troops to fire on protesters, but then tribal leaders stepped in and ordered them to stop.
"They did because they were from here. So the officers fled," he said.
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A defense committee of local residents was even guarding one of Qaddafi's once highly secretive anti-aircraft missile bases outside the city of Tobruk. "This is the first time I've seen missiles like these up close," admitted Abdelsalam al-Gedani, one of the guards, dressed in an overcoat and carrying a Kalashnikov automatic rifle.
Protesters have claimed control all the way to the city of Ajdabiya, about 480 miles east of Tripoli, encroaching on the key oil fields around the Gulf of Sidra.
That has left Qaddafi's power centered around Tripoli, in the far west and parts of the country's center. But that appeared to be weakening in parts.
Protesters in Misrata were claiming victory after several days of fighting with Qaddafi loyalists in the city, about 120 miles east of Tripoli.
Residents were honking horns in celebration and raising the pre-Qaddafi flags of the Libyan monarchy, said Faraj al-Misrati, a local doctor. He said six people had been killed and 200 wounded in clashes that began Feb. 18 and eventually drove out pro-Qaddafi militiamen.
Residents had formed committees to clean the streets, protect the city and treat the injured, he said. "The solidarity among the people here is amazing, even the disabled are helping out."
An audio statement posted on the Internet was reportedly from armed forces officers in Misrata proclaiming "our total support" for the protesters.
New videos posted by Libya's opposition on Facebook also showed scores of anti-government protesters raising the flag from the pre-Qaddafi monarchy on a building in Zawiya, 30 miles west of Tripoli. Another showed protesters lining up cement blocks and setting tires ablaze to fortify positions on a square inside the capital.
The footage couldn't be independently confirmed.
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Further west, armed forces deployed in Sabratha, a town famed for nearby ancient Roman ruins, in a bid to regain control after protesters burned government buildings and police stations, the Quryna news website reported. It said clashes had erupted between soldiers and residents in the past nights and that residents were also reporting an influx of pro-Qaddafi militias that have led heaviest crackdown on protesters.
The opposition also claimed control in Zwara, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the Tunisian border in the west, after local army units sided with the protesters and police fled.
"The situation here is very secure, the people here have organized security committees, and there are people who have joined us from the army," said a 25-year-old unemployed university graduate in Zwara. "This man (Qaddafi) has reached the point that he's saying he will bring armies from African (to fight protesters). That means he is isolated," he said.
The division of the country -- and defection of some army units to the protesters -- raises the possibility the opposition could try an assault on the capital. On the Internet, there were calls by protesters for all policemen, armed forces and youth to march to Tripoli on Friday.
In his speech Tuesday night, Qaddafi defiantly vowed to fight to his "last drop of blood" and roared at supporters to strike back against Libyan protesters to defend his embattled regime.
"You men and women who love Qaddafi ... get out of your homes and fill the streets," Qaddafi said. "Leave your homes and attack them in their lairs."
Qaddafi appears to have lost the support of several tribes and his own diplomats, including Libya's ambassador in Washington, Ali Adjali, and deputy U.N. Ambassador Ibrahim Dabbashi.
The Libyan Embassy in Austria also condemned the use of "excessive violence against peaceful demonstrators" and said in a statement Wednesday that it was representing the Libyan people.
International alarm has risen over the crisis, which sent oil prices soaring to the highest level in more than two years on Tuesday and sparked a scramble by European and other countries to get their citizens out of the North African nation. The U.N. Security Council held an emergency meeting that ended with a statement condemning the crackdown, expressing "grave concern" and calling for an "immediate end to the violence" and steps to address the legitimate demands of the Libyan people.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy also pressed Wednesday for European Union sanctions against Libya's regime because of its violent crackdown on protesters, and raised the possibility of cutting all economic and business ties between the EU and the North African nation.
"The continuing brutal and bloody repression against the Libyan civilian population is revolting," Sarkozy said in a statement. "The international community cannot remain a spectator to these massive violations of human rights."
Italian news reports have said witnesses and hospital sources in Libya are estimating there are 1,000 dead in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, alone.
"We have no complete information about the number of people who have died," Frattini said in a speech to a Catholic organization in Rome ahead of a briefing in Parliament on Libya. "We believe that the estimates of about 1,000 are credible."
Libya is the biggest supplier of oil to Italy, which has extensive energy, construction and other business interests in the north African country and decades of strong ties.
Frattini said the Italian government is asking that the "horrible bloodshed" cease immediately.