Libya crisis: Gaddafi envoy visited London Skip to main content

Libya crisis: Gaddafi envoy visited London

Libyan rebel: "We've made mistakes, we're fighting for freedom, there's no plan"
A Libyan government envoy, Mohammed Ismail, has been in London in the past few days for talks with the British authorities, the BBC has learnt.
The Foreign Office said that in all its contacts with Libyan officials, it had made it clear that "Gaddafi has to go".
News of the visit emerged after Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa flew to Britain and was said to have defected.
Meanwhile, the US says air attacks have destroyed about a quarter of the Libyan government's military's capabilities.
Following Mr Koussa's unexpected arrival in the UK on Wednesday, there were unconfirmed reports that other senior Libyans were defecting.
The pan-Arab TV channel Al-Jazeera said the intelligence minister, deputy foreign minister and General People's Congress speaker were awaiting flights in Tunisia.
Oil Minister Shukri Ghanim has denied any intention to leave Libya. Ali Abdul Salaam Treki, who was recently named as Libya's permanent representative to the United Nations, is not accepting the post.
A government spokesman told reporters that they were all in Libya, but that it was also possible that some had left the country on a mission.
Koussa questioned
BBC diplomatic correspondent James Robbins understands that Mohammed Ismail - a senior aide to Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam - visited London in recent days.
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi Mohammed Ismail was a senior aide to Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam
The Foreign Office refused to confirm the visit, saying it was "not going to provide a running commentary on our contacts with Libyan officials, but that in any contact that we do have we make it clear that Gaddafi has to go".
It seems that the envoy may have wanted to explore a possible exit strategy for the Libyan leader, but the Foreign Office insist their policy is to encourage all those around him to abandon what they call "a brutal regime" and embrace a better future for Libya, our correspondent says.
It is not clear on whose authority within the regime Mr Ismail was in London, but he is thought to have returned to the Libyan capital, Tripoli, he adds.
There has been mounting speculation that Col Gaddafi's sons, particularly Saif al-Islam, Saadi and Mutassim, are willing to discuss exit strategies, either for the whole family or only the Libyan leader.

Moussa Koussa's career

  • 1979-80: De facto ambassador in London
  • 1994: Appointed head of foreign intelligence
  • 2009: Appointed foreign minister; reportedly resigns 30 March 2011
The reports of Mr Ismail's visit come as British diplomats and intelligence officials continue to question Moussa Koussa, who is also a former head of Libya's external intelligence service.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron said Mr Koussa's defection told "a compelling story of the desperation and the fear at the very top of the crumbling and rotten Gaddafi regime".
He also insisted that Mr Koussa had not been offered immunity from prosecution. Scottish prosecutors have asked to interview him about the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, which left 270 people dead, though government sources told the Guardian they did not think he was involved.
Rebels 'outnumbered' Meanwhile, the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm Mike Mullen, said coalition air attacks had destroyed about a quarter of the Libyan government's military's capabilities.

Notable defections

  • Mustafa Mohammed Abdul Jalil: Quit as justice minister in Feb in protest at "excessive" violence against civilians. Now key opposition leader.
  • Gen Abdel Fattah Younes al-Abidi: Interior minister, switched sides after being sent to Benghazi to crush the protests. Told BBC he thinks Col Gaddafi may be mad.
  • Ali Abdussalam Treki: Ex-foreign minister was named as Libya's new UN envoy after previous incumbent defected. Since refused post and now reportedly in Egypt.
  • Ahmed Qadhaf al-Dam: Cousin and close aide of Col Gaddafi, defected to Egypt in February in protest at "grave violations to human rights".
But Adm Mullen said this did not mean that Col Gaddafi's forces were close to breaking point; he said they still outnumbered Libyan rebels about 10-to-one.
"We have actually fairly seriously degraded his military capabilities. That does not mean he's about to break, from a military standpoint, because that's not the case," he told the US House of Representatives armed services committee.
He also revealed that bad weather had stopped the coalition from identifying targets over the past three or four days.
The rebels in Libya have been struggling to regain the initiative after several days of losing ground to Col Gaddafi's forces.
They are trying once more to advance westwards along the Mediterranean coast.
But they were halted by the government troops' superior firepower while attempting to reoccupy the oil town of Brega, a town about 800km (500 miles) east of Tripoli. Gaddafi loyalists earlier overran Ras Lanuf.
Further west, pro-Gaddafi forces continued to pound the besieged city of Misrata with artillery and tank fire.
"If it continues for a couple more days, I'm afraid it will overwhelm the city and it will be a complete massacre," a resident told the BBC.
Nato has meanwhile said it is investigating reports of civilian casualties caused by air strikes on Tripoli. Earlier, the top Vatican official in the Libyan capital, citing witnesses, said 40 civilians had been killed.
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12930169

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