sarkozy and cameron pledge further nato support
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
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Egypt's Foreign Minister visits as rebels enter Sirte

Sarkozy and Cameron pledge further NATO support

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Egypt Today, egypt today Sarkozy and Cameron pledge further NATO support

 Sarkozy and Cameron concluded their visit to Libya yesterday after visiting Benghazi in in country's east
Tripoli - Imad Ajaj

 Sarkozy and Cameron concluded their visit to Libya yesterday after visiting Benghazi in in country's east The French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the British Prime Minister David Cameron concluded their visit to Libya last night after visiting Benghazi in eastern Libya. The two leaders flew from Tripoli to Benghazi, along with the President of the National Transitional Authority (NTC), Mustafa Abdul Jalil.
The plane landed in the airport near Benghazi’s Tahrir Square.
The NTC is currently headquartered in Benghazi, which was one of the first cities captured by the Libyan rebels.
It was the first visit by foreign leaders to Libya since Gaddafi was toppled.
Abdel Jalil said that the NTC was honoured by the visit, which came the same day as the arrival of the Egyptian Foreign Minister, Mohammed Abdo.
“Libyans will not forget what NATO gave them on March 19th, when it stood by Libyans people’s side against Gaddafi’s forces.”
Cameron and Sarkozy received a hero’s welcome in Benghazi.
"It is great to be in a free Benghazi and in a free Libya," Cameron said as jubilant crowds cheered them, flashing V-for-victory signs.
"The people of Britain salute your courage."
"Your city was an inspiration to the world," Cameron added. "Colonel Gaddafi said he would hunt you like rats but you show the courage of lions."
Sarkozy said: "Friends in Benghazi we ask one thing. We believe in a united Libya, not a divided Libya."
 "You wanted peace, you wanted liberty, you want economic progress. France, Great Britain and Europe will be on the side of the Libyan people," he said.
Before flying to Benghazi, Cameron at a joint news conference in Tripoli pledged help to bring the fugitive Gaddafi to book.
"We must keep on with the NATO mission until civilians are all protected and until this work is finished," he said.
"We will help you to find Gaddafi and to bring him to justice."
Sarkozy said the toppled despot remained a "danger" and that there was a "job to finish" in eliminating his forces' remaining strongholds.
Sarkozy also insisted there was "no ulterior motive" in Western assistance to the new Libya.
"We did what we did because we thought it was right," he declared.
Cameron and Sarkozy, whose forces spearheaded the NATO air war that helped topple Gaddafi, are immensely popular among ordinary Libyans for their role in ending the fugitive strongman's 42 years of iron-fisted rule.
Cameron said NATO would continue its UN-mandated air operations until Gaddafi's remaining forces are neutralised.
"This work isn't finished yet. There are still parts of Libya under Gaddafi control," he said.
"And the message I think to Gaddafi and all those still holding arms on his behalf is it is over. Give up. The mercenaries should go home.
"Those who still think Gaddafi has any part in any part of government of any part of this country should forget it. He doesn't. It is time for him to give himself up."
In Tripoli, Cameron and Sarkozy met NTC head Mustafa Abdel Jalil amid a massive security operation.
There were roadblocks along the road from Metiga airport on Tripoli's eastern outskirts to the city-centre hotel where the two leaders held their talks, cordoned off by French-backed local forces.
The two visiting leaders also visited the Tripoli Medical Centre where jubilant crowds of medical staff thronged to shake their hands, chanting: "Thank you, thank you."
Cameron said Britain would release 600 million pounds ($950 million, 690 million euros) in Libyan assets as part of a series of measures aimed at supporting Libya's new authorities.
He also said Britain would release another 12 billion pounds in frozen Gaddafi regime assets as soon as the UN Security Council approved a draft resolution that Britain and France are to put forward on Friday.
Japan has also decided to release part of the $4.4 billion of frozen Libyan assets, Kyodo news agency reported.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Kamel Amr also arrived in Tripoli Thursday, an official in the Libyan capital said on condition of anonymity. He said Amr met NTC number two Mahmud Jibril and other officials.
Ahead of his trip, the foreign ministry in Cairo said it would be the first visit by an Arab official since the "victory" of the Libyan revolution.
Official sources told Arabs Today: “this visit comes because Egyptian government wants Amro to be one of the first officials to arrive to Tripoli’
The spokesman of the Egyptian foreign ministry, Amr Rushedi, told ‘Sawa Radio’: “the goal of this visit is to show the Egyptian commitment to Libya and its support for the Libyan people. We will discuss the possibility of cooperation between the two countries. The visit will also ascertain the support that Libya require from Egypt and find out how Egypt can participate in Libya’s reconstruction.”
Their historic visit coincided with an assault on Sirte by battle-hardened fighters, who had set off in a 900-vehicle convoy from Misrata early Thursday before splitting at the crossroads town of Abu Qurin to form a pincer movement.
"Our revolutionaries have entered Sirte today on three main axes," the military council statement said, adding later that they had reached the city centre.
The later statement said Misrata fighters now controlled "the entrances to Sirte city" and were beginning "the process of combing."
A spokesman for the convoy confirmed that the pro-NTC troops had entered Sirte.
"I confirm our forces are in Sirte, it is a big force," said Fathi Bashaga.
"There is still resistance but our fighters will be able to overcome it," the spokesman told an AFP correspondent in Wadi Bey, a desert town where part of the Sirte-bound convoy was held up in a battle with Gaddafi loyalists.
"They are attacking us with 40- and 43-mm mortars and all kinds of weapons."
The military said Misrata hospital had so far received "one martyr and five wounded" from the fight in Sirte, based on initial reports.
Dr Ibrahim Garta said there were 20 NTC wounded and one dead.
Pro-NTC forces had earlier raised their flag on the outskirts of Sirte, the military said.
"Misrata's thwar at a distance of 3 km from the Sirte -- Independence flag flying over the last petrol station before the city," the Military Council said in an English statement, referring to the new regime's forces.
"We are turning the tables on Gaddafi. We were attacked in Misrata on three fronts, and now we're going to attack Sirte on three fronts," Fawzy Sawawy, head of the Mountains Brigade, told AFP.
Their task appeared to have been made easier by NATO air strikes.
 NATO said that on Wednesday it had struck a command and control node, a military vehicle storage facility, four radar systems and two surface-to-air missile systems in the Sirte area.
Around 15 percent of Gaddafi's forces are still operational, the alliance said.
General Vincent Tesniere said in a teleconference from Italy that Gaddafi's remaining forces were concentrated in a zone stretching from Tripoli to Sabha in the south and to Sirte.
 

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sarkozy and cameron pledge further nato support sarkozy and cameron pledge further nato support



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