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Pro-Gaddafi forces clash with Tunisian military

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110429/wl_nm/us_libya

Pro-Gaddafi forces clash with Tunisian military

By Zoubeir Souissi – 2 hrs 23 mins ago

DEHIBA, Tunisia (Reuters) – Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi fought

a gun battle with Tunisian troops in a frontier town on Friday as Libya's

conflict spilled over its borders.

Pro-Gaddafi forces shelled the town of Dehiba, damaging buildings and wounding

at least one resident, and a squad drove into the town in a truck chasing

anti-Gaddafi rebels.

Tunisia summoned Libya's ambassador to protest against the incursions.

Tunisian deputy foreign minister Radhouane Nouicer, speaking on Al Jazeera

television, said casualties had been inflicted, including a young girl.

" We summoned the Libyan envoy and gave him a strong protest because we won't

tolerate any repetition of such violations. Tunisian soil is a red line and no

one is allowed to breach it, " he said.

The Libyan troops were chasing rebels from the Western Mountains region who

fled into Tunisia in the past few days after Gaddafi forces overran a border

post they had earlier seized.

A Reuters cameraman who crossed into Libya saw the bodies of three Gaddafi

soldiers on the ground. It was not clear if they had been shot by the rebels or

by the Tunisian military.

Tunisian border guards had shut down the border, he said. They were laying

barbed wire and fortifying their positions.

Columns of Libyan refugees fleeing the fighting in the Western Mountains were

reaching the crossing but were unable to get through.

Reuters photographers in Dehiba, a short distance from the border, saw several

abandoned pick-up trucks which Gaddafi loyalists had driven. One had a multiple

rocket launcher on the back. Another, which had overturned and lay upside down

in the sand, was fitted with a heavy caliber machine gun.

Two residents told Reuters that shells had fallen on the town from pro-Gaddafi

positions across the border.

" Rounds from the bombardment are falling on houses.. A Tunisian woman was

injured, " one resident, called Ali, told Reuters by telephone.

He said later the fighting and shelling had stopped.

" The Tunisian army is combing the town. We have no idea about the fate of

Gaddafi's forces there because the Tunisian army closed the gates to the town

and nobody is allowed to enter. "

Tunisia toppled its own veteran leader, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, in a

revolution earlier this year that triggered turmoil through the Middle East and

many Tunisians are sympathetic to the rebels fighting Gaddafi's forces.

ON THE BORDER

While Dehiba was under fire, the rebels, who are fighting to end more than four

decades of Gaddafi rule, announced they had recaptured the border post.

Rebels seized the post a week ago. It controls the only road link which their

comrades in the Western Mountains have with the outside world, making them rely

otherwise on rough tracks for supplies of food, fuel and medicine.

" Right here at this point I'm looking at the new flag flying up there at the

border. The rebels have got control of it, the freedom fighters. We're just in

the process of opening it up, " rebel Akram el Muradi said by telephone.

The main crossing into Libya, two hours' drive to the north, remains firmly

under Libyan government control.

Friday's clashes marked the first time that government ground forces had crossed

the border and entered a Tunisian town.

Residents said a crowd of local people gathered in Dehiba on Friday morning to

try to prevent pro-Gaddafi forces from entering the town. Tunisian soldiers

fired in the air to disperse them and urged the demonstrators to seek shelter

from the shelling inside their homes.

Inside Libya, NATO air strikes hit Gaddafi troops attacking rebel-held Zintan, a

rebel spokesman said from there. State news agency Jana confirmed the attacks,

saying " the crusader colonial aggression " had hit civilian and military sites.

In the rebel stronghold Benghazi, a doctor said shelling by Gaddafi's forces in

the besieged city of Misrata killed 12 people on Thursday, including two women.

He said the dead were victims of rocket and mortar fire.

Oil traders in Asia said on Friday a tanker with the first major oil shipment

from rebel-held east Libya is expected to arrive in China next week.

The Liberia-registered tanker Equator, reported to be carrying 80,000 tonnes of

crude, left the rebel-held east Libyan port of Marsa el Hariga three weeks ago,

carrying fuel exports vital to financing the uprising against Gaddafi.

The buyer of the cargo was not clear as trading house Vitol, which is managing

the shipment, has not commented on its Libyan transactions. Traders said that

finding a buyer was not straightforward due to concerns over legal complications

related to the ownership of oil and international sanctions.

(Additional reporting by Abdelaziz Boumzar in Dehiba, Georgy in

Benghazi, Tarek Amara and Tostevin in Tunis and Hamid Ould Ahmed in

Algiers, Randy Fabi in Singapore and Judy Hua in Beijing; Writing by Christian

Lowe; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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