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Three journalists killed, 15 injured in NATO raid

Libya said three journalists were killed in a NATO air strike on state television on Saturday and that the murder of the rebels’ army chief proved Al-Qaeda was instigating the country’s armed revolt. “Three of our colleagues were murdered and 15 injured while performing their professional duty as Libyan journalists,” said Khaled Basilia, director of Al-Jamahiriya television’s English-language service. He branded the strike “an act of international terrorism and in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.”

Earlier, NATO said it struck three television transmitters to silence “terror broadcasts” by Moamer Kadhafi’s regime.

“NATO conducted a precision air strike that disabled three ground-based Libyan state TV satellite transmission dishes in Tripoli... with the intent of degrading Kadhafi’s use of satellite television as a means to intimidate the Libyan people and incite acts of violence against them,” the alliance said. “In light of our (UN) mandate to protect civilian lives, we had to act.

After due consideration and careful planning to minimize the risks of casualties or long-term damage to television transmission capabilities, NATO performed the strike.”

But Basilia said the channel posed no threat to civilians. “We are not a military target, we are not commanders in the army and we do not pose threat to civilians,” he insisted.

“We are performing our job as journalists representing what we wholeheartedly believe is the reality of NATO’s aggression and the violence in Libya.”

Libyan rebels, meanwhile, probed the killing of their army chief, General Abdel Fatah Yunis.

“The NTC has appointed an investigative committee and we will publish all the facts of this investigation,” said Ali Tarhuni, who handles economic affairs for the rebel National Transitional Council. Yunis was the faithful right-hand man of Kadhafi, participating in the 1969 coup that brought him to power, before defecting to the rebels fighting to oust the strongman since February.

Tarhuni said Yunis’s bullet-ridden and partly burned body was found early on Friday on Benghazi’s outskirts, but that the NTC had received news of his death late on Thursday when the head of a militia behind the crime confessed. “The head of the militia is imprisoned now,” Tarhuni said, adding some of the perpetrators, who he said belonged to Jirah Ibn al-Obeidi brigade, were yet to be incarcerated, and the motive remained unclear.

Tripoli pinned the blame squarely on Al-Qaeda and argued the killing exposed the impotence of the NTC.

“The other members of the National Transitional Council knew about it but could not react because they are terrified of Al-Qaeda,” he added.

Meanwhile, the rebels appointed a temporary replacement for Yunis.

Suleiman Mahmud al-Obeidi was named “the interim chief of staff (of rebel armed forces) until further decisions are made,” said NTC spokesman Mahmud Shammam.

AFP

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