Skip to main content
Feedback

Witness: Joy as opposition beats back Gadhafi forces in Misrata

By the CNN Wire Staff
March 6, 2011 -- Updated 2109 GMT (0509 HKT)
Click to play
Witness: There are rockets on the ground
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: The U.N. urges authorities to allow needed humanitarian aid into Misrata
  • A hospital in the central Libyan city says 42 people were killed, 85 wounded
  • Witness in Misrata: "Everyone is hugging everyone" despite "blood everywhere"
  • Witness describes opposition win despite claims by Gadhafi supporters
RELATED TOPICS
  • Libya
  • Moammar Gadhafi

(CNN) -- Standing outside a courthouse Sunday that the Libyan opposition is using for a base of operations in the town of Misrata, a witness described a sense of jubilation against a backdrop of blood stains and rocket fragments.

"I'm standing in the middle of a ... battlefield," the witness told CNN by phone from Misrata after a fierce fight between rebels and Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's forces.

People were holding their hands up, singing, chanting and cheering, he said. "Everyone is hugging everyone."

CNN is not identifying witnesses and sources for safety reasons.

A doctor at Central Misrata Hospital said 42 people were killed in the fighting -- 17 from the opposition and 25 from the pro-Gadhafi forces. Among the dead was a 3-year-old child, killed from direct fire, the doctor said. At least 85 people were wounded, the doctor said.

Gallery: Rebellion in Libya

The fighting continued on the city's outskirts Sunday evening.

The witness described the opposition's victory in central Misrata even as people some 200 kilometers (125 miles) west, at a pro-Gadhafi demonstration in Tripoli, insisted the government had taken back the coastal central Libyan city.

After reports of the opposition successfully holding onto Misrata, east of Tripoli, Libyan state TV showed a graphic stating that "strict orders have been issued to the armed forces not to enter cities taken by terrorist gangs."

On Sunday morning, pro-Gadhafi militias converged on Misrata from three different points, trying to retake control of the city, the witness said. He saw four tanks, though other witnesses told him there were a total of six. Using heavy artillery, the ground forces and tanks headed for the courthouse operations base.

Tanks fired rockets at the building, and black smoke could be seen rising from it, he said.

The opposition couldn't match the government's weaponry, but rebels took to the streets using what weapons they had, such as machine guns. And some simply picked up whatever they could find, with some resorting to sticks, he said.

Speaking to CNN during the battle, he said, "People are willing to die for the cause," describing them as "fearless" and "amazing."

Later, after the forces had been repelled from the city center, the witness said, "I can't believe it.

"The will and the determination and dedication that people are showing here on the ground, it just makes you speechless," he said.

Describing the scene, he said, "We're talking about a rocket on the ground. We're talking about blood everywhere."

CNN could not confirm witness reports for many areas in Libya, including Misrata.

Valerie Amos, the United Nations' Under Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, said Sunday that there was "urgent" need for humanitarian aid in Misrata because "people are dying and need help immediately." The world body has gotten reports that Libyan Red Crescent ambulances dispatched from Tripoli have been trying to get into Misrata to transport out dead and injured people.

"I call on the authorities to provide access without delay to allow aid workers to help save lives," Amos said in a statement.

Log in or sign up to comment

soundoff (68 Comments)

Post a comment

Log in or sign up to comment
  • desertvoice
    Terrible that the world watches while people bleed to death! How sick is the world today!
  • johnmuyundo
    The Arab league should revisit their stand and support military intervention,otherwise this war is mend to stay at the expense of the Libyan people.
  • KiM3695
    Recently, two fighter pilots from Gadhafi's army were sent on a mission to bomb their fellow citizens in Libya. They faced two choices: Either bomb the citizens on the ground, or return to Gadhafi, where they would likely be executed. The pilots chose neither option. Flying their planes dangerously ... more
  • rodken
    Worth a try. Just signed.
  • jamobthere
    Achmed the Dead Terrorist targets Kadaffy says "Silence! I kill you!"
  • rodken
    I have to say this report has to be bull.... They repelled the militia along with four to six tanks and all they had was machine guns and sticks.
    How big were those sticks!
  • rodken
    @Travelling, that would make more sense.
  • Travelling
    One can repel a tank with a molotov cocktail. Mortars and anti-aircraft guns, which I'm sure the rebels have, may have been used as deterrents as well.
  • rodken
    @whozzat,
    I guess you missed this part "Using heavy artillery, the ground forces and tanks headed for the courthouse, which rebels are using as its operations base.
    Tanks fired rockets at the building, and black smoke could be seen rising from it, he said."
  • whozzat
    Tanks don't do real good in urban combat. Especially where there are civilians. In a town, all they can do is block roads. Which doesn't help when there are individuals around.The reason that their "witnesses" couldn't decide whether there were six tanks or four, is because the tanks were outside... more
  • glen262
    Heroes and liberators of Libya, seize the tanks and the weapons of the Gadhafi forces and use them to your advantage, democracy is just around the corner.
  • whozzat
    I don't think they're listening to you.
  • whozzat
    Witness' testimony must be pretty unreliable, since they said Misrata is an Eastern city, and the map shows it in the North-west.
  • whozzat
    Oh, I see! So that would make Virginia a Western state.
    OK, gotcha! ;-)
  • Siyajkak
    I think it's referring to the fact that it's east of Tripoli and east of Gadaffi-controlled territory. It's like how in Cold War Germany, Munich would be a West German city, event though its in the eastern part of Germany overall
  • MrRodgers
    It's east of the capital. Right now the Libyan northwest is the capital city and its immediate suburbs. If there is one thing that rewrites the textbook on geography, it's war.
  • gitfidl
    Hard to understand "jubilation" over wins/losses of sides we do not even understand. It's not clear which demon vanquishes the current demon. We know they are all demons. We know the gas prices will go up and thus everything else.
  • beerhelps
    thankfully we have our guitars to keep us grounded in reality. it's the one thing that never changes. except in winter, when it gets a little testy.
  • whozzat
    We know they're watching the net, and if they see a lot of whiners in one area, everybody knows they will raise the gas prices in that neighborhood.
  • Siyajkak
    people are fighting for political freedom and economic opportunity, for LIBERTY! the most prized concept in America, and all you care about are gas prices
  • weatherzen
    Based on most of the comments below I'd say the loons are out in full force this afternoon!
  • NavRetired
    Lybians, it's your freedom, keep fighting for it. There will be blood, but you will be the victor. US should send humanitarian food and medical supplies, but the battle is for you to fight.
  • whozzat
    You must live in Area 51. In my job, I've seen people in trouble. And the Government gives them a free lawyer! I also see a lot of poor people to whom the Government actually gives money to! The Government also helps them find a job, if they want to. Before you say the U.S. isn't "that good" o... more
  • whozzat
    Contrary to your belief, cherokeefupa, the sun is the center of the solar system. Everything does not revolve around the U.S.
  • MrRodgers
    We should not foreclose any military option. I heard what the French foreign minister said about that, and I believe his main experience is in military affairs, not diplomacy - and it shows. At a certain point, the US, or some other powerful nation such as Italy, Britain or perhaps a NATO coalitio... more
Part of complete coverage on
Send your videos, stories
Are you in the Middle East or North Africa? Send iReport your images. Don't do anything that could put you at risk
Gadhafi's son speaks to CNN
CNN's Nic Robertson sits down with Saif Gadhafi, son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
updated March 4, 2011
Who are Gadhafi's world allies?
Despite intense interantional pressure, Moammar Gadhafi still has some support from world leaders.
Interactive: Latest developments
Check out our interactive map to see the latest developments across the Middle East and North Africa
updated March 6, 2011
Unrest in the Middle East, N. Africa
Demonstrations have spread across parts of the Middle East and Africa. Here is the latest from each country.
Explain it to me: Libya in crisis
From the rebels to the loyalists and leader Moammar Gadhafi, CNN's Michael Holmes explains the unrest in Libya.
Coverage in Arabic
For full coverage in Arabic of events in Egypt, Tunisia and the rest of the region, head to CNN Arabic.
Who is the opposition in Libya?
Anderson Coooper and Ben Wedeman speak with journalist Fadel Al-Ameen about the opposition organizing in Libya.