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Libya's social affairs minister, Ibrahim al-Sharif, said they welcomed international humanitarian aid, but only from international organizations. "But if it comes with a military face then we won't accept it, it's basically a declaration of war," he told reporters in Tripoli. Wary of Gadhafi's earlier broken cease-fire pledges, European officials supported the rebels' refusal to negotiate until Gadhafi and his powerful sons and associates are gone. "The sons and the family of Gadhafi cannot participate in the political future of Libya," Frattini said on France's Europe-1 radio. He said Gadhafi's departure would have to happen "in parallel" with any cease-fire. He said he was lobbying allies to arm the rebels but that he was against expanding the international operation to include ground forces. The rebels have far less equipment, training and troops than Gadhafi's forces, and members of the international community have grown doubtful the opposition can overthrow Gadhafi even with air support. NATO is operating under a U.N. resolution authorizing a no-fly zone and airstrikes to protect Libyan civilians. Libya's former foreign minister Moussa Koussa gave statement to BBC Arabic saying Gadhafi and the rebels must not allow the country to slide into civil war. Koussa who quit his post and fled to Britain on March 30 warned Libya could become a "new Somalia" and urged "all the parties to avoid taking Libya into civil war." NATO airstrikes on Sunday hit Gadhafi tanks, helping the rebels push back government troops who had been advancing toward Benghazi on an east-west highway along the country's northern Mediterranean coast. The airstrikes largely stopped heavy shelling by government forces of the eastern city of Ajdabiya
-- a critical gateway to Benghazi, the opposition's de facto capital and Libya's second largest city. On Monday, rebels held positions at the western gates of the city, on the fringes of desert littered with bullet casings, scraps of metal and more than a dozen blackened or overturned vehicles, including tanks and pickup trucks outfitted with anti-aircraft guns. The area was also scattered with twisted cooking pots, torn blankets and a shredded green helmet smeared with blood. A rebel scout sent down the highway to the west said he encountered Gadhafi forces and was drawn into a brief gunbattle before falling back to Ajdabiya, but there were no major battles on that front Monday.
[Associated
Press;
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