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Brega, 460 miles (740 kilometers) east of Tripoli along the coast, and nearby Ajdabiya are the furthest west points in the large contiguous swath of eastern Libya extending all the way to the Egyptian border that fell into opposition hands in the uprising that began Feb. 15. Gadhafi's regime has been left in control of the country's northwest corner, centered on Tripoli, but even here several cities have fallen into rebel hands after residents rose up in protests, backed by mutinous army units and drove out Gadhafi loyalists. In recent days, loyalists succeeded in regaining two of those towns -- Gharyan, a strategic town in the Nafusa mountains south of Tripoli, and Sabratha, a small town west of the capital. But opposition fighters successfully repulsed attacks by pro-Gadhafi forces on several others: the key city of Zawiya outside the capital; Misrata, Libya's third largest city east of Tripoli; and Zintan, a town further southwest in the Nafusa mountains. The regime may be bringing in more forces from regions it still dominates in the sparsely populated deserts in the southwest. Residents of the southwestern oasis town of Sebha -- a key Gahdafi stronghold with military bases 400 miles (560 kilometers) south of Tripoli
-- reported heavy movement at the airport there Tuesday night, said Abdel-Bari Zwei, one of the opposition activists in Ajdabiya in touch with sympathizers in Sebha. Zwei said it is believed some of those forces were involved in the offensive against Brega.
[Associated
Press;
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