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The gathering appeared to have been organized in an attempt to reassure Libyans that the regime was standing strong three months into an uprising that has left most of the east in rebel hands, halted the country's oil exports and drawn in the punishing NATO air campaign. Gadhafi's regime has also been hit by a wave of defections. Late on Wednesday, Libya's deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, denied rumors that Gadhafi's wife and daughter had fled to neighboring Tunisia. "They are in Tripoli; they are safe," he said. He also denied that Oil Minister Shukri Ghanem defected, saying he was in Vienna on business. Ghanem, who was also head of Libya's National Oil Co., crossed into neighboring Tunisia by road on Monday and defected, according to a Tunisian security official and Abdel Moneim al-Houni, a former Libyan Arab League representative who was among the first wave of Libyan diplomats to defect. Prominent members of Gadhafi's government who have abandoned the regime include the foreign minister, justice minister, a former U.N. General Assembly president and a number of other diplomats.
[Associated
Press;
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