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Libyan rebels reject Qadhafi ceasefire offer

Benghazi — Libyan rebels on Saturday rejected Muammar Qadhafi's offer for a ceasefire and negotiations if NATO stopped its attacks, saying the time for compromise had passed.

"Qadhafi's regime has lost all credibility," Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, spokesman for the rebel's transitional national council, said in a statement.
 
The Libyan leader had repeatedly offered ceasefires only to continue violating human rights, it said.
 
"The time for compromise has passed. The people of Libya cannot possibly envisage or accept a future Libya in which Qadhafi's regime plays any role," it said.
 
In a speech broadcast on Libyan state television, Qadhafi offered to order a ceasefire and start negotiations provided that provided NATO stop its strikes against his forces but he refused to give up power, as rebels and Western powers demand.
 
"(Libya) is ready until now to enter a ceasefire," Qadhafi said. "We were the first to welcome a ceasefire and we were the first to accept a ceasefire…but the crusader NATO attack has not stopped. The gate to peace is open."
 
The rebels' military spokesman, Colonel Ahmed Bani, also said Qadhafi was "playing dirty games."
 
"He doesn't speak honestly. We don't believe him and we don't trust him," Bani told Reuters.

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