Gaddafi said in a speech outside of one of his apartments that still maintains control of the capital Tripoli, and said he was calling on people to "cleanse Libya house to house" unless the protesters on the streets deserted.
He swore he would not give up, as leaders of Tunisia and Egypt did.
"Gaddafi is not a point to step back from Gaddafi is the leader of the revolution forever," he said in his speech that since the first big anti-government protests erupted last week.
"I am a warrior," he said, adding: "I will not leave this earth, and I will die here as a martyr."
"I have not ordered the use of force has not yet ordered a bullet to be fired ... when I do, everything will burn," said Gaddafi.
He urged supporters to take to the streets to show loyalty, said: "You men and women who like Gaddafi, leave your houses and filling the streets Chase them, arrest them, return to the security (forces) .. "
"From tonight until tomorrow, all young people need to form local committees for the safety of people, he said, telling people to wear green armbands to identify themselves.
"Monitoring people's revolution and Libya, Libya," he said, was defiant.
Gadhafi blamed the unrest on the "cowards and traitors" who sought to portray Libya as a place of chaos and "humble" Libyans.
Inspired by the rebellion of the street-born that has swept Egypt and Tunisia, and forced to resign from their leaders, thousands of Libyans a series of protests against Gaddafi, in power for 42 years.
With more bodies found in the capital, Tripoli, opposition groups and Al-Arabiya television, with more than 500 dead and almost 1,400 people still missing since the unrest began in the countries of North Africa.
Libyan unrest provoked strong reactions throughout the world.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday condemned as "completely unacceptable repression of Libya on anti-regime demonstrators" and called on Tripoli to respect people's rights.
"This blood is totally unacceptable," Clinton said at the State Department, and added: "It is the responsibility of the Government of Libya to respect the universal rights of their own people, including their right to free speech and assembly, he said.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday expressed concern at reports of grave violations of human rights in Libya.
No comments:
Post a Comment