Recap of developments in Middle East, North Africa
CAIRO—Latest developments in the unrest sweeping the Middle East and North Africa.
LIBYA: A fresh air strike hit the rebel-held Libyan town of Brega amid fears of a new bid by troops loyal to strongman Moammar Gadhafi’s regime to recapture the key oil port.
– US President Barack Obama said Gadhafi has lost legitimacy and must leave office, warning that he was studying all options in dealing with the crisis.
– Gadhafi, his sons and key aides will be probed over allegations they have perpetrated crimes against humanity, the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said.
– Libyan rebels rejected a mediation proposal from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, which the Arab League said it was “studying.”
– A major European operation was under way to airlift out of Tunisia thousands of people who fled the bloodshed in Libya as Washington also offered planes to repatriate Egyptian refugees.
Article continues after this advertisement– The UN said a food aid ship for Libya turned back for security reasons.
Article continues after this advertisement– The Pentagon said Libya has used warplanes for bombing raids on rebel positions.
– Poland suspended diplomatic activity in Tripoli and was evacuating embassy staff from the Libyan capital.
– Gadhafi’s son, Seif al-Islam, said bombs dropped on the eastern port of Brega were intended to frighten, not kill.
– Malian officials said up to 800 ethnic Tuareg fighters from Niger, Mali, Algeria and Burkina Faso had joined forces with Gadhafi’s regime.
– Libya’s oil output is down by half since the uprising began, the country’s top oil official said.
– Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Libya is on the verge of civil war.
– US amphibious forces deployed to the Greek island of Crete.
– Three Dutch marines helping to evacuate civilians from Sirte were captured by Libyan soldiers at the weekend, and negotiations continued for their safe return.
– NATO has no intention of intervening in Libya but is planning for “all eventualities”, alliance chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.
– State-run Metallurgical Corp of China Ltd says it has halted multi-million-dollar projects in Libya, the latest of a number of Chinese firms to shut down in the strife-torn country.
– The European Union will earmark 30 million euros in aid to cope with the refugee crisis in revolt-hit Libya, EU commissioner for international cooperation Kristalina Georgieva said.
EGYPT: Egypt’s military rulers have accepted the surprise resignation of Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq, seen by protesters as a symbol of ousted president Hosni Mubarak’s regime.
– The Cairo bourse said it will remain closed indefinitely.
– Egypt’s prosecutor general denied reports claiming toppled president Hosni Mubarak and his family were in Saudi Arabia, insisting they were still in an Egyptian Red Sea resort.
YEMEN: Yemen’s opposition and clerics have offered President Ali Abdullah Saleh a smooth exit from power this year, but protesters staged new demonstrations to demand his immediate ouster.
IRAQ: Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani raised the possibility of early elections in the autonomous region after a spate of protests there.
– The mayor of Baghdad resigned after protests in the Iraqi capital against poor public services and corruption.
SAUDI ARABIA: Cyber activists have created a group on Facebook calling for a “Day of Anger” on Friday in the eastern Shiite-majority Saudi region, following the arrest of a Shiite cleric who called for a constitutional monarchy in the kingdom.
BAHRAIN: Six opposition groups, including the largest Shiite parliamentary bloc, set conditions for dialogue which include electing a “constitutional assembly” to form a new constitution.
TUNISIA: Interim Tunisian President Foued Mebazaa announced that a constituent assembly charged with developing a new post-revolt constitution will be elected on July 24.
– The European Investment Bank, the financial arm of the European Union, announced it was extending more than 600 million euros in additional loans to unrest-hit Tunisia.
PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES: Banks in the Gaza Strip closed for a day of protest after gunmen allegedly protected by Hamas police twice robbed one bank of tens of thousands of dollars.