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Seraphim
07-30-2003, 06:17 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=2&u=/ap/20030730/ap_on_re_af/liberia_030730180660

http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20030730/capt.1059575233.liberia_dkb104.jpg

A government fighter crouches to avoid gunfire on the roof of a building next to the Mesurado 'old' bridge in the Liberian capital Monrovia Wednesday, July 30, 2003, where government and rebel forces exchanged small arms and mortar fire despite a proclaimed ceasefire. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)


By ALEXANDRA ZAVIS, Associated Press Writer

MONROVIA, Liberia - An advance inspection team of a long-promised multinational peacekeeping force flew into Liberia (news - web sites)'s besieged capital Wednesday, as explosions and gunfire rocked Monrovia despite a new rebel pledge to cease fire.


AP Photo


AP Photo
Slideshow: Liberia




Nigerian military commanders and other team members traveled from Ghana aboard a military plane, and authorities said they would assess conditions for a peace force pledged since rebels opened attack on the refugee-crowded capital in June.


Nigerian Brig. Gen. Festus Okwonkwo, who would oversee any West African deployment, said on arrival that the first peace forces would follow him in days — a timeframe repeatedly held out by West African officials.


In Washington, Pentagon (news - web sites) spokesman Lawrence Di Rita said it was "too early" to say whether U.S. Marines, expected to arrive off Liberia's coast in warships by Saturday, would take part on the ground.


President Bush (news - web sites) repeated demands that a cease-fire be in place, and President Charles Taylor gone, before any U.S. involvement.


"I also want to remind you, the troop strength will be limited and the time frame will be limited, and we're working on that," Bush told a White House news conference Wednesday.


In Monrovia, residents in rebel-held parts of the bloodied capital held a rally to urge rebels to hold their ground until a peace force arrives — and to appeal to American forces to hurry.


"Uncle Sam must come at once," declared the slogan on one banner, among the crowd of hundreds of participants.


Residents said they fear looting and reprisal attacks on civilians if rebels withdraw from the city ahead of peacekeepers. Taylor's forces, largely unpaid and notorious for rights abuses, have robbed homes nightly during the two-month siege of the capital.


A rebel commander, Maj. Gen. As Shaeriff, promised ralliers "we'll not move an inch from Monrovia until peacekeepers arrive."


Insurgents are pressing a three-year campaign to take the capital and oust Taylor, a Libyan-trained guerrilla fighter who launched the American-founded West African nation into near-constant conflict in 1989.


The Bush administration has promised at least logistical support to what it says must be a West African- and U.N.-led peace effort.


West African leaders, taken aback by the surge in fighting and hopeful of more U.S. aid for the multimillion-dollar mission, have yet to deliver on what they have repeatedly described as imminent deployment.


The 12-member assessment team will work in Monrovia at least through Friday, West African bloc spokesman Sunny Ugoh said. Two Nigerian battalions, on standby as a vanguard force, will deploy only after the assessment, he said.


Six African countries — Nigeria, Ghana, Mali, Benin, Senegal and Togo — have promised a total of 3,250 troops for an eventual 5,000-strong peacekeeping force, according to a statement issued Wednesday by the Economic Community of West African States, the regional bloc arranging the force.


In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (news - web sites) urged West African nations to commit publicly to a date for deployment — and repeated that U.N. funds could be freed to help with the cost.


A rebel cease-fire, announced Tuesday under U.S. and West African pressure, brought not a pause in hostilities on Wednesday.





Rebel commanders on the ground accused Taylor's forces of provoking fighting with new attacks, and said a cease-fire was impossible under those conditions.

Liberian military chief Gen. Benjamin Yeaten said government forces were battling attempted rebel drives across heavily contested bridges, which lead from the rebel-held port to the government's base in central Monrovia.

At one span, Old Bridge, teenage government fighters in bandanas, jeans and sneakers danced out onto the bridge, dodging bullets. Holding AK-47s over their heads, they fired wildly, then ran back for cover.

Mortars crashed into tin-roof shacks around the port, killing at least one person and wounding eight adults and a dozen children, aid workers said. Government forces fired volleys of rocket-propelled grenades.

"There is nothing like a cease-fire here," said Kate Wright, a downtown resident who spent a sleepless night cowering in a basement business center with neighbors.

Others slept on city beaches, feeling safer in the soft sand than in their own homes.

Stray bullets from fighting near two bridges whistled into neighborhoods around the U.S. Embassy — scattering a crowd gathered there to draw water from a stream.

Fighting has killed more than 1,000 civilians in the capital since June.

Cut off from aid and commercial warehouses at the rebel-held port and from the main water plant outside the city, the 1.3 million residents and refugees are running desperately short of food and clean water, and cholera and other diseases are rampant.

On Wednesday, the United States' top diplomat arrived in the region to urge West African nations to step up efforts for a cease-fire and peace force.

"The time has truly come to act," Walter Kansteiner, assistant secretary of state for Africa, told officials in Guinea.

Guinea, blaming Taylor for cross-border insurgencies by Liberian fighters, is widely alleged to be backing the rebels now laying siege to the capital. Guinea denies it.

He219
07-30-2003, 06:38 PM
It may be the wrong section, but I just saw this image...

http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20030729/capt.1059500408.liberia_ny194.jpg

In this handout picture from the US Air Force, US Marines with the Fleet Anti-terrorism Security Team (FAST) based out of U.S. Naval Air Station Rota, Spain provide security for a helicopter from the 56th Rescue Squadron, Naval Air Station Keflavik, Iceland as it lands at the U.S. Embassy in Liberia (news - web sites) on Monday, July 28, 2003. (AP Photo/U. S. Air Force, Technical Sgt. Justin D. Pyle)


more...

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Hi-Res (http://www.af.mil/media/photodb/photos/030728-F-6701P-045.jpg)

LUNGI, Sierra Leone -- An HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter prepares for aerial refueling from an Air Force MC-130P Combat Shadow after a evacuation mission into the U.S. Embassy in Monrovia, Liberia, on July 28. The 398th Air Expeditionary Group is currently in Sierra Leone to provide personnel recovery and emergency evacuation capability for the humanitarian assistance survey team and the fleet antiterrorism security team in Liberia. The HH-60G is from the 56th Rescue Squadron at Naval Air Station Keflavik, Iceland, and the MC-130P is from the 352nd Special Operations Group at Royal Air Force Mildenhall. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Justin D. Pyle)


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Hi-Res (http://www.af.mil/media/photodb/photos/030721-F-6701P-018.jpg)

LUNGI, Sierra Leone -- Marines prepare to board an Air Force HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter here July 21. The Marines are part of an antiterrorism security team augmenting security at the U.S. Embassy in Monrovia, Liberia. The helicopters are deployed form Naval Air Station Keflavik, Iceland, as part of the 398th Air Expeditionary Group. The group provides recovery and emergency evacuation capabilities in Liberia. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Justin D. Pyle)