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SURMAN, Libya - Libya's government said a NATO airstrike west of Tripoli early June 20 destroyed a large family compound belonging to a close associate of Muammar Gadhafi, killing at least 15 people, including three children, the second such charge in as many days.
Col. Gadhafi's regime has repeatedly accused NATO of targeting civilians in an attempt to rally support against international intervention into Libya's civil war. The alliance insists it tries to avoid killing civilians.
Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said NATO bombs struck the compound belonging to Khoweildi al-Hamidi outside the city of Surman, some 40 miles west of Tripoli, around 4 a.m. local time June 20.
NATO initially said it had not hit any targets in the Surman area overnight. But the alliance later released a statement saying it conducted a “precision strike” near the town “on a legitimate military target—a command and control node which was directly involved in coordinating systematic attacks” on Libyan citizens.
The commander of NATO's Libya operation, Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, said the “strike will greatly degrade the Gadhafi regime's forces' ability to carry out their barbaric assaults on the Libyan people.”
NATO officials have repeatedly said the alliance does not target individuals.
Mr. Al-Hamidi is a longtime regime insider who took part in the 1969 coup that brought Col. Gadhafi to power. He reportedly commanded a battalion that crushed rebels in the nearby western city of Zawiya in March, and his daughter is married to one of Col. Gadhafi's sons, Saadi.
Spokesman Ibrahim said Mr. Al-Hamidi escaped the airstrikes unharmed but that three children, two of them Mr. Al-Hamidi's grandchildren, were among the 15 people killed. Officials said he was inside a still-intact building at the time of the strike.
“They (NATO) are targeting civilians. ... The logic is intimidation,” Mr. Ibrahim said. “They want Libyans to give up the fight ... they want to break our spirit.”
Foreign journalists based in the Libyan capital were taken by government officials to the walled compound, where at least two buildings had been blasted to rubble. A pair of massive craters could be seen in the dusty ground, and rescue workers with sniffer dogs were scouring the rubble in search of people. The smell of smoke was still in the air.
Bombs also appeared ripped holes through the top of a large tent sheltering cars, smashing the floor and mangling vehicles inside. The windows were shattered in a circular sitting room containing old framed photos said to be of Mr. Al-Hamidi, and a deer kept in an enclosure with other animals had a broken antler and was bleeding from the mouth.
While there were no signs of heavy weapons at the site, armed guards in military-style uniforms patrolled the grounds as numerous security cameras watched over the sprawling complex. Hundreds of cases of bottled water, cooking oil, pasta and other supplies were stockpiled in one of the destroyed buildings.
Another building outside the compound, next to a communications tower, was also flattened, and walls were blown out of an adjacent house. A mosque across the street and a school next door were not damaged.
Journalists were later taken to a hospital in the nearby city of Sabratha, where medical workers showed them the bodies of about eight to 10 people, including at least two children, said to have been killed in the strike. Some of the bodies appeared charred, while others were in pieces.
NATO acknowledged that one of its June 19 airstrikes accidentally struck a residential neighborhood in the capital, killing civilians.
A coalition including France, Britain and the United States launched the first strikes against Gadhafi's forces under a United Nations resolution to protect civilians on March 19. NATO, which is joined by a number of Arab allies, assumed control of the air campaign over Libya on March 31.
(Associated Press writers Don Melvin in Luxembourg and Brian Murphy in Dubai contributed to this report.)
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