| NATO confident Gaddafi rule will collapse
The head of the NATO military alliance said that military and political pressure were weakening Muammar Gaddafi's hold on power in Libya and would eventually topple him.
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen delivered his message on Thursday as Libya's government denied persistent rumours that Gaddafi's wife, daughter and top oil official had left the country.
Libyan officials have produced no evidence of the whereabouts of the three, raising questions about Gaddafi's ability to hold together his entourage in the face of a widespread rebellion and NATO bombing.
"We have significantly degraded Gaddafi's war machine. And now we see results, the opposition has gained ground," Rasmussen told a news conference in the Slovak capital, Bratislava.
"I am confident that combination of strong military pressure and increased political pressure and support for the opposition will eventually lead to the collapse of the regime."
Securing family
Earlier, a Tunisian security source and a Libyan opposition source with links to the ruling circle said Gaddafi's wife Safia and daughter Aisha were staying on the Tunisian island of Djerba, near the border with Libya.
Libyan rebel officials, as well as official sources in Tunisia, have said that Shokri Ghanem, a former prime minister who runs Libya's oil industry, had left Libya via Tunisia, though it was unclear where he had gone.
Libya's deputy foreign minister and one of the main government spokesmen, Khaled Kaim, told reports in Tripoli: "Shokri Ghanem is in his position, at work. If he's out of the country, he'll be coming back.
"As for the family of the leader, they're still here in Libya. Where else would they be?"
Rasmussen said he had no information that Gaddafi's wife, daughter and oil chief had fled.
Libya battle
NATO, acting under a UN mandate, has been carrying out air strikes on the oil producer since Gaddafi used force to put down a revolt inspired by uprisings elsewhere in the Arab world.
Rebels control eastern Libya and pockets in the West, but the conflict has reached stalemate in military terms, with several attempts by the rebel to advance on Tripoli, Gaddafi's stronghold, stalled.
That has left Western governments -- under pressure from sceptical publics to deliver a decisive outcome -- counting on Gaddafi's administration collapsing from within.
Ceasefire deal
The last few days have also seen a flurry of diplomatic activity focusing on a possible ceasefire deal, with pro-Gaddafi officials travelling to Moscow for talks and United Nations envoys trying to broker an agreement.
Western powers are likely to stress their determination to keep the pressure up on Gaddafi when heads of state from the Group of Eight industrialised nations meet on May 27-28 in the French seaside resort of Deauville.
Libyan officials deny attacking civilians and say they have been forced to act against armed criminal gangs and al Qaeda militants. They describe the NATO intervention as an act of colonial aggression aimed at grabbing Libya's oil.
If Gaddafi's wife and daughter and Ghanem have left the country, it could make it harder for the Libyan leader to keep other members of his entourage from leaving too.
REUTERS/Williams
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