Ajdabiya: Holding out under a rain of shelling and sniper fire, Libyan rebels fought Muammar Gaddafi's forces Sunday in close-quarters battles in the city centre of Misrata, the last major rebel foothold in western Libya. Seventeen people were killed, an NGO worker and an opposition activist said.

Government troops have been laying siege to the city on Libya's Mediterranean coast for weeks, prompting repeated international warnings of a dire humanitarian situation as well as calls for Nato forces to intensify airstrikes on Gadhafi's forces there.

On Sunday, government troops, who have pushed into the city centre from the outskirts in recent days, pounded Misrata with mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenades, said resident Abdul Salam, who only provided his given name for fear of retribution.

"Residents have become so accustomed to the sound of mortars and missiles," he said. "Snipers are still on the roofs of tall buildings shooting at anything that moves in the city centre."

Rebels fought government forces back from an area around a central produce market, regaining a small sliver of territory, said Rida Al Montasser, a local activist reached by Skype.

He said a hospital report that he received from a doctor, showed 17 people, including rebels, were killed and 74 others were injured. He said Gaddafi forces had fired at the city's hospital Sunday.

Children shot

A worker for a foreign NGO who visited the hospital Sunday also said 17 bodies were brought in, including that of a girl shot in the head. Other children who had been shot were among the wounded, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he feared for his safety.

Explosions thundered late into the night, Al Montasser said.

The Nato-led air campaign authorised by the UN to protect civilians and enforce a no-fly zone has failed to stop government shelling that, according to residents and witnesses, has hit Misrata's hospital, the port and residential areas.

The international airstrikes have kept rebels from being defeated on the battlefield by the better trained and equipped government forces, but it still has not been enough to turn the tide in the war.

In the eastern half of Libya, rebels in control of most of that part of the country since the uprising began on February 15 have been unable to advance westward toward the capital.

Lack of information

In Paris, French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet dismissed statements from a top Nato official that the alliance is short of aircraft. Longuet said instead that Nato's mission in Libya is hampered by a lack of ground information.

"There is no lack of planes but a lack of identification of mobile objectives," he said in an interview published Sunday in the daily Le Parisien. "The problem is that we're missing concrete and verifiable information on identified objectives on the ground."

Longuet said that "coalition aviation is capable of breaking all logistical provisions of Gaddafi's troops" to the east. But he acknowledged that in urban combat, "if the aviation avoids tragedies, it still isn't solving the problem."

After a meeting of Nato foreign ministers last week in Berlin, the alliance's secretary-general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said Nato needed "a small number of precision aircraft" to hit Gaddafi's forces.

"I'm hopeful that nations will step up to the plate," he said, noting that the two-day Berlin meeting was not held to solicit new pledges of support.

The need for the additional aircraft comes as the situation has changed on the ground, Fogh Rasmussen said.

Ajdabiya shelled

In eastern Libya on Sunday, government forces shelled the eastern edge of Ajdabiya, the front-line rebel town that has been the scene of fierce fighting in recent weeks.

Loud booms rocked the city throughout the morning, sending a column of cars - some with rebel fighters, others with families - fleeing north through a thick sandstorm to more securely held rebel territory.

Rebel forces fired back with rockets and no government forces entered the city, said rebel fighter Awad Sathi.

The Libyan government has come under sharp international criticism for its assault on Misrata and has been accused by human rights groups of using heavy weapons, including shells, missiles and cluster bombs. Such bombs can cause indiscriminate casualties and have been banned by many countries.

In Tripoli, Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ebrahim denied the allegations Sunday, telling a small gathering of foreign diplomats: "Don't believe the lies."

Major General Saleh Ebrahim denied Libyan forces have used cluster bombs, saying the army did not have such weapons and that Libyan soldiers had not been trained in their use.

On Sunday, spokesman Ebrahim said Nato is taking sides in the conflict and renewed claims that fighters from the Al Qaida terror network have joined the rebels.

"Nato is supporting the rebels, allowing them to advance against our army, providing them with air cover," he said. "It knows about the arming of rebels by the Qatari government and is allowing that. Nato knows about Al Qaida activities in Benghazi, Darna and Beyda. It knows that Al Qaida fighters are advancing westbound."

No crime commited

In an interview with The Washington Post, Saif Al Islam Gaddafi, son of the Libyan leader who is battling a rebellion, claimed "we didn't commit any crime against our people".

The 38-year-old Saif Gaddafi told the Post in an hour-long interview in Tripoli that evidence of Libyan forces firing on anti-government demonstrators is false, likening it to reports of pre-war Iraq hiding weapons of mass destruction.

"It's exactly like the WMD," he said. "WMD, WMD, WMD, go and attack Iraq. Civilians, civilians, civilians, go and attack Libya. It's the same thing."

Saif Gaddafi, speaking in fluent English, said he had brought many reformers into the Libyan government. But several of them have defected to the rebellion and have leading roles with the Transitional National Council.

He said the rebellion is besieged by Al Qaida, and dismissed claims by the United Nations, doctors, foreign journalists and others that civilians were targeted and killed in Misrata.

"I am not going to accept it, that the Libyan army killed civilians. This didn't happen. It will never happen."

He said the the United States should help Libya fight Al Qaida and that after "terrorists" are removed from Misrata and the rebel stronghold of Benghazi that his father's role would be reduced under a new constitution.

"The biggest issue is the terrorists and the armed militia," he said. "Once we get rid of them, everything will be solved."