Tripoli: The four-decade-old regime of Gaddafi faces rare internet calls for protests on Thursday by activists buoyed by the ouster of veteran strongmen on its eastern and western borders, in both Egypt and Tunisia.

The demonstrations are being called to commemorate the deaths of 14 protesters in 2006 in a rally in Libya's second city of Benghazi but they are being fuelled by the wave of protests that has swept through the Arab world, rocking regimes that have long seemed unmovable.

Like protest movements elsewhere in the region, the dissidents have been using the internet in a bid to rally support in a country where the media are tightly controlled by the state.

Under the banner "The February 17 Intifada (Uprising): A Day of Strikes in Libya", a Facebook group urging a popular uprising had garnered more than 5,000 members by Tuesday.

Another group of nearly 8,000 members invited the Libyan people to take to the streets for a "day of anger against corruption and nepotism."

A total of 69 people were also wounded in the 2006 protest in which the consulate of former colonial power Italy was targeted by demonstrators angry at cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad (PBUH).

Authorities have been sufficiently concerned about the scale of potential protests that they have hit out in a bid to discredit the dissidents.

At prayers attended by Gaddafi on Sunday to mark the anniversary of the birth of the prophet, the floor was opened to a "representative of the families of the Benghazi martyrs" to "renew their allegiance" to the veteran leader, who seized power in a 1969 coup ousting a Western-backed monarchy.

The last was an allusion to the self-immolations that fanned the fires of protest in neighbouring Tunisia prompting the departure of president Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali and inspiring the 18 straight days of demonstrations that triggered the resignation of president Hosni Mubarak.

"Nothing like Mubarak or Zine, we are in harmony with our leader," the loyalists chanted.

In a petition of which AFP obtained a copy, more than 200 signatories and exiled opposition groups stressed "the right of the Libyan people to express their opinions in peaceful protest, without any form of harassment, threats or provocations" by the regime.
They also called on Gaddafi and his family to relinquish authority and "revolutionary, political, military and security" powers.