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A rebel fighter dives into the sea in the western Libyan city of Misrata. A leader claimed though 16 rebel fighters were killed, several explosions ripped through the Libyan capital. Image Credit: Reuters

TRIPOLI: A wave of blasts rocked Tripoli early Saturday, including the area housing Moamer Kadhafi's complex, as his regime denied rebels attacked Libya's capital and wounded a top security official.

At least seven powerful explosions were heard around 2:20 am (0020 GMT), an AFP journalist reported, as state television quoted a military official as saying NATO warplanes "are currently bombing civilian sites in the capital Tripoli."

The raid is yet to be confirmed by NATO-led forces which have been carrying out air strikes against Kadhafi's war machine since late March in a bid to halt a crackdown on civilians.

It came after rebel forces said they lost 16 fighters east of Tripoli on Friday but that they infiltrated the capital and attacked a regime command post where a son of the strongman was among officials targetted.

The rebel forces, who have been fighting to oust Kadhafi for more than five months, said the assault "seriously injured" a high-ranking member of Kadhafi's security forces.

"Yesterday (Thursday) in Tripoli, there was an attack on an operations centre of top regime officials, including Seif al-Islam Kadhafi," National Transitional Council vice president Ali Essawy said after a meeting in Rome with Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.

"One person was left seriously injured," he said, identifying the person as a high-ranking security official.

Frattini said the "rocket attack against an operations centre" probably in a Tripoli hotel was aimed at "top officials ... including Kadhafi's son Seif, and the head of the secret service, Abdullah al-Senussi."

On Thursday, unconfirmed rumours swirled that rebels in Tripoli had tried to assassinate senior regime members that day.

Since the revolution began in mid-February, a number of Tripoli-based groups have broadcast videos purporting to show acts of civil disobedience in the heavily controlled capital.

Libyan officials denied the attack occurred and denounced as "criminal and unjustified" what they said were NATO raids that killed six guards at a pipeline factory south of an oil plant in the eastern town of Brega.

"There was no attack," government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told reporters in reference to the rebels' claims they had launched a raid on a Tripoli command post.

Rebel forces, he said, were losing their battles in the east of the country and to the southwest and trying "to boost their morale with lies and small victories".

Elsewhere, the rebels said 16 of their men were killed in two days of fighting for Zliten, the last coastal city between insurgent-held Misrata and the capital.

"Sixteen of our fighters have fallen as martyrs and 126 more have been wounded in fighting with loyalist troops in Zliten," said a rebel statement, with clashes said to be particularly heavy in the suburb of Souk al-Thulatha.

The insurgents have been trying for weeks to take Zliten, 200 kilometres (120 miles) from Tripoli and 40 kilometres west of Misrata.

The rebels say they have chased the bulk of Kadhafi's forces from Brega in the east and are poised to advance towards the capital from Misrata and their other western enclave in the Nafusa Mountains, southwest of Tripoli.
The Nafusa campaign is focused on taking Asabah, gateway to the garrison town of Gharyan on the highway into Tripoli.

A rebel commander, Nasser al-Aaib, said Kadhafi troops "are not moving because they don't know the terrain; they are afraid of being ambushed by the rebels, who know every inch of it."

In speeches aired by state television this week, Kadhafi urged tribal leaders to march on Misrata while calling the rebels' uprising a "lost cause" and ruling out any talks with them.

"They cannot defeat us. They will be defeated and they will go home empty-handed.

"I will not talk to them. There will be no negotiations between me and them."

Meanwhile, NATO has authorised a civilian air corridor between the rebel headquarters of Benghazi in the east and the Nafusa mountains, an official in the rebel-held southwest said.

A road that cuts through fields is used as a runway, according to an AFP correspondent who toured the area but cannot identify the location for security reasons.