Libyan Su-22UM-3K crashes near city of Benghazi
Libyan Su-22 fighter jet Pilot and co-pilot eject, refusing bombing orders, a newspaper reports
Even as Moammar Gaddhafi called on the military to crack down on anti-government protesters, reports emerged Wednesday that the Libyan leader was facing growing international and domestic opposition, including from his own military.
An opposition figure told CNN that a pilot who had been ordered to bomb oil fields southwest of Benghazi refused to do so and instead ejected from the plane.
A Libyan fighter jet crashed near the eastern city of Benghazi on Wednesday, Libyan news website al-Qurayna reported.
The jet's pilot and co-pilot parachuted out of the jet after allegedly refusing to carry out orders to bomb Benghazi, military sources told al-Qurayna.
The jet crashed into an empty space near the town of Ajdabiya, 160 kilometers (100 miles) southwest of Benghazi.
Benghazi, where the anti-government protests began, is reported to be in control of protesters. Quryna itself is a sign of the changes sweeping through Libya. When protests began last week, it carried regime propaganda. But it later reported on the protests and casualty figures.
Source: Tobruk, Libya - by Agencies Report, Feb 23, 2011
Photo: Libyan Arab Republic Air Force Sukhoi Su-22M-2 Fitter-J
(24.02.2011)
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