A bunch of Anglo-Libyans have launched a radio station, TributeFM (also available on-line). They just had a live caller on from Tripoli. Some quotes culled from the ChangeInLibya twitter stream:
Tripoli caller now on Tribute fm: I was 200m from a NATO strike, bombing is incredibly precise, no casulaties from NATO bombing
There are clashes everywhere, Soug Al Jumaa, Fashloom, Tajoura... thr was a big battle in SAJ 2 days ago
"Fuel.. sometimes it's not a shortage, there's an absence.. no fuel in Tripoli at all"
"The queues are kilometres long, I never thought I'd see it in an oil producing country like #Libya "
"There are the policemen who try to keep us safe, but there are the G brigades that skip everyone"
"These Gdfi brigades cause an extreme amount of tension.. and 3 people were killed recently @ fuel pmps"
"I've spoken to police.. these guys basically hate Gaddafi forces now.. they're at each others throats"
"I went to saif al arab's funeral and we witness a FIGHT between a policeman and a Gaddafi soldier"
"These guys are fighting each other.. something is gonna ERUPT"
"Gunshots around the city.. you hear them every SINGLE NIGHT..seems like an "exchange of fire"
"security forces are visibly stretched, visibly scared, visibly tired... "
"There are no more than 15% of tripolitanians who are showing support for gaddafi"
They will re-broadcast the call soon.
In other news from Libya today, the revolutionaries have extended their gains in Misrata and captured some NATO standard weapons, which perplexed them. Read about it here.
Updated by Athenian at Thu May 12, 2011 at 06:12 AM EEST
The New York Times now has the article by Chivers, the guy who wrote the post in the last sentence.
http://www.nytimes.com/...
"Seizing the airport in Misurata, a city that has been under siege for nearly two months, represented one of the most significant rebel victories in the Libyan conflict and a stiff military and public-relations blow to the Qaddafi government. The airport and its approaches were the last remaining pieces of terrain in the city to be controlled by Qaddafi soldiers."