Gadhafi called on supporters of his regime to attack street protesters and threatened major security operations in the north-eastern cities of Derna (Derna province) and Bayda (Al Jabal al Akhdar province).
Following Gadhafi's speech, Interior Minister Gen Abdul Fatah Younis resigned and encouraged the army to side with the anti-regime demonstrators. In a statement on al-Jazeera news network early on 22 February, a group of army officers called on the military to ‘join the people' and support the removal of Gaddafi.
Violence is continuing across the country- witnesses in Tripoli told Al Jazeera that fighter jets had bombed portions of the city in fresh attacks on Monday night.
Military aircraft and helicopter gunships were also used, they said, to fire on the streets in order to scare demonstrators away.
Eyewitness statements suggest that foreign mercenary units were firing indiscriminately at demonstrators and bystanders in the city, while pro-Gaddafi forces warned people not to leave their homes via loudspeakers mounted on cars.
Residents of the Tajura neighbourhood, east of Tripoli, said that dead bodies are still lying on the streets from earlier violence. At least 61 people were killed in the capital on Monday, witnesses told Al Jazeeera.
The UN Security Council has condemned the bloodshed in Libya that has seen more than 300 people killed – and is calling for an immediate end to the violence after an emergency meeting.