Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi reportedly has accepted the peace plan that offered the African Union to end the conflict. This was conveyed by President Jacob Zuma of South Africa in Tripoli on Sunday (10 / 4).
"Delegation of our brother (Libya) has received a map of peace offered by us," Zuma said in his press conference at the residence of Bab al-aziziya.
Detailed map for peace will be formulated by a communique. But he did not explain when it will be published.
"We are also in the communique would ask NATO to stop bombing and provide an opportunity for a truce," he explained.
While other commitments he had to leave Libya on Sunday night, another member of the African Union delegation will stay overnight in Tripoli before traveling to rebel-held eastern Benghazi, he continued.
There they will offer the African Union plan, which involves immediate ceasefire, for the leaders of the opposition. So far, the rebel leader has rejected a ceasefire plan that involves both Gaddafi or his sons died and asking Qaddafi to power.
Like Zuma, the African Union delegation includes three other African leaders: Mali Amadou Toumani Toure, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz Mauritania and Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo. Foreign Minister Henry Oryem Okello of Uganda, representing President Yoweri Museveni, complementing African Union team.
Earlier on Sunday, joining the African Union mediators to Qaddafi for a photocall outside the Bedouin tent in the compound of Bab al-Aziziya in the capital Tripoli. The meeting on Saturday in the capital, Nouakchott Mauritania, the mediators have reaffirmed the purpose of their mission: an "immediate cessation of hostilities," which brought humanitarian aid, and opening dialogue between the regime and the rebels.
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