Deutsche Welle
Libyan rebels  revealed on Saturday that their military chief was shot dead by fighters  allied in the fight to oust leader Moammar Gadhafi.
General  Abdel Fattah Younes was found dead on Thursday along with two  bodyguards after he was called back from the battlefield by rebel  forces.
It  was initially unclear who was responsible for the murder, but after 24  hours of speculation a member of the Libyan militia accepted  responsibility.
Rebel  minister Ali Tarhouni said a militia leader believed to belong to the  Obaida Ibn Jarrah Brigade had been detained. The minister said that the  arrested man had confessed that his subordinates, who were still at  large, carried out the killing.  
"It was not him. His lieutenants did it," Tarhouni said. 
The  Obaida Ibn Jarrah Brigade, named after one of the companions of Islam's  Prophet Mohammed, is believed to have Islamist leanings.        
Speculation rife    
Younes  had served as Gadhafi's interior minister before defecting to the  rebels in February. He had participated in the 1969 coup which first  brought Gadhafi to power. 
His  assassination has raised questions about the credibility of the  opposition government, the National Transitional Council (NTC), who have  recently won the official recognition of some 30 countries.
The  motives of the killing remain uncertain. But Reuters news agency  reported rebel sources on Saturday claiming that General Younes had been  recalled from the front over suspicions that he or his family were  secretly in contact with Gadhafi.
NATO raid condemned
Meanwhile,  NATO carried out an air strike on Libyan state television (LBC) on  Saturday which killed three journalists and injured 15 others. 
NATO  said it had bombed three satellite dishes in Tripoli to stop "terror  broadcasts" by Gadhafi. But Libyan state television branded the strike  "an act of international terrorism and in violation of UN Security  Council resolutions."
            .
"We  are not a military target, we are not commanders in the army and we do  not pose a threat to civilians," said Khalid Bazelya, an LBC official,  reading the statement to reporters.    
"The  fact that we work for the Libyan government or represent anti-NATO,  anti-armed gangs views does not make us a legitimate target for NATO  rockets," he added. 
NATO,  which has been bombing Libyan targets since March, justified the  attack, saying it was in line with the UN mandate to protect civilians.
"NATO  conducted a precision air strike... with the intent of degrading  Gadhafi's use of satellite television as a means to intimidate the  Libyan people and incite acts of violence against them," the alliance  said.
"In  light of our (UN) mandate to protect civilian lives, we had to act.  After due consideration and careful planning to minimize the risks of  casualties or long-term damage to television transmission capabilities,  NATO performed the strike."
Libyan State television remains on air, despite the bombings.
Author: Charlotte Chelsom-Pill (AFP, Reuters)
Editor: Kyle James 
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