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"Libya at a crossroads. If we do not agree today on reforms, we will not be mourned only 84 people, but thousands of deaths, and rivers of blood will flow through Libya," said Saif al-Islam Gaddafi in a televised speech on Sunday.
He accused factions that try to generate chaos in the country and offers of dialogue and the establishment of local governments in an effort to quell a national uprising.
He also warned that the situation has become very dangerous in Libya, emphasized that his country rather than Tunisia or Egypt.
Saif al-Islam further indicated that Libya had approached the intersection between civil war or peace.
In other comments, he expressed willingness to negotiate with the Libyan government factions and parties 'legitimate' to carry out reforms.
However, he warned that the government would fight to the last drop of blood, saying that no dissident or a so-called thugs will be allowed to take over Libya.
In the Libyan revolution Revolution, nearly 400 people dead
International Federation for Human Rights said that as many as 400 pro-democracy demonstrators have been killed so far in the Libyan people's revolution.
The leader of the Souhayr Belhassen said anti-Muammar Gaddafi has led to "between 300 and 400 deaths, probably closer to 400," AFP reported Monday.
Paris-based group added that the information is largely derived from human rights groups in Libya.
This came when the demonstrators had taken control of several cities, including Benghazi and Sirte, because of the defection of several army units, and despite the bloody violence launched by the Gaddafi regime.
Meanwhile in Tripoli, demonstrators attacked the headquarters of state television last night and burned the office of the People's Committee - the mainstay of government.
The report also said that security forces killed dozens of people in the second largest city, Benghazi, at midnight.
The development comes when the revolution of the people / popular continues to sweep the autocratic regimes that supported the U.S. in the Middle East and North Africa.
In the meantime, there are reports that Gaddafi had left the country.