Misratah hospital received more than 100 fatalities on Wednesday which has UN aid Chief warned blurring the boundaries between military operations and relief work in Libya.Valerie Amos said it was still to accept no need to protect an EU offer of military escorts and relief supplies.
Oscar nominated Tim Hetherington, one of the two Western photojournalists in a mortar attack was killed in the besieged city of Misurata.
A cease-fire have rejected offer of the Government of the Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi Libya's rebels.
Inspired by riots in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt, they fought Col Gaddafi's forces since February.
Based in Benghazi, the rebels hold much of the East, while Col Gaddafi's forces in the control of Tripoli and most of the West remain.
"Impartial help"MS Amos spoke to UK, France and Italy, said that she are small teams of military advisers fighting rebels, would send to overthrow Col Gaddafi.
"Our responsibility is all the time, to ensure that our assistance on an impartial basis is offered" she said.
Military escorts aid workers and the delivery of their help could endanger she said.
"We must be extremely careful and make sure that not the boundaries are blurred."
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Orla Guerin BBC News, MisratahA survivor of the attack on the journalists said they were street at the front in Tripoli. It was relatively quiet. She decided to withdraw and it was when they pull back was that they came under fire.
It seems to have been a direct hit on the group. Tim Hetherington lost his life.
He was back and forth several times gone to Afghanistan make a documentary, so he knew about the dangers of the work on front. Last night on his own Twitter feed, he had written a statement: "In Misratah, indiscriminate shelling, no sign of NATO."
His family said that he forever would lack known for his amazing images and its documentation.
You said that in Libya to humanitarian suffering in times of conflict show had been.
Humanitarian deliveries were both sides in the conflict reach, she said.On the occasion of the UN in New York after a trip to Libya, she that Libyan authorities had agreed to secure aid workers in conflict zones, and to ensure that she received roadblocks by Government said.
But without agreement on a ceasefire, access to places like Misratah would be determined by the intensity of the fighting, she said.
If the security situation impossible, said Mrs Amos was would call the UN to the EU for military support for the aid shipments.
Not directly address the decisions of the United Kingdom, France and Italy to send about 10 military teams of consultants, to the rebels.
The British team provides logistics and intelligence training in Benghazi. UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said it met the UN mandate for the empowerment to protect civilians "all necessary measures behind the occupation".
UN Security Council resolution 1973 NATO admitted to a no-fly zone on Libya and launch to force air attacks on government troops attacking rebels.
Late on Wednesday, Libya's official Allibiya TV reports that NATO troops fired several missiles at the al-Farjan Khallat district of the capital Tripoli.
Journalists hitMS Amos comments came as continue to struggle in Misurata, the only rebel held town in western Libya anger.
The reported use of cluster bombs by Col Gaddafi's said UN High Commissioner for human rights Navi Pillay, forces trying to conquer city "could constitute international crimes".
The BBC's Orla Guerin, in Misratah, said, the city hospital more than 100 fatalities on Wednesday, the vast majority of them civilians.
The hospital said five civilians had been killed.
British journalist James deadly Misurata: "The rebels say they fight until they die" (this video not be verified independently of each other for authenticity)Ms. PILLAY said there were reports of a cluster bomb explode "just a few hundred metres from the Misurata hospital and other reports recommend at least two medical clinics of mortar or sniper fire are affected".
A doctor at the Hospital of Misurata said that he and his colleagues were exhausted by death and blood, and asked where was the international community our correspondent.
Since rebels fought government troops along the front to the Tripoli Street a group was captured by Western journalists in an attack in the mortar.
Tim Hetherington, 41, a photo-journalist and Oscar nominated film-maker, who had two British and American nationality, was killed in the attack. He had covered a number of conflicts, including the war in Afghanistan.
Reports suggested that Chris Hondros, an American photographer for Getty Images, died several hours later.
Cease-fire offer refusedA spokesman for the rebel Transitional National Council based in Benghazi, they said the Government had rejected recent offer a ceasefire.
A spokesman for the Council, Abdul Hafeez Ghoga, said Col Gaddafi wanted a ceasefire, because his forces were destroyed by NATO air strikes.
Mr Ghoga said a proposal, the it, the Col Gaddafi and his family could stay his a political solution "on the scene" allow would impossible, reports the BBC's Peter Biles in Benghazi was.
On Tuesday a ceasefire said Libyan Foreign Minister Abdul ATI al Obeidi it be followed should a transitional period of perhaps six months discussion democracy and constitutional reforms, and preparation for an election that would be monitored by the United Nations - a proposal by the African Union.
He said, would be the presence of foreign military a "Step backward".
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