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TRIPOLI -- Muammar Gadhafi has accepted a roadmap for ending the conflict in Libya including an immediate ceasefire, the African Union said on Monday, but an opposition representative said it would only work if Gadhafi left power.
South African President Jacob Zuma, who met Gadhafi at the head of a delegation of African leaders, urged NATO to stop air strikes on government targets to "give ceasefire a chance".
Earlier truce offers from Gadhafi have come to nothing and rebels, who took up arms across the east and in some towns in the west after he crushed protests in February, have said they will accept nothing less than an end to his 41 year-old rule.
Asked if the issue of Gadhafi stepping down was discussed at his talks with an African Union delegation in Tripoli, Ramtane Lamamra, AU Commissioner for Peace and Security, told reporters: "There was some discussion."
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Officials from NATO, which stepped up attacks on Gadhafi's armour on Sunday to weaken a bitter siege of Misrata in the west and disrupt an advance his troops made in the east, were not immediately available for comment on Zuma's ceasefire appeal.
The British-based representative of the Libyan opposition leadership, Guma al-Gamaty, said it would look carefully at the AU plan, but would not accept any deal designed to keep Gadhafi or his sons in place, Britain's BBC reported.
Libyan officials have repeatedly said Gadhafi will not quit.
Asked if he feared rebels might reject the plan, Lamamra said: "We believe what we have proposed is broad enough to launch negotiations ... What we need is for them to accept that we are people of good will."
"It's not up to any outside force even the African Union itself to decide on the behalf of the Libyan people on who the leader of the country should be," Lamamra told a news conference in the early hours of Monday morning after the AU talks.
Zuma met Gadhafi for several hours at the Libyan leader's Bab al-Aziziyah compound with four other African heads of state.
"The brother leader delegation has accepted the roadmap as presented by us. We have to give ceasefire a chance," Zuma said, adding that the African delegation would now travel to the eastern city of Benghazi for talks with anti-Gadhafi rebels.
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