Cameron Live Blog

French president Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister David Cameron and NTC chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil are now holding a joint press conference in Tripoli. You can watch it live here

David Cameron, the British prime minister, has arrived in Libya, a spokesperson has confirmed.

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Al Jazeera's Anita McNaught has just been reporting live from Tripoli, ahead of a visit by British PM David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

We're expecting two very senior leaders of two very important delegations. ... This is all about building confidence. Of course France and Britain tookleading roles in the intervention in Libya, but it's much more important now that in this post-Gaddafi period, even though Gaddafi of course has not entirely disappeared from the picture, that France and Britain be also seen to be leading the recovery. 

This is a city many, many months ago when I was here back in March, as a place that looked like it had been hit by a neutron bomb: the buildings were standing but the people had disappeared. Britain and France need to engage to show the world that there is a post-conflict plan. There is security, there is stability, there is confidence. And they're coming here one would imagine to start that ball well and truly rolling.

One shouldn't only imagine it's about the oil. I don't think anyone in Libya is suspicious of big business contracts either, at least not at the moment. Look, there was enormous foreign business going on in Libya under Colonel Gaddafi. Every major American company had a presence here. We've seen Haliburton's signage all over the country as we've travelled through here. There were massive construction contracts going on with China, with Turkey. And one of the most crucial things that the NTC has said again and again is that we will honour existing contracts. Because in truth the pause button was hit: what Libya needs most of all right now is for those countries that had ongoing business here to pick up where they left off. Get their foreign workers back in and start making those very necessary public projects.

World leaders have weighed in on events in Tripoli with almost unanimous calls for Gaddafi to give up and end the bloodshed. 

"Tonight, the momentum against the Gaddafi regime has reached a tipping point. Tripoli is slipping from the grasp of a tyrant," said US President Barack Obama.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron said "the end is near for Gaddafi".

Meanwhile, Venezuela President Hugo Chavez, a longtime critic of the NATO campaign in Libya, still opposed the international effort:

"Today we are seeing images of how the democratic European governments - well some of them are (democratic), we know who they are - are practically demolishing Tripoli with their bombs and the supposedly democratic government of the United States, because they feel like it."

David Cameron refuses to answer question if he ever discussed the BSkyB bid with News International executives saying that he did not have any inappropriate discussions.

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UK Prime Minister David Cameron to make statement on hacking at emergency session of parliament shortly - we will have updates for you from that session.