AFP, TRIPOLI: Moamer Kadhafi's regime vowed to crush any challenge to the Libyan strongman after an opposition "day of anger" turned into a bloodbath and two policemen were reported hanged by protesters.
According to a toll compiled by AFP from different local sources, at least 41 people have lost their lives since demonstrations first erupted on Tuesday.
That toll does not include two policemen who were killed on Friday.
Oea newspaper, which is close to Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam, said they were lynched after being captured in the eastern city of Al-Baida.
Security forces were deployed around Al-Baida on Friday, a source close to the authorities told AFP, following Internet reports that protesters had seized control of the city.
"Security forces were deployed heavily around the city and control all roads in and out, as well as the airport," the source said, declining to be named.
Oea also reported that 20 people were buried in Libya's second city of Benghazi on Friday after being killed in protests. A previous toll supplied by a medical source in the city was 14 dead.
Demonstrators also set fire to the headquarters of a local radio station in Benghazi after the building's guards withdrew, witnesses and a security source told AFP.
Seven people were killed in protests in Derna, east of Benghazi, Oea reported.
London-based Amnesty International gave a different death toll, saying it had "learned that at least 46 people had been shot dead by security forces in the last 72 hours."
Sarah Leah Whitson of US-based Human Rights Watch said: "The security forces' vicious attacks on peaceful demonstrators lay bare the reality of Moamer Kadhafi's brutality when faced with any internal dissent."
Earlier, the Revolutionary Committees, which are the backbone of Kadhafi's regime, issued a stark warning.
"The response of the people and the Revolutionary Forces to any adventure by these small groups will be sharp and violent," the Revolutionary Committees said on the website of their newspaper, Azzahf Al-Akhdar (Green March).
"The power of the people, the Jamahiriya (government by the masses), the Revolution and the leader are all red lines, and anyone who tries to cross or approach them will be committing suicide and playing with fire."
Several thousand mourners on Friday went straight from weekly prayers to funerals for the Benghazi dead, witnesses told AFP, with one reporting that 13 victims were buried in the city's Hawari cemetery.
In Al-Baida, a well-informed Libyan source told AFP 14 civilians had been killed since Wednesday, including both protesters and members of the Revolutionary Committees.
In another sign of growing disorder, about 1,000 inmates broke out of a prison in Benghazi, Quryna newspaper reported on its website, and four convicts were killed by security forces when they tried to flee another prison outside Tripoli, a security services source said.
The overall reported toll does not include the four prisoners.
Kadhafi, 68, is the longest-serving leader in the Arab world, but his oil-producing North African nation is sandwiched between Tunisia and Egypt, whose long-time leaders have been toppled by popular uprisings.
Computer users in Tripoli reported that from early Friday evening it was impossible to access the popular Facebook site, and connections to other Internet sites were either very slow or not possible.
Opponents of his regime had used Facebook to call for a national "day of anger" and Kadhafi sought to counter its impact with his own pro-regime rally in the heart of the capital Tripoli.
US President Barack Obama on Friday condemned the use of violence against peaceful protesters in Libya, Bahrain and Yemen.
"The United States condemns the use of violence by governments against peaceful protesters in those countries and wherever it may occur," he said in a statement.
Britain, France and the European Union have called for restraint by the authorities in Libya.
France said on Friday it had suspended authorisation of exports of security equipment to both Libya and Bahrain.
And Britain stopped the export of some security equipment to Bahrain and Libya because of the risk it might be used to suppress anti-regime protests, the foreign office said.
Britain's foreign office warned nationals against all but essential travel to parts of eastern Libya including the cities of Benghazi, Al-Baida, Derna, Ajdabiya, Al-Marj and Tobruk, all in the east of the North African state.