 The rebels roared along the bleak  and empty desert highway, leaving the last checkpoint far behind as they  probed the no-man's-land that separates them from the final stronghold  of Moammar Gadhafi's crumbling regime.
The rebels roared along the bleak  and empty desert highway, leaving the last checkpoint far behind as they  probed the no-man's-land that separates them from the final stronghold  of Moammar Gadhafi's crumbling regime.Stopping  in Heisha, some 75 miles (120 kilometers) from Gadhafi's hometown of  Sirte, the patrol found a dusty collection of single-story, concrete  buildings that stretched from the highway to the desert.
They  also found the green flags of Gadhafi flying everywhere and at least  one poster of the long-serving leader — a sign that the town still  supported the old regime, or at least that its forces had recently been  there.
"There used to be people  here supporting the regime, but they have left," Ali Mabrouk stammered  on Tuesday, after the rebels stopped outside his house to ask how things  were going.
 "Life is hard here,  there are shortages of milk, electricity and food," the old man  continued, as his family spilled out of the house behind him to eye the  rebel trucks bristling with weapons. "We're just trying to live."
"Life is hard here,  there are shortages of milk, electricity and food," the old man  continued, as his family spilled out of the house behind him to eye the  rebel trucks bristling with weapons. "We're just trying to live."While  the rebels have captured broad swaths of Libya, the loyalists who still  control Sirte have rebuffed all negotiations. For most of the six-month  conflict, the rebels have been greeted with open arms by Libyans  exhausted with 42 years of Gadhafi's erratic rule. But that changes in  places like this, edging closer to towns where Gadhafi had genuine  support.
"We patrol here to see if there are any Gadhafi  supporters or remnants of his soldiers, which we would then fight,"  Mohammed Sherif said as he drove a spray-painted rebel pickup truck with  a huge machine-gun bolted on the back. "Of course we would leave the  civilians alone."But that isn't a guarantee with all the rebels.
Sitting inside the pickup truck, Mohammed al-Awayib had little sympathy for the people of Heisha, now caught between two ragged armies. He muttered the word "dogs!" each time they passed someone on the street, and made spitting noises.
"They are not even human," he snarled. At one point, moving to fire his Kalashnikov assault rifle out the window, Sherif sharply told him to stop.
When al-Awayib stepped out of the car, Sherif apologized for him, saying his friend had lost a relative in Gadhafi's infamous Abu Salim prison.
But how such resentments play out remains a major factor in the Libyan fighting.
For  most of the civil war, the loosely organized and poorly trained rebels  have normally steered clear of looting — except in places closely  associated with Gadhafi's regime, such as in Tripoli's Abu Salim  neighborhood.Fear of ill-treatment by the rebels may well be why Sirte has shown little interest in surrendering.
Once  a sleepy agricultural and trading town, Sirte was transformed under  Gadhafi's rule as the regime handed out government jobs to his  tribesman. But it really only came alive when Gadhafi hosted summit  meetings in its luxurious convention center, with limousines and police  cars racing down the road from the airport with sirens wailing.
Gadhafi's  tribesmen have a vested interest in the regime's survival. The  Gadhadhfa are heavily armed and use Sirte's air base as the headquarters  of a militia drawn from their ranks.
If  word was to spread of ill-treatment in towns like Heisha, rebel  officials know it could further harden the people of Sirte against  surrendering.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 8/31/2011 12:51:00 AM
8/31/2011 12:51:00 AM
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