 The  head of the government did not immediately not confirm Gadhafi's  capture or death. The transitional government called a news conference  in Tripoli, where Prime Minister Mustafa Abdul-Jalil could confirm the death.
The  head of the government did not immediately not confirm Gadhafi's  capture or death. The transitional government called a news conference  in Tripoli, where Prime Minister Mustafa Abdul-Jalil could confirm the death.Information Minister Mahmoud Shammam  said he was told that Gadhafi was dead from fighters who said they saw  the body. He said he expects the prime minister to confirm the death  soon, noting that past reports emerged before they could confirm them  100 percent.
"Our people in  Sirte saw the body ... Mustafa Abdul-Jalil will confirm it soon,"  Shammam told The Associated Press. "Revolutionaries say Gadhafi was in a  convoy and that they attacked the convoy."
Other military  officials in the government also said Gadhafi was dead and several  revolutionary groups fighting in Sirte also said he was either killed or  captured.The transitional government called a news conference in Tripoli, where Abdul-Jalil could confirm the death.
Celebratory  gunfire and cries of "Allahu Akbar" or "God is Great" rang out across  Tripoli as the reports spread. Cars honked their horns and people hugged  each other. In Sirte, the ecstatic former rebels celebrated the city's  fall after weeks of bloody siege by firing endless rounds into the sky,  pumping their guns, knives and even a meat cleaver in the air and  singing the national anthem.
Despite  the fall of Tripoli on Aug. 21, Gadhafi loyalists mounted fierce  resistance in several areas, including Sirte, preventing Libya's new  leaders from declaring full victory in the eight-month civil war.  Earlier this week, revolutionary fighters gained control of one  stronghold, Bani Walid, and by Tuesday said they had squeezed Gadhafi's  forces in Sirte into a residential area of about 700 square yards but  were still coming under heavy fire from surrounding buildings.
Reporters  at the scene watched as the final assault began around 8 a.m. and ended  about 90 minutes later. Just before the battle, about five carloads of  Gadhafi loyalists tried to flee the enclave down the coastal highway  that leads out of the city. But they were met by gunfire from the  revolutionaries, who killed at least 20 of them.Col.  Roland Lavoie, spokesman for NATO's operational headquarters in Naples,  Italy, said the alliance's aircraft Thursday morning struck two  vehicles of pro-Gadhafi forces "which were part of a larger group  maneuvering in the vicinity of Sirte."
But NATO officials,  speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance to alliance rules, said  the alliance also could not independently confirm whether Gadhafi was  killed or captured.After the  battle, revolutionaries began searching homes and buildings looking for  any hiding Gadhafi fighters. At least 16 were captured, along with cases  of ammunition and trucks loaded with weapons. Reporters saw  revolutionaries beating captured Gadhafi men in the back of trucks and  officers intervening to stop them.
In an illustration of how  difficult and slow the fighting for Sirte was, it took the anti-Gadhafi  fighters two days to capture a single residential building.In the central quarter where Thursday's final battle took place, the fighters looking like the same ragtag force that started the uprising eight months ago jumped up and down with joy and flashed V-for-victory signs. Some burned the green Gadhafi flag, then stepped on it with their boots.
They  chanted "Allah akbar," or "God is great" in Arabic, while one fighter  climbed a traffic light pole to unfurl the revolution's flag, which he  first kissed. Discarded military uniforms of Gadhafi's fighters littered  the streets. One revolutionary fighter waved a silver trophy in the air  while another held up a box of firecrackers, then set them off.
"Our  forces control the last neighborhood in Sirte," Hassan Draoua, a member  of Libya's interim National Transitional Council, told The Associated  Press in Tripoli. "The city has been liberated."
The  Misrata Military Council, one of the command groups, said its fighters  captured Gadhafi. Another commander, Abdel-Basit Haroun, says Gadhafi  was killed when the airstrike hit the fleeing convoy.
In  a sign of the conflicting versions, military spokesman Col. Ahmed Bani  in Tripoli told Al-Jazeera TV, "I can assure everyone in Libya that  Gadhafi has been killed for sure and I'm definitely sure and I reassure  everyone that this story has ended and this book has closed."
But  rather than a strike on the convoy, he said a wounded Gadhafi "tried to  resist (revolutionary forces) so they took him down."
The  spokesman for Libya's transitional government, Jalal al-Gallal, and  another military spokesman Abdul-Rahman Busin said the reports have not  been confirmed.
The caution in  making a definitive announcement came because past reports of Gadhafi  family deaths or captures have later proven incorrect, even after they  were announced by officials, because of the confusion among the  revolutionary forces' ranks and the multiple bodies involved in  commanding their fighters.
Gadhafi loyalists who have escaped could still continue the fight and(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/20/2011 06:44:00 AM
10/20/2011 06:44:00 AM
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