Fearing  more attacks, revolutionary forces set up checkpoints manned by young,  armed men across the metropolis of some 2 million people, snarling  traffic. They also rounded up several suspected African mercenaries,  pulling them from cars and houses.
The  violence in Tripoli and fierce resistance on two other fronts set back  the new rulers' stated goals of declaring total victory and establishing  democracy as Gadhafi, the ruler for nearly 42 years, remains on the  run.
The capital has been  relatively calm since then-rebels swept into the city in late August.  But Gadhafi's loyalists have control of parts of his hometown of Sirte  and the desert enclave of Bani Walid and have battled off NATO-backed  revolutionary forces besieging them for weeks, perhaps encouraged by  several audio recordings issued by Gadhafi from hiding.
The  firefight in Tripoli began after Friday prayers. Witnesses said dozens  of loyalists carrying the green flag appeared on a square in the Abu  Salim neighborhood, which has long been a pro-Gadhafi stronghold and  houses a notorious prison of the same name.
"I looked out of my  window and I saw men and women in a group of 50 to 80 people, carrying  the green flag," said Abadi Omar, a resident in one of the buildings in  the area. "They put one of these flags at the end of our street. This is  when the revolutionary forces came out and these people disappeared."Revolutionary  forces started searching every building in the area and found weapons  on some of the rooftops, many hidden under water tanks, Omar said. Then  pro-Gadhafi snipers opened fire, and the gunbattle began as anti-Gadhafi  fighters chased loyalists around the closely packed buildings.
In  amateur video shown to The Associated Press, gunfire can be seen coming  from the upper floors of apartment buildings surrounding the square,  prompting revolutionary forces to scramble and begin shooting from the  street below.
Shouting "God is Great," hundreds of revolutionary  fighters converged on the area in pickups mounted with weapons. They set  up checkpoints as heavy gunfire echoed through the streets.Ameena Sami, a 39-year-old resident, said her brother was shot in his waist.
"My brother was standing at the front door of our house, and we heard shooting in the streets. We don't know where it came from, and the revolutionaries came speeding onto our street and surrounded one of the buildings across the street," she said. "The shooting just got more intense, and we looked outside and found my brother shot."
Tripoli military officials said 12 suspected Gadhafi supporters were detained but played down the shooting, saying no clashes occurred and that the gunfire was primarily from revolutionary forces themselves. The local military council issued a statement saying 30 people were injured in friendly fire.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland also downplayed the seriousness of the fighting, calling it an "isolated, relatively small incident, by the sound of it."
Ahmad al-Warfly, a fighter from the revolutionary forces' Zintan brigade, said several Gadhafi supporters apparently planned a protest but drew fire because they were armed. They then fled and were pursued by revolutionary forces, prompting fierce street battles.
Al-Warfly  said one man carrying a gun was captured and identified as a suspect  wanted for the killings of protesters in the nearby city of Zawiya.
"It seems like it was organized," he said. "They were planning to have a big demonstration, then the fight started."
Witnesses also reported fighting elsewhere in the capital, but the shooting was most intense in Abu Salim.
Interim  leader Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, the head of the governing National  Transitional Council, has said that he hoped to declare liberation this  week after the imminent fall of the holdout city of Sirte, 250 miles  (400 kilometers) southeast of Tripoli on the Mediterranean coast. That  could allow the council to name a new interim government and set a  timeline for holding elections within eight months.
The revolutionary forces control much of Sirte after launching a major push a week ago.
On  Friday, they pounded loyalists holed up in two neighborhoods with  rocket and machine-gun fire but also suffered heavy casualties  themselves. Wounded men streamed into front-line medical units, then  were evacuated to field hospitals on the city's outskirts.
Tanks  and weapons-mounted vehicles from the revolutionary forces have kept up  a steady barrage of fire into the small enclave known as District 2,  where commanders believe several hundred remaining loyalists, possibly  including high-ranking figures from the former regime, are hiding.
AP  Television footage on Friday showed smoke rising from a building in one  part of the city, and a burning car presumably in another. Pickup  trucks with mounted machine guns are seen driving through a flooded  street, and elsewhere an injured revolutionary soldier is carried on a  stretcher into an ambulance.
Thousands of civilians have fled the city to escape the violence.
One  resident returned Friday to collect personal items from his home, which  had been used as a firing position for pro-Gadhafi forces. Their  uniforms and mattresses littered the front courtyard.
The  owner, who would not give his name because of fear of reprisals, left  carrying just a blanket, saying, "the pictures speak for themselves." He  then left the city with several of his relatives.
NATO has called the continued resistance by Gadhafi forces in Sirte "surprising," as they appear to be(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/14/2011 02:36:00 PM
10/14/2011 02:36:00 PM
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