The wife of Muammar Gaddafi and three of his children took
refuge in Algeria on Monday but the whereabouts of the former strongman himself
remained a mystery a week after rebels drove him from power.
Algeria's Foreign Ministry
said Gaddafi's wife Safia, his daughter Aisha and his sons Hannibal and
Mohammed had entered Algeria on Monday morning.
The development threatened to
create a diplomatic rift just as the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC) worked
to consolidate its position as Libya's new government.
An NTC spokesman accused
Algeria, Libya's western neighbor, of an act of aggression and said the council
would seek to extradite the Gaddafis.
A senior rebel officer also
said Gaddafi's son Khamis, a feared military commander, had been killed in a
clash outside of Tripoli. The report could not be independently confirmed.
Meanwhile rebel forces
converged on Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte from east and west, intent on seizing
one of his last bastions of support either by force or by negotiation.
Muammar Gaddafi's whereabouts
have not been known since Tripoli fell to his foes and his 42-year-old rule
collapsed a week ago after a six-month uprising backed by the West and several
Arab nations.
Algeria's acceptance of
Gaddafi's wife and offspring angered the rebel leadership, who want him and his
entourage to face justice for years of repressive rule and who fear that he
could orchestrate a new insurgency unless he is captured.
"We have promised to
provide a just trial to all those criminals and therefore we consider this an
act of aggression," spokesman Mahmoud Shamman told Reuters. "We are
warning anybody not to shelter Gaddafi and his sons. We are going after
them...to find them and arrest them."
NTC chairman Mustafa Abdel
Jalil called on the Algerian government -- which has not recognized the council
as Libya's legitimate authority -- to cooperate with it and hand over any of
Gaddafi's sons who is on its wanted list.
Asked if he knew where
Gaddafi senior was, he told al- Jazeera TV: "If we knew where Gaddafi was
now our revolutionaries would be on their way to capture him. We have no
information that Muammar Gaddafi is in Libya or in any other place."
Earlier on Monday, Jalil
appealed to NATO to keep up its air campaign in support of the rebels, saying
Gaddafi was still a threat.
NATO warplanes have struck at
Sirte, on the Mediterranean coast, in recent days and Britain said its aircraft
also attacked artillery units of Gaddafi forces near Sidra, west of the oil
town of Ras Lanuf.
LAST STAND AT SIRTE?
Whether or not Gaddafi is
hiding in Sirte to make a last stand, the city would be a strategic and
symbolic prize for Libya's new rulers as they tighten their grip on the vast
North African country.
Rebel forces were advancing
toward Sirte from east and west even as contacts continued for its surrender.
Their eastern column had pushed past the village of Bin Jawad and secured the
Nawfaliya junction By Monday.
Marwan Mustapha, an ambulance
worker at Nawfaliya, said: "God willing, the rebels will enter the city
without bloodshed and the negotiations will have succeeded. But if they have to
enter by force, there will be blood."
In the desert to the south,
Gaddafi loyalists were also holding out, notably in the city of Sabha.
But the death of Gaddafi's son
Khamis, if confirmed, would be a serious blow to any chance of a military fight
back.
Colonel Al-Mahdi Al-Haragi,
chief of the rebels' Tripoli Brigade, said he had confirmation that Khamis was
badly wounded in a clash near Ben Walid. He was taken to hospital but died and
was buried in the area, Al-Haragi said.
Rebel military spokesman
Colonel Ahmed Bani told Al Arabiya TV that the rebels also believed Gaddafi's
intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi was killed on Saturday along with
Khamis,
"We have almost certain
information that Khamis Gaddafi and Abdullah al-Senussi were killed on Saturday
by a unit of the national liberation army during clashes in Tarhouna (90 km
southeast of Tripoli)," Bani said.
A U.S. official said
Washington could not independently confirm Khamis' death but similar
information was being received from "reliable sources."
Khamis has already been
reported killed twice during the uprising only to re-emerge.
Earlier on Monday, prosecutor
Luis Moreno-Ocampo of the International Criminal Court had said he may apply
for an arrest warrant for Khamis.
Human Rights Watch said
members of the Khamis Brigade, which he commanded, appeared to have carried out
summary executions of prisoners whose bodies were found in a warehouse in
Tripoli.
The Hague-based ICC has
already approved arrest warrants for Muammar Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam,
and Senussi on charges of crimes against humanity.
A GOOD EID
The NTC, now recognized as
Libya's legitimate authority by more than 40 nations, was working to establish
control in Tripoli after days of chaos and clashes with remaining Gaddafi
loyalists.
The council, whose leaders
plan to move to Tripoli from their Benghazi headquarters this week, is trying
to impose security, restore basic services and revive the economy.
Gunfire echoed occasionally
across the city but aid agencies reported medical and other services were
beginning to function again.
Residents, hit by shortages
of food, fuel and water, ventured out to shop amid the stink of garbage before
the Eid al-Fitr festival after the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.
"Thank God this Eid has a
special flavor. This Eid we have freedom," said Adel Kashad, 47, an oil
firm computer specialist who was at a vegetable market. "Libya has a new
dawn."
(Reporting by Samia Nakhoul
and Mohammed
Abbas in Tripoli, Maria
Golovnina in Abu
Grein, Alex Dziadosz in Nawfaliya, Robert Birsel and Emma Farge in Benghazi and Regan Doherty in Doha;
Writing by Angus MacSwan;
Editing by David Stamp)
Source : Reuters
EmpireMoney.com
No comments:
Post a Comment