By Peter Graff and Ulf Laessing
Muammar Gaddafi taunted his Libyan enemies and their Western
backers as rebel forces battled pockets of loyalists across Tripoli in an ever
more urgent quest to find and silence the fugitive strongman.
Rumors of Gaddafi or his sons
being cornered, even sighted, swirled among excitable rebel fighters engaged in
heavy machinegun and rocket exchanges. But two days after his compound was
overrun, hopes of a swift end to six months of war were still being frustrated
by fierce rearguard actions.
Western powers demanded
Gaddafi's surrender and worked to release frozen Libyan state funds, hoping to
ease hardships and start reconstruction in the oil-rich state. But with
loyalists holding out in the capital, in Gaddafi's coastal home city and deep
in the inland desert, violence could go on for some time, testing the ability
of the government-in-waiting to keep order.
"The tribes ... must
march on Tripoli," Gaddafi said in an audio message broadcast on a
sympathetic TV channel. "Do not leave Tripoli to those rats, kill them,
defeat them quickly.
"The enemy is delusional,
NATO is retreating," he shouted, sounding firmer and clearer than in a
similar speech released on Wednesday. Though his enemies believe Gaddafi, 69, is
still in the capital, they fear he could flee by long-prepared escape routes,
using tunnels and bunkers, to rally an insurgency.
Diehards numbering perhaps in
the hundreds were keeping at bay squads of irregular, anti-Gaddafi fighters who
had swept into the capital on Sunday and who were now rushing from one site to
another, firing assault rifles, machineguns and anti-aircraft cannon bolted to
the backs of pick-up trucks.
In a southern district close
to the notorious prison of Abu Salim, the rebel forces launched a concerted
assault, sweeping from house to house and taking prisoners. Elsewhere,
pro-Gaddafi forces shelled rebel positions at Tripoli's airport, and NATO
warplanes bombed Sirte to the east -- Gaddafi's birthplace.
RESIDENTS VENTURE OUT
While random gunfire broke out
periodically across the city, some of its two million residents ventured out to
stock up on supplies for the first time in days.
Aid agencies sounded an alarm
about food, water and also medical supplies, especially for hundreds of wounded.
But the new leadership said it had found huge stockpiles in Tripoli which would
ease the shortages.
In a sign that Libya's rebel
authority was gradually taking over the levers of power from Gaddafi, National
Transitional Council official Ali Tarhouni said late on Thursday the body had
begun a planned move from the eastern rebel bastion of Benghazi to Tripoli.
"I proclaim the
beginning of the resumption of the work of the executive office in
Tripoli," Tarhouni, who is in charge of oil and financial matters for the
council, told reporters at a briefing in the capital.
The shift is seen as a
crucial step to smoothing over rifts in the country, fragmented by regional and
tribal divisions, particularly between east and west.
Nonetheless, in order to
begin installing an administration in a nation run by an eccentric personality
cult for 42 years, to offer jobs to young men now bearing arms and to heal
ethnic, tribal and other divisions that have been exacerbated by civil war,
Libya's new masters are anxious for hard cash quickly.
The United States and South
Africa struck a deal late on Thursday to allow the release
of $1.5 billion in frozen Libya funds for humanitarian aid and other civilian
needs, U.N. diplomats said.
Some governments, notably in
Africa where there was some sympathy for Gaddafi's view of his Western enemies
as colonialist aggressors, had been reluctant to agree to the deal.
FEAR OF FAILURE
After a meeting of officials
in Istanbul, the Contact Group of allies against Gaddafi called on Libyans to
avoid revenge.
"The participants
attached utmost importance to the realization of national reconciliation in
Libya," it said. "They agreed that such a process should be based on
principles of inclusiveness, avoidance of retribution and vengeance."
The group also urged the
United Nations Security Council to pass a resolution freeing up cash quickly.
Jibril said the uprising, the
bloodiest so far of the Arab Spring, could fall apart if funds were not
forthcoming quickly: "The biggest destabilizing element would be the
failure ... to deliver the necessary services and pay the salaries of the
people who have not been paid for months.
"Our priorities cannot be
carried out by the government without having the necessary money
immediately," he said.
Gaddafi's opponents fear that
he may rally an insurgency, as did Saddam Hussein in Iraq, should he remain at
large and, perhaps, in control of funds salted away for such a purpose.
Western powers, mindful of the
bloodshed in Iraq, have made clear they do not want to engage their troops in
Libya. But a U.S. State Department spokeswoman said Washington would look
favorably on any Libyan request for U.N. police assistance -- something some say
might aid a transition to democracy.
HUNTING GADDAFI
Rebel leaders, offering a
million-dollar reward, say the war will be over only when Gaddafi is found,
"dead or alive."
The ex-international high
representative in Bosnia, Paddy Ashdown, told Reuters there was a need for
speed if Libya's new rulers were to avoid a lingering threat from their
predecessor, unlike what transpired in the former Yugoslavia and Iraq.
"The best time to
capture these defeated leaders is immediately after the conflict
finishes," Ashdown said. "The longer it takes the more chance they
have of being spirited away to a place which is much more difficult to
find."
The United States and NATO
are also deeply concerned about possible looting and resale of weapons from
Libyan arsenals as Muammar Gaddafi's rule crumbles, though the U.S. State
Department said it believes Libya's stocks of concentrated uranium and mustard
agent are secure.
With fighting raging in
Tripoli, there was evidence of the kind of bitter bloodletting in recent days
that the rebel leaders are anxious to stop in the interests of uniting Libyans,
including former Gaddafi supporters, in a democracy.
A Reuters correspondent
counted 30 bodies, apparently of troops and gunmen who had fought for Gaddafi,
at a site in central Tripoli. At least two had their hands bound. One was
strapped to a hospital trolley with a drip still in his arm.
All the bodies had been
riddled with bullets.
Elsewhere, a British medical
worker said she had counted 17 bodies who she believed were of prisoners
executed by Gaddafi's forces. One wounded man said he had survived the
incident, when, he said, prison guards had sprayed inmates with gunfire on Tuesday
as the rebel forces entered Gaddafi's compound.
French magazine Paris Match
quoted an intelligence source saying Libyan commandos found evidence that he
had stayed at a safe house which they raided on Wednesday. NATO was helping the
rebels with intelligence and reconnaissance, Britain said, and its jets kept up
their bombing campaign overnight.
"There are areas of
resistance by the regime which has had considerable levels of military
expertise, still has stockpiles of weapons and still has the ability for
command and control," said British Defense Minister Liam Fox.
"They may take some time
to completely eliminate and it is likely there will be some frustrating days
ahead before the Libyan people are completely free of the Gaddafi legacy."
Nonetheless, many in Tripoli
count themselves happy already that Gaddafi has gone. "I was nine years
old when Gaddafi came to power and I've always hoped I wouldn't die before I
saw this day," said Ali Salem al-Gharyani, choking back tears.
"I am now 50 years old
and this is the first time, seeing Gaddafi gone, that I have experienced true
joy in my life."
(Reporting by Peter Graff, Ulf
Laessing, Mohammed
Abbas and Samia Nakhoul in Tripoli, Robert Birsel in Benghazi, Hamid Ould Ahmed and
Marie-Louise Gumuchian in Algiers, Souhail Karam in Rabat, Sami Aboudi, Omar Fahmy,
Marwa Awad, Dina Zayed and Tom Pfeiffer in Cairo, Giles Elgood, Christian
Lowe and Richard
Valdmanis in Tunis, Silvia Aloisi in Milan, Tulay Karadeniz in Istanbul,
Jon Hemming in London, and Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations in New York;
Writing by Alastair
Macdonald and Richard
Valdmanis; Editing by Richard Valdmanis)
Source : Reuters
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