Translate

Search This Blog

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Gaddafi killed in his hometown


This brought to end his 42-year rule. "We announce to the world that Gaddafi has died in the custody of the revolution," National Transitional Council spokesman Abdel Hafez Ghoga said in the eastern city of Benghazi. "It is an historic moment. Gaddafi has met his fate," he said. However, Gaddafi saved himself a walk to the gallows unlike oil-rich Iraq’s Saddam Hussain. He died his boots on. The NTC spokesman said Gaddafi’s death had been "confirmed by commanders on the ground in Sirte, those who captured him after he had been badly wounded in the battle for Sirte." Reports emerged that Gaddafi was denied medical treatment in a display of utter cruelty. In Tripoli, interim premier Mahmud Jibril told reporters that interim leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil was to declare by Friday that the country has been liberated and also give details on Gaddafi s killing. As Libyans poured out on to the streets, firing automatic weapons into the air and some dancing, western leaders welcomed Gaddafi s demise as the end of despotism, tyranny, dictatorship and ultimately war in the north African state. NTC fighters who had fought in the bloody eight-month conflict that in August toppled the veteran despot at a cost of more than 25,000 lives, erupted in jubilation at the news of his death, which followed reports that Gaddafi had been captured alive. A photograph taken on a mobile phone appeared to show the 69-year-old Gaddafi heavily bloodied. In the blurry image, Gaddafi is seen with blood-soaked clothing and blood daubed across his face. A video that later circulated among the NATO-backed NTC fighters in Sirte showed mobile phone footage of what appeared to be Gaddafi s bloodied corpse. In the grainy images, a large number of NTC fighters are seen yelling in chaotic scenes around a khaki-clad body which has blood oozing from the face and neck.The body is then dragged off by the fighters and loaded in the back of a pick-up truck. Another NTC commander said one of Gaddafi s sons, Mutassim, was also killed in Sirte. "We found him dead. We put his body and that of (former defence minister) Abu Bakr Yunis Jabar in an ambulance to take them to Misrata," said Mohamed Leith. News of Gaddafi s death came as new regime troops overran the last redoubt of his loyalists in Sirte, bringing to an end a two-month siege. Fighters moving in from east and west overcame the last resistance in the city s Number Two residential neighbourhood where his diehard supporters had been holed up. "Sirte has been liberated, and with the confirmation that Gaddafi is dead," Libya has been completely liberated, a top NTC military official, Khalifa Haftar, told AFP in Tripoli. "Those who were fighting with Gaddafi have either been killed or captured," he added. Gaddafi was wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity but Libyan leaders had said they wanted him captured alive so he could be put on trial in his home country. In Brussels, a NATO spokesman said two alliance aircraft on Thursday morning struck two pro-Gaddafi military vehicles near Sirte, amid speculation the fugitive leader was fatally wounded in the air strike and died soon afterwards. The Pentagon, however, said there was no indication Gaddafi was in the convoy. "We know there was an air strike on a small convoy of vehicles that were deemed to be and in the act of threatening Libyan civilians" outside of Sirte, spokesman Captain John Kirby told reporters in Washington. "But there s no indication or identification of the people that were in that convoy," said Kirby. World leaders began to weigh in on the death of the man who had ruled the oil-rich nation. British Prime Minister David Cameron said Gaddafi s death was an occasion to remember his victims, while hailing it as a chance for a "democratic future" for Libya. "I think today is a day to remember all of Colonel Gaddafi s victims" including those who died in the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jet over the Scottish town of Lockerbie, Cameron said in a statement outside his office. French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe hailed the "end of 42 years of tyranny" in Libya and said France was "proud" to have helped bring freedom to the country, referring to the role of French forces in NATO actions during the conflict. UN chief Ban Ki-moon said Gaddafi s death ushered in a "historic transition" for Libya. "The road ahead for Libya and its people will be difficult and full of challenges. Now is the time for all Libyans to come together," he said at the UN headquarters.In Rome, Libya s former colonial ruler, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was the first to declare after the death of his onetime ally: "Now the war is over." Sirte once had 100,000 inhabitants, almost all of whom have fled. Fierce artillery battles and heavy gunfire over the past month have not left a single building intact, while looting has become commonplace as NTC fighters take their revenge on what was a Gaddafi bastion.

Kurdish rebels kill 24 Turkish soldiers


Turkey’s Prime Minister says his country’s forces are in hot pursuit of Kurdish guerillas who killed 24 soldiers in attacks on Turkish military posts. Simon Hanna reports. At least 24 Turkish soldiers were killed and 18 wounded - the biggest single death toll for Turkish security forces in years. Ankara promised a swift and strong response, launching air raids on Kurdish rebel targets in northern Iraq. Turkish commandos also crossed the border in pursuit of the rebels from the Kurdistan Workers Party or PKK. Underlying the gravity of the situation, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan cancelled a planned trip to Kazakhstan. Erdogan vowed to breathe down the necks of those responsible for the killing of the 24 soldiers. The Prime Minister said that wide reaching operations were underway in hunting down the rebels, within the framework of international law. Kurdish rebels took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984, and more than 40,000 people have since died in the conflict.