Gadaffi died of wounds.
Saif captured, wounded.
fall of another despot.
and son.
more to come...
Gaddafi killed, confirms NTC
Posted: 21 October 2011 0259 hrs
SIRTE, Libya: Libyan
strongman Muammar Gaddafi was killed Thursday in a final assault on his
hometown Sirte by fighters of the new regime, who said they had
cornered the ousted despot in a sewage pipe waving a golden gun.
The
demise of the hated dictator, who ruled his oil-rich North African
nation with an iron rod for close to 42 years, sparked a spontaneous
outpouring of joy and celebratory gunfire in streets across Libya.
"We
announce to the world that Gaddafi has died in the custody of the
revolution," National Transitional Council (NTC) spokesman Abdel Hafez
Ghoga said in the eastern city of Benghazi.
"It is an historic moment. It is the end of tyranny and dictatorship. Gaddafi has met his fate," he added.
In
Tripoli, interim premier Mahmud Jibril said NTC leader Mustafa Abdel
Jalil was to declare by Friday the country has been liberated, paving
the way for the formation of an interim government ahead of elections.
As
Libyans danced for joy in the streets, world leaders welcomed Gaddafi's
demise as the end of despotism, tyranny, dictatorship and ultimately
war in Libya.
Colonel Gaddafi, whose whereabouts were unknown
since NTC fighters overran the capital in August, was captured in a
sewage pipe waving a golden gun near Sirte, Libyan fighters said.
"Gaddafi
was in a jeep when rebels opened fire on it. He got out and tried to
flee, taking shelter in a sewage pipe," an NTC field commander, Mohammed
Leith, told AFP.
NTC fighters "opened fire again and he came out
carrying a Kalashnikov (assault rifle) in one hand and a pistol in the
other," he said.
Gaddafi "looked left and right and asked what
was happening. Rebels opened fire again, wounding his leg and shoulder.
He died after that," according to Leith.
But according to Jibril,
Gaddafi was shot in the head "in crossfire" between his supporters and
new regime fighters after his capture.
"When he was found, he was
in good health, carrying a gun," Jibril told a press conference in
Tripoli. Gaddafi was transferred from the sewage pipe to a pickup truck,
at which point he was shot in the right hand.
"When the vehicle
started moving, it was caught in crossfire between Gaddafi fighters and
the revolutionaries, and he was shot in the head," according to Jibril.
"He was alive up to (the) last moment, until he arrived at hospital" in the town of Misrata.
French
Defence Minister Gerard Longuet revealed that a French Mirage-2000
fired a warning shot at a column of up to 80 vehicles trying to flee
Sirte early Thursday.
Libyan fighters then intervened, destroying the vehicles, from which "they took out Colonel Gaddafi," he added.
Longuet
told reporters in Paris the convoy "was stopped from progressing as it
sought to flee Sirte but was not destroyed by the French intervention."
A
videotape aired on Arab satellite channels showed a bloodied Gaddafi
alive and walking as he was being manhandled by Libya's new regime
fighters after his capture.
NTC fighters circled the 69-year-old
ousted strongman, who was bloodied in the head, face and shoulders, as
he apparently tried to cry out.
Leith, the 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 (ex-defence minister) Abu Bakr Yunis
Jabar in an ambulance to take them to Misrata."
The NTC's Jibril
said that Gaddafi's most prominent son and one-time heir apparent, Seif
al-Islam, was believed to be pinned down in a village near Sirte.
Witnesses
said they saw the bodies of both Gaddafi and Mutassim in Misrata late
on Thursday. "I saw his body, he had a wound on his head," said one
witness, Hakim al-Farjani.
"There was a lot of blood on his body.
He had a bandage on his stomach," he said. "The body came in an
ambulance. Then the crowd became bigger and bigger so they took the body
away."
An AFP photographer also saw Mutassim's body after it had been transferred to Misrata.
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.
Fighters
who had fought in the bloody eight-month conflict that toppled the
despot at a cost of more than 25,000 lives, erupted in jubilation,
firing volleys of gunfire into the sky and chanting "Allahu Akbar" (God
is greatest).
Pick-up trucks blaring out patriotic music
criss-crossed the streets of Sirte as fighters flashed V for victory
signs and chanted "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest).
"We did it!
We did it!" chanted the fighters overcome with emotion, exchanging
well-wishes, hugs and handshakes against a backdrop of intense
celebratory gunfire.
World leaders began to weigh in on the death of the man who had ruled the oil-rich nation.
US
President Barack Obama said Gaddafi's death ended a long, painful
chapter for Libyans and warned "iron fist" regimes in the rest of the
Arab world they would inevitably fall.
Speaking in the White
House Rose Garden, Obama said Gaddafi's demise vindicated the collective
military action of the West and said Libyans now had a chance to build a
"democratic" and "tolerant nation."
British Prime Minister David
Cameron said the death was an occasion to remember his victims, while
hailing it as a chance for a "democratic future" for Libya.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy also hailed the end of Gaddafi and urged the country's new regime to pursue democratic reforms.
French
and British forces spearheaded the air campaign against Gaddafi's
military by the NATO military alliance, which has launched nearly 1,000
strike sorties since March 31.
NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the alliance will begin Friday winding up its six-month mission in Libya.
Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi he hoped the death of Gaddafi would "turn the page of tyranny."
Arabi
urged Libyans to "overcome the wounds of the past and to look to the
future with no grudges or sentiments of revenge, warding off all that
could disrupt national unity and peace."
UN chief Ban Ki-moon said it 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.
Medics said at least three NTC fighters
were killed and 30 wounded in Thursday's fighting in Sirte, after 18
were killed and around 180 wounded over the previous two days.
Fifty
pro-Gaddafi fighters were killed and 150 taken prisoner, including
three women, said NTC commander Leith. There was no independent
confirmation of the toll.
- AFP
The Amazonian Guard couldn't protect him this time?
Will Libya end up like Egypt?