Muammar Gaddafi killed in Libya

 

Amateur video of Col Gaddafi shortly before he was killed

Libya's ex-leader Col Muammar Gaddafi has been killed after an assault on his birthplace of Sirte, officials say.

The circumstances of his death are not yet clear. Video has emerged purporting to show Col Gaddafi being captured alive and bundled on to a truck.

Fighters loyal to the National Transitional Council (NTC) said they found him hiding in a hole, and shot him when he tried to escape.

Col Gaddafi was toppled in August after 42 years in power.

The colonel was fighting in Sirte alongside his two sons, Mutassim and Saif al-Islam, according to reports.

Officials say Mutassim was killed in battle on Thursday.

The NTC's justice minister Mohammad al-Alagi told the AP news agency Saif al-Islam had been captured and taken to hospital with a leg wound.

Golden gun

After a day of conflicting reports and rumours, the NTC's acting prime minister Mahmoud Jibril told a news conference: "We have been waiting for this moment for a long time. Muammar Gaddafi has been killed."

At the scene

There is a mood of sheer exhilaration in Tripoli - tracer fire is lighting up the early evening sky, and fireworks are going off.

People young and old, fighters and civilians, are pouring towards Martyrs' Square in their cars, some of them draped in flags, flashing V for victory signs.

There is relief that this chapter of Libya's history has ended. This is a moment that most Libyans never dreamed of.

And for the new authorities there is also huge relief. There were fears that with Col Gaddafi in hiding and issuing audio messages, he could have directed a new insurgency.

World leaders welcomed the news, urging the NTC to carry through its promise to reform the country.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron, who had taken a leading role in Nato's intervention, said it was "a day to remember all of Col Gaddafi's victims".

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called it a "historic" moment, but warned: "The road ahead for Libya and its people will be difficult and full of challenges."

Proof of Col Gaddafi's fate came in grainy pieces of video, first circulated among NTC fighters and then broadcast by international news channels.

The first videos showed a bloodied corpse, with some channels picking up footage they said showed the colonel's body being dragged through the streets.

An NTC fighter told the BBC he found Col Gaddafi hiding in a hole in Sirte, and the former leader begged him not to shoot.

The fighter showed reporters a golden pistol he said he had taken from Col Gaddafi.

Arabic TV channels showed images of troops surrounding two large drainage pipes where the reporters said Col Gaddafi was found.

Later, another video emerged of the colonel being bundled on to the back of a pick-up truck after being captured alive.

NTC fighters said he was shot when he tried to escape.

None of the video footage has been independently verified.

'United Libya'

Libyans gathered in towns and cities across the country to celebrate the reports of the colonel's death.

The BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse has visited the drain where Col Gaddafi was reportedly found by NTC forces

Groups of young men fired guns in the air, and drivers honked horns in celebration.

His death came after weeks of fierce fighting for Sirte, one of the last remaining pockets of resistance.

Nato, which has been running a bombing campaign in Libya for months, said it had carried out an air strike earlier on Thursday that hit two pro-Gaddafi vehicles near Sirte.

It was unclear whether the strikes were connected with Col Gaddafi's death.

Mr Jibril promised that National Transitional Council (NTC) chief Mustafa Abdul Jalil would give more details of how Col Gaddafi was killed either late on Thursday or during Friday.

He said Mr Abdul Jalil would also officially announce the "liberation of the country", allowing the NTC to begin pushing through democratic reforms that will lead to elections.

"I think it's for the Libyans to realise that it's time to start a new Libya, a united Libya, one people, one future," Mr Jibril said.

 

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  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 693.

    Although its good that a dictator has gone; and people have reclaimed their soverinity... I have to wonder what this means for one of Gaddafi's better pet projects: The African Union. Is this victory for Libya blow to african unity?

  • rate this
    +11

    Comment number 627.

    They removed a leader who kept the region under control. Now the area will be infested with terror groups and religious fanatics, just like Iraq after Sadam. When will the democracies of the world learn that democracy doesn't work for every nation and they cannot force it on the world without creating chaos.

  • rate this
    +7

    Comment number 419.

    This wasn't about oil - which was being traded at market rates before the Arab uprising. In fact, disruption to the supply has caused prices to rise which has contributed to rising inflation and economic anxiety here in the UK. This was about helping a people free themselves from an illegitimate leader without asking more of our own troops to die on foreign soil for someone else's cause. Job done.

  • rate this
    +26

    Comment number 418.

    Tripoli today looks like Doha, Qatar did in 1976 when I first went to live there. Doha today is covered in skyscrapers and Qatar is a very rich country.

    This is where Libya should have been. Gaddafi pilfered the oil wealth for his own use. Hopefully Libya will now start on its transformation to a wealthy oil rich Country.

    Good luck to Libya and all Libyans

  • rate this
    +27

    Comment number 389.

    A lesson to all leaders everywhere: absolute power corrupts absolutely...
    he started off as a young idealist concerned only for the benefit and future of his people, and ended by murdering thousands of them. A sad end, perhaps, but he deserved it. His hands were bloodier than his corpse ever could be...

 

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