Muammar Gaddafi -(June 7th 1942-Oct 20 2011) The Man,His Rise, His Power,His Trials And Death.
Muammar Gaddafi has been killed after Libyan rebels captured his stronghold in the city of Sirte, it was confirmed today.
As news of his death swept
through the country and across the world, bloody images of the
69-year-old tyrant slumped across the legs of a revolutionary fighter
emerged.
He had been dragged from a
storm drain where he was hiding before being shot in front of a baying
mob. Rebel fighters described him begging for mercy.
Libya's prime minister Mahmoud Jibril this afternoon confirmed the former dictator was dead.
Captured image: A mobile phone
picture, purporting to be that of wounded leader Muammar Gaddafi, was
circulated shortly after the news of his capture broke
Hiding hole: A fighter points to
the concrete pipe where Gaddafi was reportedly found. Arabic graffiti in
blue reads: 'This is the place of Gaddafi, the rat. God is the
greatest'
Brutal: There had been fierce
fighting around the drain before Gaddafi was finally killed. The body of
a fighter can be seen in the dust at the centre of the screen
'We have been waiting for this moment for a long time,' he said. 'Muammar Gaddafi has been killed'
The new was also welcomed by David Cameron who said he was 'proud' of the role Britain had played in protecting Libyan civilians.
Gaddafi is the first leader to be killed in the Arab Spring wave of popular uprisings that swept the Middle East
The revolutionary offensive began around 8am local time and progressed quickly into the town centre.
Gaddafi had been barricaded in with his heavily armed loyalists in the last few buildings they held west of the central Green Square.
Nato airstrikes and revolutionary ground forces concentrated on a compound in that area of the town.
National Transitional
Council (NTC) soldiers said that a convoy of at least five vehicles
tried to leave the town in the early morning, but it came under
sustained fire - first from a Hellfire missile and then from French
fighters jets which were part of the Nato force.
The vehicles were forced to return to the loyalist-controlled area as battle continued.
Gaddaffi, already injured, was found a short time later in a large storm-water drain,
and fighter Mohammed Al Bibi told reporters that the toppled tyrant had
pleaded 'Don't shoot, don't shoot' as he attempted to surrender.
He had been wounded in the legs. NTC official Abdel Majid Mlegta said: 'He [Gaddafi] was also hit in his head. There was a lot of firing against his group and he died.'
Mobile phone footage, released shortly after the news of his capture broke, appears to show a bloodied Gaddafi being manhandled.
Al Jazeera was also
repeatedly showing footage of what appeared to be Gaddafi's shirtless
and lifeless body being dragged along the ground.
The body was then taken to
the nearby city of Misrata, which Gaddafi's forces besieged for months
in one of the bloodiest fronts of the civil war.
Al-Arabiya TV showed
footage of Gaddafi's bloodied body carried on the top of a vehicle
surrounded by a large crowd chanting: 'The blood of the martyrs will not
go in vain.'
Double celebration: Anti-Gaddafi
fighters celebrate the fall of Sirte, but the news soon came that the
leader himself had been captured
End of conflict: The fall of
Sirte ends the last significant resistance by forces loyal to the
deposed leader, and ends a two-month siege
All that's left: A lone
revolutionary soldier fires into the air in celebration. Behind him lies
the ruins of a town all but destroyed by fighting
Rebels said he had been
armed with a golden handgun when he was found and was wearing a khaki
uniform. Later images showed young revolutionary soldiers sheering an
holding a golden handgun.
Other soldiers say they slapped the dead Gaddafi's face with a shoe to expres their disgust and lack of respect.
The reports of Gaddafi's
capture came on the same day that revolutionary forces said that they
had taken control of Sirte - the leader's home town.
Initial reports from CNN
and the National Transitional Council (NTC) said Gaddafi was in custody,
while Al Jazeera reported that a ‘big fish’ had been caught but did not
provide a name. Al Jazeera later joined Al-Arabiya in saying that
Gaddafi had been killed, but did not provide any further information.
Celebrations: Thousands came out on the streets of Tripoli as news of the dictator's demise spread
Joy: Many carried flags while some showed off pictures of the dead dictator who had been in power for 40 years
Libya's
transitional government forces have taken full control of the city -
the last stronghold of Gaddafi loyalists. Gaddafi's presence there would
explain why fighting had been so intense in the past few weeks.
Al Jazeera reported spontaneous celebration in cities like Benghazi and Tripoli, with people cheering and shouting, car horns sounding and small arms fire being heard.
The
official also said the head of Gaddafi's armed forces, Abu Bakr Younus
Jabr, was also killed during the capture of the former Libyan leader.
The NTC said Sirte's fall would be the point at which it would declare Libya
liberated. The transitional authorities have said a new government
would then be formed within a month, and the current administration
would resign.
Golden trophy: Young Libyans hold
a gold-plated handgun belonging to Gaddafi, left, who was last publicly
seen as merely an image, right, accompanying an audio message broadcast
by Al-Arouba on 1 September
'STRONG, DEMOCRATIC FUTURE'
British Prime Minister David Cameron reacted to the news of Colonel Gaddafi's death by saying it held out the promise of a better future for the people he ruled for four decades.
In a brief statement outside Downing Street, he said: 'People in Libya today have an even greater chance after this news of building themselves a strong and democratic future.'
Mr Cameron said he
was 'proud' of the role Britain played in Nato airstrikes to protect
Libyan civilians, and added that now was a time to reflect on the British victims of 'this brutal dictator and his regime', including: those who died at Lockerbie; Wpc Yvonne Fletcher, gunned down in a London street; and all those killed by the IRA using Semtex explosives supplied by Liby.
The U.S. State Department said today it could not confirm that Gaddafi had been captured.
White House officials were not immediately available to comment. The Pentagon also said it could not confirm the reports.
It is understood that Gaddafi’s son Saif has also been captured by rebels.
There were some reports that NATO had bombed a compound shortly before Gaddafi’s reported capture.
Gaddafi's killing is the most dramatic single development in the Arab Spring revolts that have unseated rulers in Egypt and Tunisia, and threatened the grip on power of the leaders of Syria and Yemen.
His
capture followed within minutes of the fall of Sirte, a development
that extinguished the last significant resistance by forces loyal to the
deposed leader.
The capture of Sirte and
the death of Gaddafi means Libya's ruling NTC should now begin the task
of forging a new democratic system which it had said it would get under
way after the city, built as a showpiece for Gaddafi's rule, had
fallen.
Gaddafi,
wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of ordering the
killing of civilians, was toppled by rebel forces on 23 August after 42 years of one-man rule over the oil-producing North African state.
NTC
fighters hoisted the red, black and green national flag above a large
utilities building in the centre of a newly-captured Sirte neighbourhood
and celebratory gunfire broke out among their ecstatic and relieved
comrades.
Hundreds
of NTC troops had surrounded the Mediterranean coastal town for weeks
in a chaotic struggle that killed and wounded scores of the besieging
forces and an unknown number of defenders.
NTC fighters said there were a large number of corpses inside the last redoubts of the Gaddafi troops.
A love for uniforms, female bodyguards and brutal repression
In the end Muammar Gaddafi's end was as violent as his life, gunned down without mercy in the crumbling ruins of his home town.
His
love of comic-opera uniforms, exotic female bodyguards and Bedouin
tents provided a theatrical backdrop for 42 years of bloody repression
that, in the end, could not withstand a determined uprising backed by
NATO air power.
Chased
out of Tripoli by rebel forces, Gaddafi disappeared - some said into
the empty desert spaces in the south of his vast country.
Eccentric style: Gaddafi was
known for his love of over-the-top military-style uniforms and a cadre
of young female bodyguards who were supposedly trained to kill
In
tandem with his eccentricity, Gaddafi had a charisma which initially at
least won him support among many ordinary Libyans. His readiness to
take on Western powers and Israel,
both with rhetoric and action, earned him a certain cachet with some in
other Arab states who felt their own leaders were too supine.
While
leaders of neighbouring Arab states folded quickly in the face of
popular uprisings, Gaddafi put up a bloody fight, taking on NATO as well
as local insurgents who quickly seized half the country.
For most of his 42-year rule, he held a prominent position in the West's gallery of international rogues, while maintaining tight control at home by eliminating dissidents and refusing to anoint a successor.
Gaddafi
effected a successful rapprochement with the West by renouncing his
weapons of mass destruction programme in return for an end to sanctions.
But he could not avoid the tide of popular revolution sweeping through
the Arab world.
THE RISE OF A TYRANT
Gaddafi
was born in 1942, the son of a Bedouin herdsman, in a tent near Sirte
on the Mediterranean coast. He abandoned a geography course at
university for a military career that included a short spell at a
British army signals school.
He
took power in a bloodless military coup in 1969 when he toppled King
Idriss, and in the 1970s he formulated his 'Third Universal Theory', a
middle road between communism and capitalism, as laid out in his Green
Book.
He
oversaw the rapid development of Libya, which was previously known for
little more than oil wells and deserts where huge tank battles took
place in World War Two. The economy is now paying the price of war and
sanctions.
One
of his first tasks on taking power was to build up the armed forces,
but he also spent billions of dollars of oil income on improving living
standards, making him popular with the low-paid.
Gaddafi
poured money into giant projects such as a steel plant in the town of
Misrata - the scene of bitter fighting - and the Great Man-Made River, a
scheme to pipe water from desert wells to coastal communities.
Gaddafi
embraced the pan-Arabism of the late Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser
and tried without success to merge Libya, Egypt and Syria into a
federation. A similar attempt to join Libya and Tunisia ended in
acrimony.
In 1977 he changed the country's name to the Great Socialist Popular Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah (State of the Masses).
For
much of his rule he was shunned by the West, which accused him of links
to terrorism and revolutionary movements. He was particularly
reviled after the 1988 Pan Am airliner bombing over Lockerbie, by Libyan
agents in which 270 people were killed.
In retrospect, his time had come when he turned his guns on protesters and sent his army to cleanse Benghazi, prompting Western powers and NATO to open up a campaign of aerial bombing that allowed rebel forces eventually to oust him.
As his oil-producing North
African desert country descended into civil war, Gaddafi's military
responded with the deadly force that he had never been afraid to use,
despite the showman image that captivated many abroad.
When
the insurgency began in mid-February, protesters were gunned down in
their hundreds. As his troops advanced on Benghazi he famously warned
rebels there would be 'no mercy, no pity' They would be hunted down
'alley by alley, house by house, room by room'.
Those
words may have been his undoing. Days later the United Nations passed a
resolution clearing the way for a NATO air campaign that knocked out
his air force, tanks and heavy guns.
Raids also targeted his own headquarters in Tripoli. One raid killed his youngest son and three grandchildren. It was not the first time that the West had killed a Gaddafi family member.
Raids also targeted his own headquarters in Tripoli. One raid killed his youngest son and three grandchildren. It was not the first time that the West had killed a Gaddafi family member.
In
televised addresses in response to the rebellion in the east earlier
this year, Gaddafi blamed the unrest on rats and mercenaries and said
they were brainwashed by Osama bin Laden and under the influence of
hallucinogenic drugs used to spike their coffee.
As
the weeks passed, there was repeated speculation that Gaddafi has
either been killed or wounded in NATO air raids, but he made carefully
choreographed television appearances in response to the rumours.
In
May, Gaddafi taunted NATO, saying its bombers could not find him,
saying: 'I am telling the coward crusaders that I am at a place you
cannot reach and kill me.'
One
of the world's longest serving national leaders, Gaddafi had no
official government function and was known as the 'Brother Leader and
Guide of the Revolution'.
He strove for influence in Africa,
showering his poorer neighbours with the largesse that Libya's vast oil
wealth allowed and styling himself the continent's "King of Kings".
His
love of grand gestures was on display on foreign visits when he slept
in a Bedouin tent guarded by dozens of female bodyguards.
U.S. diplomatic cables released by the WikiLeaks website shed further light on the Libyan leader's tastes.
One cable posted by The New York Times describes Gaddafi's insistence on staying on the ground floor when he visited New York for a 2009 meeting at the United Nations and his reported refusal or inability to climb more than 35 steps.
Gaddafi
was also said to rely heavily on his staff of four Ukrainian nurses,
including one woman described as a 'voluptuous blonde'. The cable
speculated about a romantic relationship but the nurse, Galyna
Kolonytska, 38, fled Libya after the fighting started.
Synonymous with terrorism: A young Gaddafi, right, is seen in an undated photo with notorious Ugandan leader Idi Amin
Shunned by the West: Links to revolutionaries , such as Cuba's Fidel Castro, made Gaddafi many enemies around the world.
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