It has finally ended in the only
way it could have ended. Importantly it
ended at the hands of his own people who did all the dirty work. It is worth considering that the role of NATO
was to neutralize the arms accumulated by Gaddafi so they could not be easily
used against his own people. There is a
lesson here in terms of intervention in other revolutions.
The military has had a chance to
train up and reorganize while the politicians have had time to come
forward. They can even begin to trust
each other.
I have no doubt that Libya will be rebuilt in stunning speed and a
well run democratic regime is on the way in Libya . Questions lingering about other situations will
not be here because the people have spoken as they did in Romania and
other recalcitrant dictatorships.
Other dictatorships have yet to
crumble, so much remains to be seen as the Arab Spring progresses. However the correct role of intervention is
now much clearer. It can deny an
illegitimate government outright access to the major weapon systems they may
have accumulated which are clearly inappropriate for use against their own
people. This allows the people to organize
an assault on the forces loyal to the regime and to set up a provisional
government. Sooner or late the former
regime is worn down and buckles.
This strategy is plausible in
order to take down the present government of Syria who certainly has destroyed whatever
legitimacy it has. It is not so
plausible in Yemen
which is also in the midst of a sectarian civil war.
As far as some of the other Arab
States, it may simply be too soon as their populations are now looking to see
reforms come their way. What has fallen
are the truly rotten apples. Others can
still bluff it out.
Gaddafi was 'killed in crossfire'
Libya's Col Muammar Gaddafi was killed in crossfire in an assault on
his birthplace of Sirte, officials say.
20 October 2011 Last updated at 20:29 ET
Acting Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said he had been shot in the head
in an exchange between Gaddafi loyalists and National Transitional Council
fighters.
He confirmed that Col
Gaddafi had been taken alive, but had died before reaching hospital.
Nato's governing body, meeting in the coming hours, is expected to
declare an end to its Libyan bombing campaign.
Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said that with the death
of Col
Gaddafi "that moment has now moved much closer".
"After 42 years, Col
Gaddafi's rule of fear has finally come to an end," he said. "I call
on all Libyans to put aside their differences and work together to build a
brighter future."
Golden gun
Mr Jibril, number two in the National Transitional Council (NTC), held
a news conference in Tripoli
to confirm the colonel's death.
"We have been waiting for this moment for a long time. Muammar
Gaddafi has been killed," he said.
Video footage suggests Col
Gaddafi was dragged through the streets.
Residents swarmed the streets of the capital, waving flags and cheering
from the windows of their cars.
People and fighters manning checkpoints shouted out "God is
Great", as some distributed mints and biscuits - later dubbed
"revolutionary treats" - to passing cars.
There are many who will be wondering "what next?" for Libya
as it embarks on a new era unobtainable for almost half a century.
It is unclear from the footage, broadcast by al-Jazeera TV, whether he
was alive or dead at the time.
Mr Jibril, number two in the National Transitional Council (NTC), held
a news conference in Tripoli
to confirm the colonel's death.
Later, he told journalists that a "forensic report" had
concluded that the colonel had died from bullet wounds after he had been
captured and driven away.
"When the car was moving it was caught in crossfire between the revolutionaries
and Gaddafi forces in which he was hit by a bullet in the head," said Mr
Jibril, quoting from the report.
"The forensic doctor could not tell if it came from the
revolutionaries or from Gaddafi's forces."
Earlier, some NTC fighters gave a different account of the colonel's
death, saying he had been shot by his captors when he tried to escape.
One NTC fighter told the BBC that he found Col Gaddafi hiding in a hole, and the former
leader had 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.
US President Barack Obama said it was a "momentous day" for Libya , now that
tyranny had fallen.
He said the country had a "long and winding road towards full
democracy", but the US
and other countries would stand behind Tripoli .
He was making his last stand in Sirte alongside two of his sons,
Mutassim and Saif al-Islam, according to reports.
Nato air strike
A body officials identified as that of Mutassim has been shown on
Libyan TV.
A reporter for the Reuters news agency described how the body of
Mutassim -- the former national security adviser -- had been laid out on
blankets on the floor of a house in the city of Misrata, while local people
jostled to take pictures of the corpse with their mobile phones.
The body of Col
Gaddafi was also taken to Misrata.
There are conflicting reports as to the whereabouts of Saif al-Islam.
Acting Justice Minister Mohammad al-Alagi told the AP news agency Saif
al-Islam had been captured and taken to hospital with a leg wound.
But another NTC official said his whereabouts were unknown.
Nato, which has been running a bombing campaign in Libya for months,
said it had carried out an air strike earlier on Thursday.
French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet said French jets had fired
warning shots to halt a convoy carrying Col
Gaddafi as it tried to flee Sirte.
He said Libyan fighters had then descended and taken the colonel.
Proof of Col
Gaddafi's fate came in grainy pieces of video, first circulated among fighters,
and then broadcast by international news channels.
The first images showed a bloodied figure presumed to be Col Gaddafi.
Later, video emerged of the colonel being bundled on to the back of a
pick-up truck after being captured alive.
None of the video footage has been independently verified.
'Full of challenges'
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.
In the capital Tripoli ,
wild scenes of celebration continued into the night, with cars clogging the
city centre.
Col Gaddafi's death came after weeks of fierce fighting for Sirte, one
of the last remaining pockets of resistance.
A senior official, Mahmoud Shammam, told the BBC that fighting
throughout Libya
was over.
World leaders urged 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."
Officials said the NTC intended to announce the "liberation of the
country" in the coming days, allowing them to begin pushing through
democratic reforms that will lead to elections.
Moammar Gaddafi’s demise in Libya swings spotlight to uprisings in
Syria, Yemen
DAMASCUS, Syria — As the Arab Spring claimed
its first dead dictator, the spotlight swung to the other revolts still
simmering across the region, in Yemen and, perhaps the most intractable
struggle of all, in Syria.
Moammar
Gaddafi was the third of the region’s leaders to be ousted by his own
people in less than eight months but the first to meet a bloody end. His death,
coming two months after rebels
drove his forces from Tripoli and began setting up a new government,
was in some ways a footnote to an already tumultuous year.
But the scenes of his corpse being dragged through the streets of his
home town of Sirte inevitably rekindled revolutionary sentiments across the
region, along with hopes that his violent demise will give pause to the despots
who remain.
In the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, thousands of people swarmed into Change Square to
celebrate and to call for the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. In the
Tunisian capital, Tunis ,
where it all began in January with the flight of President Zine el-Abidine Ben
Ali, young men took to the streets wrapped in Libyan flags and drivers honked
their horns into the night in celebration.
“Now all these tyrants who thought they would rule forever are
trembling,” Khelil Ezzaouia, a leader of the secularist Ettakatol party, said
at a town hall meeting in a glitzy mall in Tunis as campaigning accelerated
ahead of the Arab Spring’s first free election on Sunday.
But it was the implications of Gaddafi’s fate for Syria ’s
President Bashar al-Assad, who is showing no signs of faltering despite nearly
eight months of protests against his rule, that most seemed to capture the
imagination of commentators across the region.
“Ben Ali fled. Mubarak is on trial. Gaddafi was killed. The greater the
tyrant’s resistance to his people the worse his punishment,” tweeted Essam
al-Zamel, a writer at the Saudi newspaper al-Yawm, referring also to Egypt ’s deposed
President Hosni Mubarak. “It seems that Bashar will be crucified to death in
the center of Damascus .”
Syrian demonstrators took to the streets in several towns and cities
across the north and south, and in the eastern city of Deir al-Zour, to cheer Gaddafi’s demise.
Activists said they hoped it would reinvigorate a protest movement that has
shown signs of withering in recent weeks in the face of the sustained severity
of the government’s crackdown.
Some also expressed hope that the effective end of the NATO bombing
campaign in Libya
would free up Western forces to come to the aid of Syrian protesters, who have
been calling for a no-fly zone, like the one that facilitated the Libyan
revolution, since Gaddafi was toppled in August.
“Maybe NATO will be free now to involve themselves in Syria . At least we hope so,” said
Omar al-Muqdad, an activist from the southern town of Daraa
who fled to Turkey
in the early months of the uprising. “And maybe the regime will get this
message, that NATO is free now to attack them.”
There still seems little prospect of that, however. President Obama,
speaking in Washington , issued a warning to
Arab dictators but did not suggest that the United States would step up efforts
to remove them.
“Today’s events prove once more that the rule of an iron fist
inevitably comes to an end,” he said. “Across the Arab world, citizens have
stood up to claim their rights. Youth are delivering a powerful rebuke to
dictatorship. And those leaders who try to deny their human dignity will not
succeed.”
Obama has called on both Saleh and Assad to step aside, but there has
not yet been a concerted effort by world powers to force their ouster, as was
the case with Libya .
Russia and China have blocked action at the U.N. Security Council against their
ally Syria, and Yemen’s gulf neighbors have been reluctant to pressure Saleh,
for fear of jeopardizing his role in the fight against al-Qaeda.
In Damascus, where Assad’s grip seems unshakable and the protests that
have engulfed many other parts of the country have failed to gain critical
mass, a group of young businessmen at an upscale cafe insisted that Syria was
different from Libya and that what happened there could not possibly happen in
their country.
Gaddafi had nothing in common with Assad, they said. Assad, unlike
Gaddafi, is popular with his people, and Syria has a strong army that could
withstand a NATO assault and wreak havoc across this strategically sensitive
region.
“Gaddafi was totally insane,” said financial adviser Mohammed Homsi,
33. “We love Bashar. And the strategic calculation is different.”
The likelihood of international military intervention in Syria seems remote, said Salman Shaikh, director
of the Brookings Doha
Center in Qatar . But with attention diverted
from Libya , and at a time
when the gulf states are starting to show
signs of impatience with Syria ,
the pressure is likely to intensify on Assad as well as Saleh.
Gaddafi’s death “holds important lessons now for other dictators in the
months ahead,” Shaikh said. “The protests are not going away, and we are seeing
a move towards the militarization of those conflicts.
“I think we could certainly see a more concerted effort to isolate and
pressure the Syrian regime.”
Fadel reported from Tunis .
Special correspondent Ingy Hassieb in Cairo
contributed to this report.
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