As the
Libyan army is continuing its assault of the anti-regime stronghold of Bani
Walid in an attempt to crush the remnants of his loyalist followers, media
speculate Khamis Gaddafi was captured during the siege and died of wounds.
Reports
on Twitter confirm that Khamis Gaddafi, Colonel Gaddafi's son, has been found
alive in Bani Walid, this comes after earler reports on Twitter that he had
been captured by the government forces.
The
version which says the youngest son of the Libyan former strongman has been
captured also claims he sustained serious wounds and died, reports Al-Arabiya
citing own sourses.
Khamis
Gaddafi was said to have been killed by a NATO airstrike in August 2011, but
this has never been confirmed by evidence.
Fighting
has gripped Bani Walid for the last two weeks as security forces and militia
attempt to enter the town to arrest individuals accused of a series of
kidnappings.
“All the
families are still here, nobody decided to leave,” a town official, Abdul Salem
Al Fukahi, said in a telephone interview with Bloomberg. “They will stay in
their homes and live or die.”
Mohammed
Megaryef, Libya’s de facto head of state after the Congress fired PM Mustafa
Abushagur, said that the fight for is not over yet.
"The
campaign to liberate the country has not been fully completed," Megaryef,
the head of Libya's national assembly, said on state television on Saturday. He
cited the “corruption and weakness” of some government bodies as the root cause
for the “state of discontent and tension among different segments of society.”
The
fighting erupted earlier this week after militias allied to the Libyan army
reportedly shelled the hilltop town.
The
violence comes after the kidnap, shooting and torture in Bani Walid of, Omran
Ben Shaaban, credited with capturing Gaddafi last year. Shaban died of his
injuries last month while undergoing treatment in Paris. It is widely believed
he was killed by Gaddafi loyalists.
The
General National Congress (GNC) said it would bring Mr. Shaaban’s killers to
justice. It gave Bani Walid a deadline to hand him over and pro-government
militias effectively put the town under siege for two weeks prior to
Wednesday’s clashes.
Amnesty
International say hundreds of the town’s residents have been unlawfully taken
into custody by militia groups and that the town has been left without food and
medical supplies.
Tribal
elders tried to negotiate a solution and they hoped the army would be able to
enter Bani Walid peacefully. But reports from inside the town said Friday it
was still being shelled.
There
are also unconfirmed reports that chemical weapons may have been used in the
fighting.
Ali
Alkasih, a spokesman for the Warfalla Tribe abroad – the same tribe which
supported Gaddafi throughout his 42 year rule – says that chemical weapons had
been used in the attack resulting in one death and dozens suffering from
suffocation. He added that tanks and artillery had also been used, information
based on personal sources in the town.
Annie
Machon, a former agent in Britain’s MI5, “Gaddafi’s regime is reported to have
stockpiled chemical weapons while in power so there is a possibility that there
are still a lot of old chemical weapons floating about in Libya that might fall
into rebel militia.” Although she added that she doubted that, “This stuff has
been given to the official Libyan army and is being used against dissident
populations.”
Libya’s
GNC has so far failed to curtail violence in the country and bring militant
groups formed of former rebels under control.
A report
by Human Right’s Watch released Wednesday revealed that the Libyan rebels who
captured Gaddafi then abused and murdered him along with his son and loyalists.
Sabah
Al-Mukhtar, President of the Arab Lawyers Association described the finding as
no surprise and an “embarrassment” for NATO, given that they had backed the
same militia groups.
He added
that government forces are not in control of the fragmented militias that still
freely operate in Libya.
“Their
allegiance is not to Libya. Their allegiance is to their tribe, their town or
their background,” He said.
Machon
explained that no matter how brutal Gaddafi had been, he did at least provide a
certain degree of stability and quality of life.
“Yes he
could be brutal but that very strength allowed him to bring together the
disparate tribes and corrupting religious, secular groups within Libya and
taking away that control NATO abruptly removed any centralized power and the
people are suffering for it now,” she said.
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