Tuesday, October 25, 2011

The end of a cruel dick-tator: running and hiding like a rat

In weeks on the run, Gadhafi felt rage, despair, frequently changed hideouts, confidant says

Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Associated Press

MISRATA, Libya — Moammar Gadhafi, Libya’s all-powerful leader for four decades, spent his final weeks shuttling from hideout to hideout in his hometown of Sirte, alternating between rage and melancholy as his regime crumbled around him, said a Gadhafi confidant now in custody.

Gadhafi, his son Muatassim and an entourage of two dozen die-hard loyalists were largely cut off from the world while on the run, living in abandoned homes without TV, phones or electricity, said Mansour Dao, a member of the Gadhafi clan and former chief of Libya’s feared Revolutionary Guards.

Gadhafi would spend his time reading, jotting down notes or brewing tea on a coal stove, Dao said late Monday in a conference room of the revolutionary forces’ headquarters in the port city of Misrata, his temporary jail cell. “He was not leading the battle,” Dao said of Gadhafi. “His sons did that. He did not plan anything or think about any plan.”


The uprising against Gadhafi erupted in February and quickly escalated into a civil war that formally ended Sunday, with a declaration of liberation by Libya’s new leaders.

Gadhafi’s capture and death Thursday, along with the fall of Sirte, the last regime stronghold, paved the way for that milestone. On the day of Gadhafi’s capture, a convoy carrying loyalists, including the former Libyan leader and Dao riding in a green Toyota Landcruiser, had sped out of Sirte to try to escape. But the convoy was hit by a NATO airstrike.

Gadhafi and Dao were wounded and captured, and the ousted dictator died in unclear circumstances later that day. Libya’s interim government agreed under mounting international pressure to open an investigation.

Libyan officials claim Gadhafi was killed in crossfire. However, video footage has emerged showing Gadhafi being beaten, taunted and abused by his captors. Peter Bouckaert of Human Rights Watch said Monday that there are strong indications that a fatal shot to Gadhafi’s head was fired after he was already in custody. He said a Libyan nurse in the convoy told the rights group that Gadhafi was only lightly injured when he was caught.

The bodies of Gadhafi, Muatassim and Abu Bakr Younis, Gadhafi’s defense minister, were put on public display in a commercial produce freezer in the port city of Misrata for four days, before being moved late Monday in preparation for burial. The local military spokesman said they were buried in a secret location early Tuesday morning.

Dao said Gadhafi fled his residential compound in Tripoli around Aug. 18 or 19, just before revolutionary forces swept into the city. After the capital’s fall, Dao said Gadhafi headed directly to Sirte, accompanied by Muatassim. Gadhafi’s former heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, sought refuge in Bani Walid, another loyalist stronghold.

Dao joined Gadhafi in Sirte a week later, while Libya’s former intelligence chief, Abdullah al-Senoussi, shuttled between Sirte and the southern city of Sabha, the third remaining pro-Gadhafi bastion at the time. Al-Senoussi and Seif al-Islam, wanted by the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges, remain at large.

Gadhafi’s aides repeatedly urged him to step aside and leave the country, but he refused, saying he wanted to die in the land of his ancestors, according to Dao. “I feel sorry for him because he underestimated the situation,” Dao said of Gadhafi for him he had worked since 1980, including as chief of personal security in the 1990s.

“He could have left and gotten out of the country and lived a happy life,” Dao said.

In Sirte, Gadhafi and his entourage switched hideouts about every four days, as the city was pounded by NATO airstrikes and revolutionary forces advanced. The group stayed within the confines of the so-called No. 2 neighborhood, seeking shelter in homes residents had abandoned as they fled the fighting.

“We were scared of the airstrikes and shelling,” Dao said, adding that he did not believe Gadhafi was afraid.

Muatassim led the loyalist fighters in Sirte, initially commanding about 350, but many fled and toward the end the fighting force diminished to about 150.

Gadhafi, who once ruled a country of 6 million with an iron fist, railed against the loss of power. “He was stressed, he was really angry, he was mad sometimes,” Dao said. “Mostly, he was just sad and angry.”

“He believed the Libyan people still loved him, even after we told him that Tripoli had been occupied.”

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen should act tough like Gaddafi who did not did not leave his country and refused to be promoted beyond the rank of colonel.
The 5 golden stars general Hun Sen should be stronger, don’t run away when your turn comes, ok.
If there were moons in the military ranking system, we don’t know how many moons Hun Sen gets.
Education wise he gets the highest degrees possible (Phd) without attending any university.

Anonymous said...

RIP Hun Sen, RIP Hun Manat.

Anonymous said...

hip..hip .. paraid!

Anonymous said...

get lost, go to libya, leave cambodia alone, we are not libya, ok! and we are not gadafi, you know! so stop dreaming, ok!

Anonymous said...

libya has lots of sands and deserts, you know! singapore should buy sands from libya to expand singapore island, ok! leave cambodia sand alone, really!

Anonymous said...

12:52AM! no body as bad as ah Hun Xen CPP interm of destroying it own count try!

Ah Kwack = Ah Pol Pot.