http://www.theage.com.au/world/gaddafi-wife-children-flee-to-algeria-20110830-1jiuh.html

Gaddafi wife, children flee to Algeria 
August 30, 2011 - 6:28AM 
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Rebels advance on Gaddafi hometown
Rebels inch toward Sirte for what could be the final showdown with Gaddafi 
loyalists for control of Libya.

  a.. Video feedback 
  b.. Video settings
  a.. Guards say they were raped 
  b.. Lockerbie bomber close to death 
  c.. Rebels close in on Gaddafi's home town
Muammar Gaddafi's wife and three children fled to Algeria on Monday as rebels 
closed in on his hometown of Sirte and said the strongman still posed a danger 
to Libya and the world.

Gaddafi himself and two other children - sons Saadi and Seif al-Islam - were in 
the town of Bani Walid, south of the capital Tripoli, Italian news agency ANSA 
reported, citing "authoritative Libyan diplomatic sources".

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Gaddafis on the run ... (L to R) wife Safiya, his sons Hannibal and Mohammed 
and his daughter Aisha. Photo: AFP

Algiers announced that Gaddafi's wife Safiya, two sons, a daughter and their 
children had crossed the border into Algeria.

"The wife of Muammar Gaddafi, Safiya, his daughter Aisha, and sons Hannibal and 
Mohammed, accompanied by their children, entered Algeria at 8.45am (1745 AEST 
Monday) through the Algeria-Libyan border," the foreign ministry said in a 
statement carried by the state APS news agency, giving no information on the 
whereabouts of Gaddafi himself.

The ministry said that UN chief Ban Ki-moon, the Security Council and senior 
Libyan rebel leader Mahmud Jibril had been informed.

So far Algeria has not recognised the rebels' administration and has adopted a 
stance of strict neutrality on the conflict in its neighbour, leading some 
among the rebels to accuse it of supporting the Gaddafi regime.

The rebels' National Transitional Council (NTC) immediately said they wanted 
the Gaddafi family members back.

"We will ask Algeria to give them back," said Mohammed al-Allagy, who handles 
judicial affairs.

Italy's ANSA news agency said that another Gaddafi son, Khamis, had "almost 
certainly" been killed as he tried to make the 100 km journey from Tripoli to 
Bani Walid to join his father and brothers Saadi and Seif al-Islam.

The rebels had said previously that they had captured Seif al-Islam as they 
overran Tripoli but that claim was dismissed when he surfaced in the capital 
and met journalists.

Rebel chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil called for no let-up in international action 
against the embattled strongman.

"Gaddafi's defiance of the coalition forces still poses a danger, not only for 
Libya but for the world. That is why we are calling for the coalition to 
continue its support," Abdel Jalil said at a meeting in Doha of chiefs of staff 
of countries taking part in military action in Libya.

The international coalition launched Operation Unified Protector on March 19 
under a UN mandate which authorised airstrikes to protect civilians.

Since March 31, the airstrikes have been carried out under NATO command.

The coalition military chiefs said in a joint statement that the war in Libya 
"is yet to end" and that "there is a need to continue the joint action until 
the Libyan people achieve their goal by eliminating the remnants of Gaddafi."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is to visit Paris on Thursday for an 
international Contact Group meeting on Libya in a bid to boost financial and 
economic support for the rebels, the State Department said.

"Libya's transition to democracy is and should be Libyan-led, with close 
coordination and support between the (NTC) and its international partners," 
said spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.

"The United States stands with the Libyan people as they continue their journey 
toward genuine democracy," she added.

There had been speculation that Gaddafi was holed up among tribal supporters in 
his hometown Sirte, 360 kms east of Tripoli.

Rebels moved to within 30 kms of Sirte from the west and captured Bin Jawad 100 
kms to the east, the rebel commander in Misrata, Mohammed al-Fortiya, told AFP 
on Sunday.

"We are negotiating with the tribes for Sirte's peaceful surrender," Fortiya 
said, adding only tribal leaders were involved, and that to his knowledge no 
direct contact had been made with Gaddafi.

General Suleyman Mahmud, deputy commander in chief of the rebel forces, 
confirmed on Monday that talks were being held for a peaceful solution.

"There are still negotiations with elders and representatives of the city of 
Sirte. We are trying not to engage anyone in fighting except with those who are 
with the tyrant Gaddafi. But the outcome of the negotiations is still not 
clear," he told reporters in Tripoli.

The rebels have offered a $US1.7 million ($1.61 million) reward for Gaddafi's 
capture, dead or alive.

Fierce fighting also raged in the west as rebels trying to wrest control of the 
region from Gaddafi's forces said they were ambushed southwest of Zuwarah.

Some 70 per cent of homes in central Tripoli still have no running water 
because of damage to the mains supply, but portable water is being distributed 
from mosques, giving priority to the elderly and medical facilities, NTC 
officials said.

Faysal Gargab, a member of the capital's stabilisation team, said engineers who 
travelled to a "remote area" to connect wells back to the water grid were 
prevented from doing so by Gaddafi's forces.

"The security of the area deteriorated ... The engineers had to flee because 
Gaddafi forces were disturbing the (sites)," he said.

Rubbish trucks returned to work in the capital on Monday for the first time 
since it fell to the rebels.

Advocacy group Human Rights Watch (HRW) said evidence indicated that retreating 
Gaddafi forces had massacred dozens of detainees, after AFP counted at least 50 
human skulls in a makeshift jail.

HRW said it had inspected about 45 skeletons and two other bodies at the 
detention centre in Tripoli's Salaheddin neighbourhood.

"Sadly this is not the first gruesome report of what appears to be the summary 
execution of detainees in the final days of the Gaddafi government's control of 
Tripoli," HRW's Middle East and North Africa director, Sarah Leah Whitson, said.

AFP


Read more: 
http://www.theage.com.au/world/gaddafi-wife-children-flee-to-algeria-20110830-1jiuh.html#ixzz1WW6V9Ni0


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