Libyans took photographs of the body of Muatassim el-Qaddafi
in Misurata on Thursday
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A small group of fighters from Misurata, the vanguard of the
force attacking Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s former hometown and final hide-out,
Surt, said they had stumbled upon him hiding in a drainage pipe. He was
bleeding from his head and chest, but he was well enough to speak, w
ith his
trademark indignation.
“When he saw us, he said, ‘What’s happening?’ Those were the
words that he spoke,” said Omran Shaaban, a 21-year-old Misurata fighter who
said he and a friend were the first men in their unit to find the colonel.
On Thursday night, Mr. Shaaban, a student wearing a brown
leather jacket, and his colleagues celebrated their victory in the local
council meeting room here, hugging one another and passing around the colonel’s
prized last possessions. It was a windfall of spoils for the young men, who
have lived only half as long as Colonel Qaddafi ruled Libya, and for Misurata,
the Mediterranean port city that is their hometown.
Misurata suffered grievously under a long siege by Colonel
Qaddafi’s troops in the spring. It responded with rage, sending out its battle-hardened
fighters, first to capture Tripoli and, on Thursday, Surt. As the bodies of the
colonel and his son Muatassim were displayed for onlookers here in private
homes on Thursday night, it struck many Misuratans as a fitting end, providing
a measure of comfort to a brutalized city — and a bargaining chip for its place
in a post-Qaddafi Libyan government.
“Misurata will sleep very happily tonight,” said Dr.
Suleiman Fortia, a member of the Transitional National Council from the city.
At the house where Muatassim Qaddafi’s body was being
displayed, a man who had come to see put it more simply. “Thank God that we
caught him,” he said.
It remained to be seen whether Misurata’s achievement would
soothe resentments against the city that are lingering from the war. Its
fighters threw their weight around in Tripoli and were enthusiastic looters of
vanquished loyalist cities. Traveling to Misurata in recent weeks practically
required a visa. Their neighbors in the city of Tawerga, accused of fighting in
support of Colonel Qaddafi, fled their city in August having been told by the
Misuratans that they should not return.
The early battles of the uprising forged a formidable
fighting force. Misurata’s rebels became known for their relative skill in
urban combat and their convoys of black pickup trucks with heavy weapons
mounted in the back. When Tripoli fell, it was the Misurata fighters who led
the storming of Bab al-Aziziya, the colonel’s fortified compound and a symbol
of the regime’s power.
Fighters in Misurata surrounded the body of Col. Muammar
el-Qaddafi, flashing the victory
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Dr. Fortia tried on Thursday to be conciliatory. “It was
teamwork,” he said. “But we deserve the cup.”
The Misurata fighters who caught Colonel Qaddafi set out at
about 10 a.m. on Thursday to support the final assault on Surt, according to
Munir Senussi, 21, one of the fighters. “We used the coast road,” he said. “We
were told it was empty.” But instead, they found the remains of a convoy that
had been hit by a NATO airstrike. “We started to hit them with heavy weapons,”
he said. “We had no idea Qaddafi was there.”
Mr. Shaaban, the soldier who said he had found the colonel,
said that he and the other fighters jumped on him, but he insisted that Colonel
Qaddafi’s mortal wounds were already visible. The bodies of other men were near
the drainage pipe, he said, but none of them were the colonel’s sons.
Colonel Qaddafi was carrying what Mr. Shaaban described as a
sack of magic charms. He had a silver pistol in his hand, and in a bag, the
fighters found the golden gun.
On Thursday night, Mr. Shaaban looked around at his friends,
young men caked in dirt or blood but smiling, congratulating one another on a
job well done. “Bring the gun!” Mr. Shaaban said.
Amid the other souvenirs of war, the big prize was Colonel
Qaddafi’s body, shuttled around Misurata on Thursday, moved at least once when
the crowds gathering to see it grew too large. By the late evening, the body
had come to rest in the reception room of a pink villa. Scuffles broke out at
the door as local military leaders came to take a look and snap pictures.
He had what appeared to be a small wound just below his
chest and what looked like a gunshot wound to his left temple. His face was
clean, but his arms were caked with blood. Several visitors tugged at his
signature locks.
The exact circumstances of Colonel Qaddafi’s death were not
known. But the fighters toyed with his body, banging the head up and down,
flashing the victory sign. “This was the opportunity of my life,” said the
owner of one house to which the bodies were taken, who refused to give his
name. “If I die tomorrow, I’m happy.”
Ali Tarhouni, the interim government’s finance and oil
minister, came to Misurata to confirm the colonel’s death on behalf of the
cabinet. Mr. Tarhouni had met Colonel Qaddafi when he was a student. “He didn’t
look very powerful,” he said, after seeing the body.
“I was looking at the corpse,” Mr. Tarhouni said, “and
thinking of all the comrades and friends who spent decades fighting him, that
didn’t live to see this day.”
http://www.nytimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com
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