Monday 24 October 2011
Libya, Syria, Yemen and the Middle East - live
Libyan people look at helicopters flying above them during celebrations for the liberation of Libya in Benghazi yesterday. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters
Live coverage as Libya comes to terms with liberation and death of Muammar Gaddafi
Sunday 23 October 2011
Tunisian elections: polling day as it happened
Voters, one draped in the national flag, queue up outside a polling station in Tunisia Photograph: EPA
• Polls close in Tunisia's first free election
• Turn-out "over 80%" in some areas
• Islamists expected to win most votes
• Read the latest summary here
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Friday 21 October 2011
Libya after Gaddafi - Friday 21 October
A Libyan girl carries a TV with a drawing of Muammar Gaddafi as Libyans gather for prayer at Martyrs Square, Tripoli. Photograph: Francois Mori/AP
Gaddafi's burial been delayed as Mustafa Abdul Jalil prepares to announce the liberation of the country in Benghazi
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Thursday 20 October 2011
Gaddafi killed as Sirte falls – blog
An NTC fighter looks through a large concrete pipe where ousted Gaddafi was allegedly captured. Photograph: Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images•
Libyan PM confirms death of former dictator
• Pictures and video show body in the streets
• Final pro-Gaddafi stronghold Sirte falls to NTC
• Read a summary of today's key events
• Read more: Gaddafi is dead, says Libyan PM
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allegedly captured. Photograph: Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images
12 noon ET / 5pm BST: This is Adam Gabbatt in New York, continuing the Guardian's live coverage of the aftermath of and reaction to Muammar Gaddafi's death. Here is a summary of events so far.
• Gaddafi, who ruled Libya from 1969 until August this year, was killed by forces loyal to the country's new government. The Libyan government has confirmed his death. Gaddafi 69, was reportedly found hiding in a drain outside Sirte, where he and and others had taken shelter after their convoy was hit by a Nato airstrike as it attempted to escape. A spokesman for the National Tranisitional Council – Libya's ruling body – said Gaddafi was alive when captured but died in an ambulance on the way to hospital.
• Confusion surrounds the fate of other members of Gaddafi's family and inner circle. An NTC representative said up to 17 senior members of the Gaddafi regime have been apprehended or killed. There have been reports that his sons Mutassim Gaddafi and Saif al-Islam have been killed but other reports say Mutassim has been captured alive and that al-Islam has fled.
• Gaddafi's spokesman Moussa Ibrahim and the late dictator's cousin and adviser Ahmed Ibrahim have been captured, according to NTC official Abdel Majid Mlegta. Abu Bakr Yunis, the former Libyan defence minister, was killed in the attack on the former dictator's compound, according to the NTC. Libya TV, a pro-NTC channel, said that Abd Allah al-Sanusi, a senior Libyan intelligence chief, and Mansour Daw, a Gaddafi aide, were also captured
• Graphic video and pictures of the dead dictator have been released. His body was apparently dragged through the streets of Sirte. An NTC spokesman said Gaddafi was shot in the head and in both legs. The footage appears to show Gaddafi's body being transported through Sirte. He has blood around his chest and face.
Graphic video footage shwoing a bloodied Gaddafi Follow the latest news and reaction here to the news of Gaddafi's death.
12.05pm ET / 5.05pm BST: Nato commanders are recommending the Libya air campaign should now be brought to an end, according to the Guardian diplomatic editor Julian Borger. The formal decision will be taken tomorrow by the North Atlantic Council, representing Nato member states. Julian just received this comment from a Nato official.
A military assessment of the current situation in Libya and a recommendation for the wrapping up of the Nato operation is on its way to Nato HQ. This will most likely prompt a special meeting of the North Atlantic Council tomorrow to consider the recommendation and decide on the future of the current mission.
12.17pm ET / 5.17pm BST : Julian Borger writes: Guma al-Gamaty, an NTC spokesman here in London, has just confirmed to me that 17 top Gaddafi aides have been arrested at the time of their leader's death and their names will be made public this evening.
12.22pm ET / 5.22pm BST: Associated Press reports that bodies of "suspected Gaddafi loyalists" could be seen lying outside storm drains where Gaddafi was reportedly found hiding in Sirte. "The concrete walls of the drains are spray-painted with graffiti and the earth around them is dry," AP's reporter writes.
12.23pm ET: / 5.23pm BST My colleague Haroon Siddique has recorded an interview with Andrei Netto, special correspondent for Brazilian paper O Estado de S. Paulo, who has been amongst the celebrations in Tripoli.
He said:
They are firing guns all the time, since the end of the morning ...Last time they had some good news here in Tripoli they celebrated with guns and 21 people were killed during the celebrations so it's dangerous and the authorities are asking people not to use guns in the celebration that are coming ...but they celebrate with shooting, so I don't think things will change now.
Some Libyans, I would not say it's a majority, but I have been speaking to some Libyans, who are concerned that maybe Gaddafi could be viewed as a great leader and as a revolutionary, a military guy, who resisted to the end ...Even if the majority of people are celebrating we know there are some people who were loyalists to the end.
There are people with NTC flags and they are celebrating and shooting all the time. There is a huge celebration being prepared for Martyrs' Square, the old Green Square ...
The NTC members are concerned about the situation [with respect to other members of Gaddafi's inner circle], specially regarding Saif [al-Islam] and the others who maybe in the desert. The people in the streets are not concerned about Saif at all. I would say in the Libyan imagination, the public opinion, that's the end, the revolution is accomplished.
12.43pm ET / 5.43pm BST: Much of the debate is now focusing on how Gaddafi died. The NTC says he died in an ambulance, but there is perhaps inevitable speculation that he was executed. This video published to YouTube apparently shows Gaddafi alive after his capture. As with much of the imagery around today, it contains graphic footage.
YouTube footage apparently showing Gadddafi alive after his capture Gaddafi – if the video is genuine – is shown propped up on the bonnet of a car or truck. He is then walked forward by men carrying guns. There appears to be blood on his shirt.
12.44pm ET / 5.44pm BST: Our Washington bureau chief Ewen Macaskill says Barack Obama will give a statement on Gaddafi's death from the Rose Garden at 2pm ET. We'll cover it live here.
12.55pm ET / 5.55pm BST: Here is video footage of the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, learning of the Gaddafi news on her Blackberry
Hillary Clinton reacts to the Gaddafi news "Wow," she said, as she prepared for a TV interview.
1.02pm ET / 6.02pm BST: More on the manner in which Gaddafi died. The national transitional council says the former leader died on the way to hospital in Sirte; AP reports that a doctor who was part of the medical team accompanying Gaddafi to hospital has said he died from two bullet wounds to the head and chest.
The body of Muammar Gaddafi is brought by ambulance to the hospital in Misrata, Libya. Photograph: Guillem Valle/EPA
AP is expected to file more on this soon.
1.16pm ET / 6.16pm BST: Associated Press has published a new story that includes a quote from the doctor in the ambulance that was carrying Gaddafi. The report says:
Abdel-Jalil Abdel-Aziz, a doctor who was part of the medical team that accompanied the body in the ambulance and examined it, said Gadhafi died from two bullet wounds, to the head and chest. "You can't imagine my happiness today. I can't describe my happiness," he told The Associated Press. "The tyranny is gone. Now the Libyan people can rest."
The AP story also has more detail about Gaddafi's final moments.
Footage aired on Al-Jazeera television showed Gadhafi was captured wounded but alive in Sirte. The goateed, balding Gadhafi, in a bloodsoaked shirt and his face bloodied, is seen standing upright being pushed along by fighters, and he appears to struggle against them, stumbling and shouting. The fighters push him onto the hood of a pickup truck, before dragging him away, apparently toward an ambulance.
Later footage showed fighters rolling Gadhafi's body over on the pavement, stripped to the waist and his head bloody.
There were conflicting reports over the circumstance of Gadhafi's last hours. But most accounts agreed Gadhafi had been barricaded in with his heavily armed loyalists in the last few buildings they held in his Mediterranean coastal hometown of Sirte, furiously battling with revolutionary fighters closing in on them Thursday. At one point, a convoy tried to flee the area and was blasted by NATO airstrikes, but [prime minister Mahmoud] Jibril specified Gadhafi was not killed by the strike.
1.21pm ET / 6.21 BST: The Guardian's Tunisia Tumblr shows how much Gaddafi's death meant to people in the country that kickstarted the Arab Spring.
The death will "bolster the Libyan revolution, will bolster all the Arabic revolution", one Tunisian man says. "Gaddafi represented a dictator who resisted the revolution. I think that either Libyans or Tunisians will be happy with the news."
1.22pm ET / 6.22pm BST: Reports are suggesting Saif al-Islam, Muammar Gaddafi's son, has either been killed or injured. Associated Press cited a Libyan minister as saying Saif was wounded and in hospital.
However an al-Arabiya English correspondent claims to have "confirmed" that Saif has been killed. The Guardian has not been able to verify this.
Libyan soldiers celebrate the death of Muammar Gaddafi. Photograph: Guillem Valle/EPA
1.32pm ET / 6.32pm BST: US vice president Joe Biden has said Nato "got it right" in Libya. In the first official comment from the US government, Biden would not confirm Gaddafi had been killed, but said his outing was good for Libya. From the LA Times:
"Whether he's alive or dead, he's gone. The people of Libya have gotten rid of a dictator," Biden said at an event in New Hampshire, seeming to want to avoid a definitive statement on Kadafi. [...]
Biden also seemed to compare the regime change unfolding in Libya with the Bush administration's approach to Iraq.
"NATO got it right," he said. "In this case, America spent $2 billion and didn't lose a single life. This is more the prescription for how to deal with the world as we go forward than it has in the past."
Obama is due to give an address from the White House at 2pm ET.
1.35pm ET / 6.35pm BST After Gaddafi's death comes the race to claim credit. France's defence chief has said it was a French fighter jet that fired on the convoy carrying Gaddafi, according to AP.
1.55pm ET / 6.55pm BST: Obama is due to give his statement shortly. You can watch it live at the top of the blog by refreshing this page, or on the White House website.
2.05pm ET / 7.05pm BST: He's out.
"Today we can definitively say that the Gaddafi regime has come to an end," Obama says.
"One of the world's longest serving dictators is no more."
2.08pm / 7.08pm BST: Obama says the world "refused to stand idly by" when the Libyan people called for help.
"The Libyan people now have a great responsibility to build an inclusive, tolerant and democratic Libya."
He calls on Libyans to respect the human rights of all, "including those who have been detained".
Obama promises the United States will be a partner with Libya in the future.
2.10pm ET / 7.10pm BST: Obama says in the US "we are reminded of all those Americans lost due to Gaddafi's terror". Among those Americans lost due to Libya are the victims of the Lockerbie bombing, widely seen as having been authorised by Gaddafi.
2.14pm ET / 7.14pm BST: Obama says there have been many achievements in the world over the last few months.
"We've taken out Arab leaders," he says – slipping in a reference to his administration's success in killing Osama bin-Laden and Anwar al-Awlaki, "and are winding down the war in Iraq".
He concludes, however, by saying that today is for the Libyan people, before heading back into the White House.
2.25pm ET/ 7.25pm BST: Here's a brief summary of Obama's statement:
• Obama said today "we can definitively say that the Gaddafi regime has come to an end". He praised the operation in Libya, which he stressed was conducted after the Libyan people asked for help.
• "The dark shadow of tyranny has been lifted", Obama said. Now the country's people have "a great responsibility to build an inclusive, tolerant and democratic Libya".
• The president said the death of Gaddafi comes at a time when "we are seeing the strength of American leadership across the world". Obama cited examples including the "taking out of al-Qaida leaders", "winding down the war in Iraq" and "transition in Afghanistan".
2.31pm ET / 7.31pm BST: Our correspondent Angelique Chrisafis has been speaking to Libyans in neighbouring Tunisia. She writes:
At the Libyan consulate in Tunis, protected by barbed wire and soldiers, hundreds of Libyans gathered cheering Gaddafi's death. Many had been injured in the fighting of recent months and had come to Tunis for hospital treatment. Amid the sea of Libyan flags, people waved their crutches, held up bandaged hands and showed arms in plaster-casts. "He's gone! He's gone!" they chanted.
One student who had lost his leg in the fighting in Syrte as an amateur in the rebel army had been hoisted to the top of a railing as people cheered him.
Outside the Libyan consulate. Photograph: Angelique Chrisafis for the Guardian
Omar Abodheer, 21, was in Tunis to treat a bullet wound to his arm. A student and son of a lorry driver he had taken up an AK47 and joined the rebels at the start of the uprising in February. He had seen one of his friends killed beside him and started crying remembering it. "I was scared at the start but once I saw my friend was dead I wasn't afraid any more. I didn't even know how to handle a gun. I never thought it was possible for Gaddafi to be caught. But now things are going to change. We're free. I'd like Tripoli to become like London."
Bashir Ziggi. Photograph: Angelique Chrisafis for the Guardian
Bashir Ziggi, 54, a cafe owner from Tripoli who had relatives who had been tortured by Gaddafi's forces, said he would have preferred for Gaddafi to be caught alive, "He died too easily. I was hoping he could have been dragged into the square so every one of us could punish him, so he could be hanged. So he could suffer like he made others suffer." He said the post-Gaddafi future wasn't without obstacles: "There will be a little chaos like there is with all change. It's going to be tough. But we can do it. We're free."
3.01pm ET / 8.01pm BST Libya's information minister is now saying that Gaddafi's son Mutassim has been killed in Sirte. On Twitter, user @4Adam has posted two pictures apparently showing the dead Mutassim. Be warned: the pictures are pretty graphic.
3.05pm ET / 8.05pm BST: Nato's secretary general Anders Fogh has issued a statement following Gaddafi's death. He touches on the issue of reprisals – urging Libyans to respect all civilians' rights, as Barack Obama did earlier. He said:
After 42 years, Colonel Qadhafi's rule of fear has finally come to an end. Libya can draw a line under a long dark chapter in its history and turn over a new page. Now the people of Libya can truly decide their own future.
I call on all Libyans to put aside their differences and work together to build a brighter future. I urge the National Transitional Council to prevent any reprisals against civilians and to show restraint in dealing with defeated pro-Qadhafi forces.
Nato and our partners have successfully implemented the historic mandate of the United Nations to protect the people of Libya. We will terminate our mission in coordination with the United Nations and the National Transitional Council. With the reported fall of Bani Walid and Sirte, that moment has now moved much closer.
3.15pm ET / 8.15pm BST: Fox News says the Pentagon has told it that a US predator drone also engaged Gaddafi's convoy alongside the French jets.
Libyans celebrate the death of Gaddafi in Martyrs square, Tripoli. Photograph: Ismail Zitouni/Reuters
3.26pm ET / 8.26pm BST: Andrei Netto of O Estado de S. Paulo is in Tripoli, where the streets are "full of people". He's been speaking to people in the Libyan capital for the Guardian, where crowds are gathering in Martyrs Square to celebrate Gaddafi's demise.
Mohamed Egwatn, 29, geologist
Today is a historical day for me. Personally I didn't expect the end of Gaddafi would be like this. I thought he would escape and that nobody will know his destiny. I was waiting for this moment. The loyalists arrested me in Tripoli last March. I'm from Benghazi, but I work in Tripoli. So I decided to demonstrate against him here and I was arrested. That's why it's a special day for me.
I'd prefer Gaddafi in jail. It'd be better than killed. But it happened. And I can't hide I'm happy. He doesn't know what is to be held and stay in a prison. He doesn't know how we feel. I'd love to see Gaddafi suffering as we suffered.
Today is the end of the war. The Libyan future will be the democracy. We have no choice. We will need to learn the democratic lesson. It'll be the first time that people will decide the future of the country after 42 years. That's not easy. But at least we will have the opportunity to try to build a different future.
Mohamed Salah, 22, a student who joined the fighting
It's not over. It's the start of something different. It's amazing the way he was killed.
I'm not happy he died. We should catch him alive. People should see his humiliation. He should stand in a court, trial. But the fact is he'll not stand in front of thousands of people, being humiliating in a trial broadcast by TV.
Where's his family, where's his supporters? People who were with him had no choice but to be with him. Maybe Gaddafi will be considered as a martyr for a small part of the Libyan people, but it'll be for a small number, a very small number.
3.56pm ET / 8.56pm BST: Reuters has filed this report from the scene outside Sirte. It describes the wreckage of the convoy carrying Gaddafi, and tells how the dictator escaped the Nato strike only to be killed later.
Shortly before dawn prayers on Thursday, Gaddafi surrounded by a few dozen loyal bodyguards and accompanied by the head of his now non-existent army Abu Bakr Younis Jabr broke out of the two-month siege of Sirte and made a break for the west.
But they did not get far.
Natio said its aircraft struck military vehicles belonging to pro-Gaddafi forces near Sirte at about 8.30am on Thursday, but the alliance said it was unsure whether the strikes had killed Gaddafi.
Fifteen pick-up trucks mounted with heavy machine guns lay burnt out, smashed and smouldering next to an electricity sub station some 20 metres from the main road, about two miles west of Sirte.
They had clearly been hit by a force far beyond anything the motley army the former rebels have assembled during eight months of revolt to overthrow the once feared leader.
But there was no bomb crater, indicating the strike may have been carried out by a helicopter gunship, or had been strafed by a fighter jet.
Inside the trucks still in their seats sat the charred skeletal remains of drivers and passengers killed instantly by the strike. Other bodies lay mutilated and contorted strewn in the grass. Some 50 bodies in all.
Gaddafi himself and a handful of his men escaped death and appeared to have ran through a stand of trees towards the main road and hid in the two drainage pipes.
But a group of government fighters were on their tail.
"At first we fired at them with anti-aircraft guns, but it was no use," said Salem Bakeer, while being feted by his comrades near the road. "Then we went in on foot. One of Gaddafi's men came out waving his rifle in the air and shouting surrender, but as soon as he saw my face he started shooting at me," he told Reuters.
"Then I think Gaddafi must have told them to stop. 'My master is here, my master is here', he said, 'Muammar Gaddafi is here and he is wounded'," said Bakeer.
"We went in and brought Gaddafi out. He was saying 'what's wrong? What's wrong? What's going on?'. Then we took him and put him in the car," Bakeer said. At the time of capture, Gaddafi was already wounded with gunshots to his leg and to his back, Bakeer said.
Other government fighters who said they took part in Gaddafi's capture, separately confirmed Bakeer's version of events, though one said the man who ruled Libya for 42 years was shot and wounded at the last minute by one of his own men. "One of Muammar Gaddafi's guards shot him in the chest," said Omran Jouma Shawan. Army chief Jabr was also captured alive, Bakeer said.
4.26pm ET/ 9.26pm BST: Here's more reaction from the streets of Tripoli, filed by Andrei Netto for the Guardian:
Mohamed Shawsh, 26, accountant
On February 20, all the people came to this square, the Green Square, to demonstrate against the Gaddafi's regime. And Gaddafi used all his power and his gun machines against the people, who have no guns, no nothing. The militaries were everywhere.
Today is the end of the years of the regime. It's a new phase when you start living in freedom. I feel this freedom since the 20th of August, when Tripoli was liberated from Gaddafi's regime. But today I'm still in shock. I still can't believe that he's really gone.
I do feel free. We have never had this feeling before. That's freedom. You don't feel the freedom until the day you can say what you thing and not be afraid of the consequences.
Most of the people hate Gaddafi. They didn't want the Gaddafi's regime. But we could not express this sentiment in public and say "Gaddafi made something wrong". You cannot even point you finger and say something is wrong in the country, you cannot say it's not correct to have his photos everywhere in the town.
I hope today it's all finished. But this is just the end of the phase one. Our goal is not to kill Muammar Gaddafi. Our goal is to build a free country. Hopefully we are all united today. We have the same blood, the same languages and the same country to build in the future.
Hussan Imbess, 28, hemical engineer
It's a special day. I'm 28 years old and I feel like I was in a prison and I just come out. Mort of the Libyans hate Gaddafi because he controlled the country during 42 years with just one word, one though, one vision of the country.
I don't care the way he died. I expected that he'll escape and he'll be free for months or years, cause if you remember the history will see that Saddam was captured after months of the liberation of Iraq. It was the same with Karadzic in Bosnia.
We didn't expect they could kill him so fast. He is not a martyr, because he was not fighting. He was hiding actually. And even the fact that he was in his hometown fighting doesn't make him a hero or a martyr. He was not fighting, he was in a
hole. He could be a hero for some Libyans, but he's certainly not mine.
National Transitional Council fighters hold what they claim to be Gaddafi's gold-plated gun. Photograph: Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images
4.40pm ET / 9.40pm BST: Holly Pickett, a freelance photojournalist, tweeted that she "saw the body of Muammar Gaddafi". She followed the ambulance carrying the former dictator – which had "ten revolutionaries" inside.
"From the side door, I could see a bare chest with bullet wound and a bloody hand. He was wearing gold-colored pants," Pickett wrote. "There is no question it was Gaddafi," she added.
Here's a Storify of Pickett's tweets in the aftermath of Gaddafi's capture.
'I saw Gaddafi's body'Storified by Adam Gabbatt, October 21, 2011 at 7:42
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Reply Retweet I saw the body of Col. Muammar #Gaddafi. So weird. #Sirte #Libya.
hollypickett
October 21, 2011 at 4:31 Reply Retweet We were in a residential area behind the field hospital. Suddenly an ambulance races by with the body of #Gaddafi. We chased. #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:37 Reply Retweet The ambulance with #Gaddafi's body stopped very briefly at the field hospital, then hit the highway for Misrata. #sirte #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:43 Reply Retweet 10 Revolutionaries were packed inside. The doors were open, but it was difficult to see #Gaddafi. We drove close to the open door. #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:45 Reply Retweet From the side door, I could see a bare chest with bullet wound and a bloody hand. He was wearing gold-colored pants. #Gaddafi #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:46 Reply Retweet There is no question it was #Gaddafi. Every time the ambulance stopped, it was mobbed by rebels. Everyone was going nuts. #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:50 Reply Retweet One of the medics in our ambulance re-injured a wound from a mortar attack a couple weeks ago. He required immediate assistance. #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 4:55 Reply Retweet At every checkpoint between #Sirte and #Misrata, crowds had gathered and wanted to know if we were the ambulance with #Gaddafi's body in it.
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 5:01 Reply Retweet We didn't know they had #Gaddafi when we went behind the field hospital. We heard something about his son Muatassim. #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 5:06 Reply Retweet Crowds lined the streets in #Misrata. A boy shouted in my window with a huge smile, "Where is Shafshufa (Frizzy Hair)?" #Libya #Gaddafi
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 5:09 Reply Retweet All I could think when I found out they had #Gaddafi was, "I am the only journalist who knows what happened. I have to get a photo." #Libya
hollypickett via #!
October 21, 2011 at 6:12 Storify of Holly Pickett's tweets from Sirte You can follow her on Twitter @hollypickett.
4.52pm ET /9.52pm BST Our political blogger Richard Adams notes that the Department of Defense's statement that a Predator drone fired a Hellfire missile at the Gaddafi convoy leaving Sirte is interesting because Republicans have been trying to avoid giving any credit to the White House.
This was Senator Marco Rubio on Fox earlier: "It's the French and British that led on this fight, and probably even led on the strike that led to Gadaffi's capture or, you know, to his death."
Richard notes that the US paid for 80% of Nato's operating costs during the Libya action, costing it more than $1bn.
5.15pm ET / 10.15pm BST We are bringing this blog to a close now. Here is a final summary.
Muammar Gaddafi has been killed in Libya, following a Nato airstrike. Gaddafi was in a convoy fleeing his home town of Sirte when it was hit. Many were killed, but Gaddafi and some of his supporters are believed to have escaped, taking cover in a nearby drain before Gaddafi was found by government fighters. Reports suggest he was shot during his capture. He was taken to hospital but died in the ambulance.
Libyans have gathered in Martyrs Square, Tripoli, to celebrate Gaddafi's demise. The capital's streets were "full of people", correspondent Andrei Netto reported, with residents flying the flags of free Libya. "Today is the end of the war. The Libyan future will be the democracy," said one, Mohamed Egwatn. However some spoke of their dismay that Gaddafi had not been taken alive. "People should see his humiliation. He should stand in a court, trial," said Mohamed Saleh.
At the White House, Barack Obama said now "we can definitively say that the Gaddafi regime has come to an end". He said the "dark shadow of tyranny has been lifted", and said Libyans "now have a great responsibility to build an inclusive, tolerant and democratic Libya." Obama called on Libyans to respect the human rights of all, "including those who have been detained".
France's defence chief has said it was a French fighter jet that fired on the convoy carrying Gaddafi. The US Department of Defense has also claimed it had a hand in the attack, saying a Predator drone fired a Hellfire missile at the convoy.
Our foreign affairs commentator Simon Tisdall discusses Gaddafi's life in this video
Simon Tisdall discusses the life of Muammar Gaddafi Simon has also written this excellent piece of analysis of where Gaddafi's death leaves Libya.
Thanks very much for reading this blog and for all your comments.
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