软陶公仔制作教程:Who is possible to take Libyan official power...

来源:百度文库 编辑:九乡新闻网 时间:2024/04/27 15:59:48

Who is possible to take Libyan official power?

It's not clear that whether Gaddafi has left Tripoli ,  while the White House has not yet extended the diplomatic recognition to the rebel government -- who is the most possible to take the Libyan administration?


Gaddafi not in Tripoli any more?

1.jpg (17.52 KB)
2011-5-15 09:53


The Libyan leader has probably fled the city of Tripoli and was "most likely" wounded in NATO air strikes, an Italian minister said.


Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has probably fled the capital city of Tripoli and was "most likely" wounded in NATO air strikes, Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini has said.


Frattini said he believed the leader could have fled Tripoli to "seek refuge in a safe place", the Daily Express reported.


He said he believed claims by Tripoli's Catholic bishop, Giovanni Innocenzo Martinelli - who was in contact with the leader's group - that Gaddafi was "most probably outside Tripoli and probably even wounded".


Martinelli's office believed that Gaddafi had left for the Tunisian capital, but Frattini said he did not think that he had left the country.


" Libya is a big country, with desert areas," he said.


However, Gaddafi's spokesman dismissed the claims as "nonsense".


Mussa Ibrahim said: "The leader is in good spirits and unharmed."


Libya buries imams it says NATO killed in air strike


2.jpg (13.26 KB)
2011-5-15 09:53


Reuters – Muammar Gaddafi gestures as he speaks to officials at a Tripoli hotel in this still image from a video.

Tears, chants and volleys of gunfire fired into the air punctuated the funeral for nine imams Libya said NATO killed in an air strike, but the alliance said the building it struck was a command-and-control center.



NATO is bombing Libya as part of a U.N. mandate to protect civilians. Some NATO members say they will continue until Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who taunted the alliance as cowards whose bombs could not kill him, is forced out.




The nine imams were among 11 people killed in a strike on a guest house in the eastern city of Brega on Friday, the government said. The other two were buried elsewhere.




"May God defeat their (NATO) forces on land, sea and air," shouted a crowd of about 500 at the funeral held at a cemetery near Tripoli's port.




Mourners hoisted the plain wooden coffins above their heads to carry them into the cemetery and they were open to show what looked like bodies wrapped in green shrouds and garlanded with flowers, a Reuters witness said.




"It (NATO's campaign) is one insult after another to the living and the dead," said onlooker Abdulrahman.




In a statement, NATO defended its action: "We are aware of allegations of civilian casualties in connection to this strike and although we cannot independently confirm the validity of the claim, we regret any loss of life by innocent civilians when they occur."




Libyan state television broadcast audio remarks by Gaddafi on Friday apparently aimed at quashing speculation about his health sparked by Italy's foreign minister who said he had likely been wounded in a NATO strike and left Tripoli.



Rebels still calling for more aids, not yet admitted by White House

Rebel leader Mahmud Jibril is set to hold his first talks at the White House on Friday with National Security Advisor Tom Donilon, senior administration figures and key members of Congress. Jibril is expected to ask for the Obama administration to extend diplomatic recognition to the rebel government, which will likely be denied. White House spokesman Jay Carney said that recognizing the NTC was premature but that the body serves as a “credible and legitimate interlocutor for the Libyan people, for the opposition."


(AFP/WSJ/Reuters/IANS)