Libyan pro-government forces Wednesday seized control of Bani Walid, one of the last bastions of Moammar Gadhafi's ousted regime, an AFP correspondent in the town said.
Libyan pro-government forces Wednesday seized control of Bani Walid, one
of the last bastions of Moammar Gadhafi's ousted regime, an AFP correspondent
in the town said.
Hundreds of fighters, mostly former rebels from the rival town of
Misrata
,
converged on the center of Bani Walid, firing in the air to celebrate and
hoisting the Libyan flag on abandoned public buildings, he said.
Some of the fighters blasted the walls and windows with anti-tank rockets and
Kalashnikov rifles.
Several rebel chiefs, whose fighters patrolled in vehicles mounted with heavy
weapons, told AFP the town was "almost liberated," with only a few
pockets of resistance left in its southern sector.
The town itself was deserted, with residents and foreign workers having fled
since Sunday.
Fierce clashes in Bani Walid, which was accused of harboring die-hard Gadhafi
loyalists, cast a pall over celebrations for the first anniversary this week of
the overthrow of his regime in a bloody conflict.
The fighting fanned old tribal feuds and underscored the difficulties of
achieving national reconciliation.
A scaled-up offensive against Bani Walid since last week came in response to
the death of Omran Shaaban, a former rebel from the city of
Misrata
who
was credited with capturing Gadhafi.
Shaaban spent weeks held hostage in Bani Walid, where he was shot and allegedly
tortured, before the authorities managed to broker his release.
He later died of injuries sustained during the ordeal, stoking tensions between
his hometown Misrata and Bani Walid, long-time rivals which fought on opposite
sides of the 2011 conflict, and galvanizing the authorities to act.
The victorious fighters Wednesday carried a massive portrait of Shaaban.
Clashes between pro-government forces and Bani Walid fighters over the past
week killed dozens of people and wounded hundreds, in scenes evocative of the
civil war that led to Gadhafi's overthrow and death.
Tribal leaders and commanders in Bani Walid, 185 kilometers southeast of
Tripoli
, had
accused "lawless Misrata militias" of seeking to annihilate their
historic rival.
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