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Omar Fathi Bin Shatwan, Libya's Former Energy Minister, Flees To Malta

Omar Fathi Bin Shatwan

By DAVID STRINGER   04/ 6/11 03:43 PM ET   AP

LONDON -- Libya's former-energy minister said Wednesday that several members of Moammar Gadhafi's inner circle want to defect, but many are too scared to abandon the dictator fearing the safety of themselves and their families.

Omar Fathi bin Shatwan, who also served as industry minister, told the Associated Press that he had fled by fishing boat to Malta on Friday from the western Libyan city of Misrata.

Shatwan, who left the government in 2007, said he still had contact with some government figures and explained that many feared for their safety. In some cases, their families are under siege, he said.

"Those whose families are outside Libya will flee if they get a chance," Shatwan said. "But many can't leave, and all the families of ministers are under siege."

Shatwan said he had last had contact with Gadhafi in 2006, and had not spoken with the tyrant's sons since leaving office. "Ministers who are friends of mine, I have spoken to them," he said.

The 59-year-old said he had spent 40 days at his home in Misrata before escaping from Libya, and witnessed Gadhafi's forces pounding the city with heavy artillery and relentlessly shooting civilians.

"There has been a big bombardment and there is total destruction," Shatwan said, speaking by telephone from Malta. "After this, they occupied some streets with tanks, and put snipers in the buildings."

He said Gadhafi's forces – which he said were mainly foreign mercenaries led by a small number of Libyans – had fired on civilians indiscriminately inside Misrata.

Shatwan described tanks rolling along the city's Tripoli Street – a major thoroughfare – and regime soldiers turning their weapons on anyone in the vicinity. "They have killed a lot of civilians, whether they are in cars, or are moving targets – they just shoot at them," he said.

He claimed that local people had been fired on as they attempted to rush to safety, and that regime soldiers had wildly discharged their weapons inside the city.

"I think the regime is just going mad," Shatwan said. "Col. Gadhafi has changed. No one would kill people in the streets in this way."

Shatwan said his own home was struck four times during shelling by Gadhafi's forces. He said he believed at least one attack had involved cluster munitions. "I counted the holes myself – there were 250 holes in the walls of my house. There were so many holes because of the types of weapons they're using," he said.

He estimated at least 1,500 people are dead or wounded in Misrata, but said it is almost impossible to know the precise death toll

"I think nobody knows the exact figure yet, but I can tell you that more than 1,500 people are injured or dead. There are a lot of people missing, some people have been kidnapped by the Gadhafi regime," Shatwan added.

Shatwan was first appointed to Gadhafi's government in 1987 as industry minister, and held several portfolios until he left the regime in 2007, including a spell as energy minister between 2004 and 2006.

He said he has since worked as an academic in Tripoli, and retained some links to Libya's ruling elite.

"At the beginning Gadhafi's regime was good – the first 10 years saw vast improvements, the middle 20 years less so, and the last 10 years have seen terrible decline," Shatwan said.

The ex-minister said his own departure from the government was likely linked to his criticism of declining investment in education and other sectors.

He said he believed the majority of Libyans believed Gadhafi's ouster was drawing close – and that the regime would need to leave the country, not simply quit office.

"There is no future for Gadhafi or his sons to stay in Libya, not just not to govern," he said. "Gadhafi cannot last in power."

He said that the international community should have acted to remove Gadhafi weeks ago, rather than hope that Libya's opposition would be able to topple the regime themselves.

Shatwan urged NATO to step up its military campaign. "The West should act quickly to finish the job, before there are a lot more people dead," he said. "The best solution in the first place would've been for the international community to arrest him, or to help the opposition to do that."

He said Libyans believed the tempo of air assaults against Gadhafi's troops has slowed since NATO took over charge of the international mission from the U.S. last week.

"Since NATO has been in charge, it has been a disaster," Shatwan said. With a more vigorous campaign of airstrikes, Libya's opposition "could finish him in less than 10 days," he claimed.

"Libya would be a decent, civilized state with very good relations with the people who helped us to topple him," Shatwan said.

He also insisted that he had seen no evidence of extremists taking a lead within the rebel forces.

The top NATO commander, U.S. Navy Adm. James Stavridis, said last week he had seen "flickers" of al-Qaida and Hezbollah among the rebels.

"It's completely wrong to say there are al-Qaida in the opposition, there is no al-Qaida in Libya," Shatwan said.

Britain's Middle East minister Alistair Burt also said Wednesday that the U.K. had no evidence that Libya's opposition has ties to violent extremists.

"We have no details of the involvement in the Libyan internal opposition movement of individuals with a background in violent political activities or international terrorism in Afghanistan or Iraq," Burt said, in a written answer to a Parliamentary question published Wednesday.

Shatwan confirmed he has held talks with European diplomats in Malta, to offer his account of Gadhafi's faltering regime.

The ex-energy chief also said he believed that Libya's opposition will be able to begin exploiting the country's lucrative oil fields. He said there had been only limited, and easily repairable damage, to oil installations and ports.

"It will be no problem to begin production, and to export oil again," Shatwan said.

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LONDON -- Libya's former-energy minister said Wednesday that several members of Moammar Gadhafi's inner circle want to defect, but many are too scared to abandon the dictator fearing the safety of the...
LONDON -- Libya's former-energy minister said Wednesday that several members of Moammar Gadhafi's inner circle want to defect, but many are too scared to abandon the dictator fearing the safety of the...
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George Hanshaw
There are none so blind as those who will not see.
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George Hanshaw
There are none so blind as those who will not see.
01:09 PM on 04/10/2011
Muammar Gaddafi's forces continued to fight their way toward Benghazi, the city at the heart of Libya's revolution, as five African leaders arrived in Tripoli in an attempt to broker a ceasefire and political settlement.

Rebel defences around Ajdabiya appeared to be failing as Gaddafi's soldiers broke into the heart of the strategic town, 90 miles from Benghazi, and engaged in running street battles after again outmanoeuvring the revolutionaries.

Although western powers continued their air strikes, the strikes did not appear to deter Gaddafi's forces.

Rebels said government forces shot down a Russian-made helicopter sent to the fight by revolutionaries only two days before. Nato forced a rebel MIG jet to land because of the UN-imposed no-fly zone.

Shelling around the southern entrance to Ajdabiya continued , with loud explosions heard and thick black smoke rising over parts of the town.

Much of Ajdabiya was deserted after civilians fled amid the prospect of Gaddafi's troops taking the town for the second time in as many weeks.

Thousands of discarded bullet casings littering some streets marked sites of intense shooting over the weekend.

"Gaddafi's military is in the town," said Saleh Mufta, a 25-year-old who was a science student before becoming an armed rebel.

"There's been a lot of shooting. Gaddafi has copied our techniques. He is not using so many tanks now after the air strikes. His men are in pickups. They move very fast. We don't know where they are. They just pop up.
12:12 AM on 04/10/2011
O.K. Let me get this straight, CHILDREN are dying in Misrata and adults are saying why doesn't the Arab States or some other country help them in their greatest need. Children are starving and why doesn't someone else feed them? That sure doesn't speak well of ANYONE who can watch this torture and not help. Shameful.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjwrites
04:48 AM on 04/08/2011
Gee, whoda thunk? Despots and tyrants being run out of town by the proletariat? That never happens, does it?

Oh wait. It's inevitable and history tells us so. If it ain't happened yet, it will.

Are you listening, "top" American "families"?
11:40 AM on 04/08/2011
The inevitability of revolution is, I think, a matter of faith. But I like the wicked grin I imagine on your face.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
02:39 AM on 04/08/2011
Foreign mercenary soldiers paid in gold ... shooting anyone who moves.
Gadhafi has committed 1,500 murders with more each day to keep himself in power.

This is the trouble with dictators who have NO conscience. They leave a path of destruction.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nelson rivera
All Together Now.
10:39 PM on 04/07/2011
It looks like the International Community is taking its time as Thousands of Civilians are killed and wounded. Libyan People are waiting for real help on the ground. Where is the Red Cross, Doctors, Nurses,Soldiers? I guess everyone is playing the waiting game.It appears the US is waiting for everyone else to make up their minds. I guess more Debates for the Coalition.One good thing has happened Oil Profits are Up.
09:49 AM on 04/08/2011
And where are the Arab states? Are they not taking their time while thousands of civilians are killed and wounded?

The west and especially the US is criticized for intervening in arab/muslim affairs and criticized for not intervening. They can't win. China and Russia 'appeal for restraint from all sides' which roughly translates to 'we don't want to take a side'. The arab states are silent, no surprise.

Why aren't you criticizing them for inaction?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nelson rivera
All Together Now.
11:48 PM on 04/08/2011
The Arab States and the Oil Companies are enjoying higher Oil Prices. Most Arab States want the Libyan's to fight it out. Most Arab States don't want any troops to help the Freedom Fighters. Some Arab states want the Freedom fighters to get wiped out. This Way the People in their Countries will not rise up and want change.In the End Oil Profits will be very good for 2011.
10:25 PM on 04/07/2011
"Libya's former-energy minister said Wednesday that several members of Moammar Gadhafi's inner circle want to defect, but many are too scared to abandon the dictator fearing the safety of themselves and their families."

NOW they're chicken sh*ts. But when they were raking in the billions, anything Gaddafi did was cool.
09:51 AM on 04/08/2011
I'm sure you'd take Gadhafi out yourself if you were there tough guy
10:26 PM on 04/08/2011
Yeah! I punch from the butt!
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CoronaDischarge
Fired Up! Ready to go!
08:55 PM on 04/07/2011
Tyranny in any guise needs to be rooted out. Time for the Ghadafi family to take up Uganda's offer of a vacation home.

My prayers for a free Libya.
10:18 PM on 04/07/2011
Tyranny of kleptocracy in US too