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Libya: Gaddafi Loyalists Seize Bani Walid

Gaddafi Loyalists Bani Walid

RAMI AL-SHAHEIBI and MAGGIE MICHAEL   01/24/12 07:53 PM ET   AP

BENGHAZI, Libya — Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan mountain city in the most serious challenge to the central government since the strongman's fall, underlining the increasing weakness of Libya's Western-backed rulers as they try to unify the country under their authority.

The taking of Bani Walid, one of the last Gadhafi strongholds captured by the new leadership late last year, was the first such organized operation by armed remnants of Gadhafi's regime. A simultaneous outbreak of shootings in the capital and Libya's second largest city Benghazi raised authorities' concerned that other networks of loyalists were active elsewhere.

The security woes add to the difficulties of the ruling National Transitional Council, which is struggling to establish its authority and show Libyans progress in stability and good government. Bani Walid's fall comes after violent protests in Benghazi, where Libyans angry over lack of reform stormed the NTC headquarters and trashed offices.

In Bani Walid, hundreds of well-equipped and highly trained remnants of Gadhafi's forces battled for eight hours on Monday with the local pro-NTC revolutionary brigade, known as the May 28 Brigade, said Mubarak al-Fatmani, the head of Bani Walid local council. The brigade was driven out and Gadhafi loyalists then raised their old green flag over buildings in the western city.

Four revolutionary fighters were killed and 25 others were wounded in the fighting, al-Fatmani said.

There were no immediate signs that the uprising was part of some direct attempt to restore the family of Gadhafi, who was swept out of power in August and then killed in the nearby city of Sirte in October. His sons, daughter and wife have been killed, arrested or have fled to neighboring countries.

Instead, the fighting seemed to reflect a rejection of NTC control by a city that never deeply accepted its rule, highlighting the still unresolved tensions between those who benefited under Gadhafi's regime and those now in power. Those tensions are tightly wound up with tribal and regional rivalries around the country.

The May 28 Brigade had kept only a superficial control over the city, the head of Bani Walid's military council, Abdullah al-Khazmi, acknowledged.

"The only link between Bani Walid and the revolution was May 28, now it is gone and 99 percent of Bani Walid people are Gadhafi loyalists," he said.

He spoke to The Associated Press at a position on the eastern outskirts of Bani Walid, where hundreds of pro-NTC reinforcements from Benghazi were deployed with convoys of cars mounted with machine guns, though there was no immediate move to retake the city.

The fighters who captured the city Monday night belong to Brigade 93, a militia newly created by Gadhafi loyalists who reassembled after the fall of the regime, said al-Khazmi and al-Fatmani. The fighters, flush with cash and heavy weaponry including incendiary bombs, have been increasing in power in the city, they said.

There was no possibility to confirm their claims. However, there were no mass evacuations from the town after the clashes, an indication that the residents appear to accept the new arrangement, said Ali al-Fatmani, a revolutionary brigade commander in Bani Walid.

Authorities in Benghazi, where the NTC is centered, appeared concerned that the Bani Walid uprising could have sent a signal to other cells of Gadhafi forces.

An AP reporter who was present in the Benghazi operation room heard military commanders on Monday saying coordinated incidents of drive-by shootings in Tripoli and, to a lesser extent, Benghazi erupted as news of the Bani Walid takeover spread. In Tripoli, some shops closed, and fighters responsible for security in the capital were on a state of alert over the shootings.

Five months since the Gadhafi regime's fall and three months since his death, the National Transitional Council has so far made little progress in unifying its armed forces. Instead it relies largely on multiple "revolutionary brigades," militias made up of citizens-turned-fighters, usually all from a specific city or even neighborhood.

The militias were created during the months of civil war against Gadhafi's forces last year, and since the war ended in October, the various brigades remain in control of security affairs of each city they liberated. Though loyal to the NTC, they have also feuded among themselves and acted on their own initiative, and the council has been unable to control them.

A month ago, Gadhafi loyalists attacked another revolutionary brigade from Tripoli that entered Bani Walid, killing 13, said Mubarak al-Fatmani.

"The council (NTC) did absolutely nothing," said al-Fatmani, who resigned from his local council chief post to protest the NTC's failure to investigate the ambush. He still holds his position, since his resignation has not yet been accepted.

The council has faced increasing complaints that it is doing little to bring stability to the country. It faces a daunting task, since Gadhafi's regime stripped Libya of most institutions, and the civil war has stirred up widespread divisions, rivalries and resentments.

In the Benghazi unrest last Saturday, protesters broke into the NTC headquarters, smashed windows and carted off furniture and electronics, then threw bottles at NTC chief Mustafa Abdul-Jalil as he tried to address them and torched his car. The next day, Abdul-Jalil suspended the Benghazi representatives on the council in an apparent attempt to appease protesters. The deputy chief of the NTC resigned in protest over the suspension.

Bani Walid, a city of 100,000 located in the mountains 90 miles (140 kilometers) southeast of Tripoli, held out for weeks against revolutionary forces after Gadhafi's fall from power, with loyalist fighters dug into its formidable terrain of valleys and crevasses. Pro-NTC fighters finally took it in October.

The main tribe in Bani Walid is a branch of the Warfala tribal confederation, which stretches around the country with around 1 million members. The Bani Walid branch was one of the most privileged under Gadhafi, who gave them top positions and used their fighters to try to crush protests in the early months of last year's uprising against his rule.

That has left a deep enmity between the tribe and others. Ali al-Fatmani said Bani Walid loyalists were among Gadhafi troops that tried to march on Benghazi during the civil war and were used to in the siege of Zawiya, west of Tripoli. There were reports, he said, that Bani Walid fighters desecrated graves of fallen revolutionary fighters in Zawiya.

"The hatred and mistrust have been building up during the revolution," said al-Fatmani, himself a Warfala.

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BENGHAZI, Libya — Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan mountain city in the most serious challenge to the central government since the strongman's fall, underlining the increasin...
BENGHAZI, Libya — Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan mountain city in the most serious challenge to the central government since the strongman's fall, underlining the increasin...
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06:53 AM on 01/27/2012
this war was so stupid. Gaddafi was not as terrible as you guys described him here in Britain. Considering the fact that innocent people like Mark Duggan and Jean Charles de Menezes were murdered by State police, I wonder who runs the real police state
04:58 AM on 01/27/2012
so now would Obama, Cameron and Sarkosy get ready for a second round of war in Libya because the free oil they dreamed for may not flow as they expected when the Gadaffi people eventually prevailed?
04:54 AM on 01/27/2012
Obama and Cameron better get ready for another round of war its not over until its all over.
07:01 AM on 01/25/2012
The so-called "remnants of the Gadaffi regime" are just Libyans dissatisfied with the NTC. Maybe the NTC is the problem. Whatever the case, this is none of our business.
05:01 AM on 01/27/2012
It is really the business our business because we put the NTC there just to facilitate the oil flow so why wont it be our business now?
10:27 AM on 01/27/2012
Its their oil and they can do whatever they want with it. Listen to yourself. You're actually advocating murder if they don't produce a certain amount of oil. Get a grip.
03:21 AM on 01/25/2012
The Arab Spring has been a rousing success, Right ???
Democracy is springing up all over, Right???
We are still somewhat dependent on the oil from the Middle East.
We certainly would not want to use oil from Canada when we can buy it from the Middle East and they can use the money to buy weapons, Right???
We do not worry about the oil that leaks from their tankers into the ocean, Right ???
02:37 AM on 01/25/2012
Wars are no longer fought. Just battles. When is America going to learn that when you take them out behind the wood shed you got to spank them hard to make them not want to do it anymore? We have become a nation of pansies. You got to pound them until they say Uncle.
03:26 AM on 01/25/2012
Yeah right, just like Iraq and Afghanistan?

"nation of pansies."
No, nation of irrationals and ign.orants.
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Steven Mackey
04:21 AM on 01/25/2012
We didn't go in and spank them hard as he said. We went in a coddled them like babies.
07:13 AM on 01/25/2012
"you got to make them not want to do it anymore"

Who is "they" and what are "they" doing?

To win a war in the manner you speak, you'd have to murder a sizable portion of the citizenry. In Libya with a population of about 10 million, you'd probably have to kill 9+ million people. My advice to you is to mind your own business.
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02:30 AM on 01/25/2012
Rommel was right. About Libya he famously said, "GTFO. Let the French and the Brits deal with it." ...although, he probably would have said the same about Iraq and Afghanistan.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Helfgott
01:21 AM on 01/25/2012
Okay, cross off Bani Walid as next summer vacation destination.
06:52 AM on 01/25/2012
Soon: add all of Libya. You can't just bomb people into what the Yanks call "democracy"--then follow up with Qatar mercenaries and Arab lynch mobs.
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UTARebel
No one can win without the Independent Vote
01:12 AM on 01/25/2012
What a great job (number) BO did to this nation...
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02:47 AM on 01/25/2012
Yes. We should do it the right way and insert ourself into a civil war and occupy a hostile country for years at a cost of $800 billion like the predecessor of "BO" did.
03:24 AM on 01/25/2012
We need to get out of the Middle East and let them fight each other (and they will).
We need to become independent of their oil and stop providing foreign aide.
They need our money but do we need them ?
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UTARebel
No one can win without the Independent Vote
01:32 PM on 01/25/2012
BO's working on that for you.
01:04 AM on 01/25/2012
Just give them some time to straighten things out and create a central authority
07:34 AM on 01/25/2012
Maybe power in Libya should be separated/de-centralized with a federal authority that's only strong enough to help the common good. One thing is for sure: the more the West is involved, the more things will be messed up in Libya.
01:04 AM on 01/25/2012
Just a thought but wasn't the United States much like this after the Revolutionary war and before the signing of the constitution. States going to war with other states all jockeying for power.
07:35 AM on 01/25/2012
Correct.
11:26 PM on 01/24/2012
Barry and Hillary better hurry up and apologize to these loyalists.
11:20 PM on 01/24/2012
Libya was going to take the oil off the dollar standard. Just like Saddam Hussein was going to do.
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f1nesse101
freedom with peace and prosperity
10:15 PM on 01/24/2012
Is Libya going to be another Iraq? Another bold reason why the US armed forces should steer clear of using American servicemen to do another man's bidding.
CHUXKLES
Independently, non-dependent
11:28 PM on 01/24/2012
The United States has sent some 12,000 soldiers to Libya, in the first phase of deployments to the oil-rich North African nation.

thttp://www.presstv.ir/detail/222317.html
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UTARebel
No one can win without the Independent Vote
01:15 AM on 01/25/2012
Wondered how long it would take BO to send troops. It will probably start another war.
03:35 AM on 01/25/2012
Our Commander in Chief seems amazingly quiet about this.
It made all the news channels when he said no to the Keystone Pipeline.
10:03 PM on 01/24/2012
Another area of the world we need to keep our noses out of - America doesn't seem able to change the character of the citizens there, so we should let them sort out their own issues.
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UTARebel
No one can win without the Independent Vote
01:16 AM on 01/25/2012
I agree, Dave.