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Summary Rebels claim they are controlling 4 areas that represent only about 15 to 20 percent of the city.
Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi continue to fight rebels in the capital Tripoli and control 15 to 20 percent of the city, a rebel spokesman told Al Jazeera television on Monday.Earlier, euphoric Libyan rebels took control of most of Tripoli in a lightning advance, celebrating the victory in Green Square, the symbolic heart of Moammar Gaddafis regime. Gaddafis defenders quickly melted away as his 42-year rule crumbled, but the leaders whereabouts were unknown and pockets of resistance remained.Moammar Gaddafis defenders quickly melted away as his 42-year rule crumbled, but the leaders whereabouts were unknown and pockets of resistance remained.State TV broadcast Gaddafis bitter pleas for Libyans to defend his regime. Opposition fighters captured his son and one-time heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, who along with his father faces charges of crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court in the Netherlands. Another son was under house arrest.Its over, frizz-head, chanted hundreds of jubilant men and women massed in Green Square, using a mocking nickname of the curly-haired Gaddafi. The revelers fired shots in the air, clapped and waved the rebels tricolor flag. Some set fire to the green flag of Gaddafis regime and shot holes in a poster with the leaders image.The startling rebel breakthrough, after a long deadlock in Libyas 6-month-old civil war, was the culmination of a closely coordinated plan by rebels, NATO and anti-Gaddafi residents inside Tripoli, rebel leaders said. Rebel fighters from the west swept over 20 miles over a matter of hours Sunday, taking town after town and overwhelming a major military base as residents poured out to cheer them. At the same time, Tripoli residents secretly armed by rebels rose up.When rebels reached the gates of Tripoli, the special battalion entrusted by Gaddafi with guarding the capital promptly surrendered. The reason: Its commander, whose brother had been executed by Gaddafi years ago, was secretly loyal to the rebellion, a senior rebel official Fathi al-Baja said.Fathi al-Baja, the head of the rebels political committee, said the rebels National Transitional Council had been working on the offensive for the past three months, coordinating with NATO and rebels within Tripoli. Sleeper cells were set up in the capital, armed by rebel smugglers. On Thursday and Friday, NATO intensified strikes inside the capital, and on Saturday, the sleeper cells began to rise up.President Barack Obama said Libya is slipping from the grasp of a tyrant and urged Gaddafi to relinquish power to prevent more bloodshed.The future of Libya is now in the hands of the Libyan people, Obama said in a statement from Marthas Vineyard, where hes vacationing. He promised to work closely with rebels.By the early hours of Monday, rebels controlled most of the capital. The seizure of Green Square held profound symbolic value the plaza was scene of pro-Gaddafi rallies organized by the regime almost every night, and Gaddafi delivered speeches to his loyalists from the historic Red Fort that overlooks the square. Rebels and Tripoli residents set up checkpoints around the city, though pockets of pro-Gaddafi fighters remained.In a series of angry and defiant audio messages broadcast on state television, Gaddafi called on his supporters to march in the streets of the capital and purify it of the rats. He was not shown in the messages.His defiance raised the possibility of a last-ditch fight over the capital, home to 2 million people. Government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim claimed the regime has thousands and thousands of fighters and vowed: We will fight. We have whole cities on our sides. They are coming en masse to protect Tripoli to join the fight.But it seemed that significant parts of Gaddafis regime and military were abandoning him. His prime minister, Al-Baghdadi Al-Mahmoudi, fled to a hotel in the Tunisian city of Djerba, said Guma el-Gamaty, a London-based rebel spokesman.NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Gaddafis regime was clearly crumbling and that the time to create a new democratic Libya has arrived.It was a stunning reversal for Gaddafi, who earlier this month had seemed to have a firm grip on his stronghold in the western part of Libya, despite months of NATO airstrikes on his military. Rebels had been unable to make any advances for weeks, bogged down on the main fronts with regime troops in the east and center of the country.Gaddafi is the Arab worlds longest-ruling, most erratic, most grimly fascinating leader presiding for 42 years over this North African desert republic with vast oil reserves and just 6 million people. For years, he was an international pariah blamed for the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jumbo jet over Lockerbie, Scotland, that killed 270 people. After years of denial, Gaddafis Libya acknowledged responsibility, agreed to pay up to $10 million to relatives of each victim, and declared he would dismantle all weapons of mass destruction. That eased him back into the international community.But on February 22, days after the uprising against him began, Gaddafi gave a televised speech vowing to hunt down protesters inch by inch, room by room, home by home, alleyway by alleyway. The speech caused a furor that fueled the armed rebellion against him and it has been since mocked in songs and spoofs across the Arab world.As the rebel force advanced on Tripoli on Sunday, taking town after town, thousands of jubilant civilians rushed out of their homes to cheer the long convoys of pickup trucks packed with fighters shooting in the air. One man grabbed a rebel flag that had been draped over the hood of a slow-moving car and kissed it, overcome with emotion.
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