New Video Shows Gadhafi Begging for Mercy after Capture

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A video that went viral on Friday on social networking websites showed a bloodied Moammar Gadhafi begging the new regime fighters for mercy after his capture.

Gadhafi was later declared dead by the National Transitional Council, Libya’s new rulers.

Another video on Thursday showed the former dictator, his face half-covered in blood, being dragged towards a vehicle by a crowd, delirious with excitement.

Those at the front, pushed and shook him, pulled him by the hair, hit him until he disappeared from the screens amid a crackle of gunfire.

Disquiet grew on Friday over how Gadhafi met his end after being taken alive.

In Geneva, the U.N. human rights chief called for an investigation into the way the ousted Libyan leader was killed, saying that “the two videos ... taken together are very disturbing."

"On the issue of Gadhafi’s death yesterday, the circumstances are still unclear," Navi Pillay's spokesman Rupert Colville said.

"There are four or five different versions of how he died.

"There should be some kind of investigation given what we saw yesterday."

A senior National Transitional Council official said: "No instructions were given to kill Gadhafi, and we do not believe our revolutionaries intentionally killed him."

But he acknowledged: "There have been rumors flying around since the killing of Gadhafi, after images were released, claiming that our revolutionaries slaughtered him."

He added: "I deny that we gave orders to kill Gadhafi."

Gadhafi was caught trying to flee Sirte, his hometown which for weeks withstood the NTC siege, in a convoy of vehicles which had been targeted by NATO warplanes at around 8:30 am (0630 GMT), sources said.

The alliance confirmed on Friday that its aircraft had hit 11 armed vehicles in or around Sirte 24 hours earlier.

Agence France Presse journalists some 50 kilometers from Sirte had heard early Thursday morning a series of huge blasts coming from the city, far louder than the normal daily explosions.

French Defense Minister Gerard Longuet said French planes had "stopped" the convoy. Libyan fighters had then attacked it, destroying vehicles from which "Colonel Gadhafi had come out."

Thirty minutes later, immense columns of smoke could be seen rising over west Sirte and exchanges of gunfire were heard.

Mohammed Leith, a commander from Misrata, based in the west of Sirte, said the deposed dictator died from wounds inflicted while he was being seized.

"Gadhafi was found in a jeep on which the rebels had opened fire. He came out of it and tried to flee. He took refuge in a drain. The rebels opened fire again and he emerged carrying a Kalashnikov in one hand and a pistol in the other," Leith said.

"He look left and right, shouted 'what's going on'. The rebels opened fire again, wounding him in the shoulder and the leg, and he then died."

NTC executive chief Mahmoud Jibril said the ex-dictator had been killed by a bullet in the head.

"When he was found, he was in good health and was carrying a weapon" but "when the vehicle drove off, he was caught in an exchange of fire between pro-Gadhafi fighters and revolutionaries, and was killed by a bullet in the head," he said, adding that Gadhafi remained alive until he arrived at the hospital in Misrata.

Late in the afternoon, witnesses saw Gadhafi’s body in an ambulance in a market on the outskirts of Misrata.

An AFP photographer later saw the body in a house in the town. He photographed the corpse whose chest was bare and stomach covered in blood. The impact of a bullet was visible on Gadhafi’s forehead.

British Foreign Minister William Hague said Gadhafi appeared to have been killed. "We would have liked him to face justice for his crimes in a court, in an international or Libyan court, and we don't approve of extrajudicial killing," he said, adding: "But we are not going to mourn him."

The U.N. human rights spokesman said: "The thousands of victims who suffered loss of lives, disappearances, torture and other serious human rights violations since the conflict occurred in February 2011 as well of those who suffered human rights violations throughout Gadhafi’s long rule have the right to know the truth.

"And they have the right to see the culture of impunity brought to an end and to receive reparations," he added.

Comments 8
Missing m.c. 21 October 2011, 17:24

He received his justified punishment, I don't approve oh killing prisoners but somehow there is Karma in his death.

Thumb geha 21 October 2011, 18:05

assad, nasrallah and aoun better see this video: their turn is coming soon....

Thumb libnani 21 October 2011, 18:34

Bashar, watch this video, and think about what you are doing.

Missing truth1976 21 October 2011, 19:19

M.C. I understand where you are coming from but don't agree in full. Qaddafi needed to go down but not in this way. The people who have done this have shown that they are just as barbaric as him... And they are to be the next leaders? Will this be the mentality of the New Libya? I would not want a people who are capable of doing such things to run my country. (There is a time and a place) The NTC has already been caught telling lies about it. I am in no way in favor of Qaddafi. I think it would have been better if nothing was said or shown until he was dead if that was the way it was going to go down. Many extremist will use this and I hate to give them any fuel to go on. As of Assad and the growing infection in Lebanon. I tend to understand this feeling more. I would want nothing more than such filth to be cleansed from such a Holy land but I would rather not know how. God bless all Freedom, Justice and God fear people of the world

Default-user-icon MUSTAPHA O. GHALAYINI (Guest) 21 October 2011, 20:29

i wish a more civilised end to bashar,but i dont mind a similar end to his brother maher.
anyway its more economic than spending a billion on a tribunal and wait for 5/10 years..dommage que hafez n est plus present.

Missing m.c. 21 October 2011, 21:57

truth1976, I agree with you. I am not standing for the NTC and their credibility is fragile at best in my book. I am saying that most tyrants of our modern history received the same fate (I think only of Saddam and Molosovic who stood trials for their crimes). People like Benito Mussolini , Adolf Hitler, Nicolae Ceausescu, Joseph Stalin, Josip Tito, etc... I do favor those tyrants to stand trial before the very public they harmed and ruled but the karma here is they received the punishment they themsleves bestowed on hundreds of thousands of people without the proper due process.

Default-user-icon TITUS (Guest) 22 October 2011, 00:02

I hear and understand all the arguments but sometimes like in the case of Kaddhafi if the tyrant lives long enough he will incite another insurection and many more innocent lives would be lost for nothing, I'd rather save innocent lives rather than worry about the inhumane killing of an unrepenting bloody long time merciless murderer like Kaddhafi and his likes. Unfortunately when the pain the dictators have caused their people is so deeply rooted, this would be the only way to get closure and to end this evil and its figure heads.The rule of law and unification and reconciliation could start afterwards not during a dictator's often protracted trial since he would have the means to hire lawyers that could drag the process for a long time maybe long enough to see his country slip back into chaos on the hands of his former henchmen and benefactors not to mention that the Assad and Iranian regimes would have loved for that to happen that would buy them some time with Nato's hands full.

Default-user-icon Nagham D. (Guest) 22 October 2011, 02:40

The extremists in lybia are the NTC, its filled with alqaida and alqaida-like groups. They tortured a dying man, that prooves what kind of savages they are. Regardless of what he did, he should have been put on trial and if he was injured during the arrest then he should have been given care, and if that wasent possible then at least be allowed to die without being tortured while his face and body was already bleading. The savage behaviour of the rebels not only now but during the revolution prooves that they are either as evil as the qaddafi army or worse. Islam is against torture regardless of who it is done against. It is strictly forbidden. How dare these savages scream allaho akbar while they are sinning. May God grant them a death such as that of Qaddafi as obviously they arent better than him otherwise they would have let him die without resorting to anamalistic behaviour.