At age 42, Jennifer Aniston still has a killer body. And she’s going to make sure everybody knows it. The star stepped out at Monday night’s at Elle’s 18th Annual Women in Hollywood Tribute at the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills. Joining her fellow November issue Elle girls Evan Rachel Wood, Freida Pinto and Barbra Steisand, Aniston walked the red carpet in all her tanned-gam glory. And how glorious it was. Jen wowed in a teeny, silver Kaufman Franco dress, strappy Balenciaga heels, Fred Leighton jewels and a Ferragamo clutch. (Also, is that a ring we spy on her lefthand ring finger?) We hope the fashion statement impressed the discerning eyes of Elle editor-in-chief Robbie Myers and creative director Joe Zee (although Zee himself was the nervous one, tweeting before the event, “Rushing now to get ready for our big @ELLEmagazine #WomenInHollywood event tonite. Downing protein shake – need all the energy I can muster”). He shouldn’t have worried, as all eyes were on Jen last night. Check out her low-cut look in the slideshow below — does the 42-year-old make it work?
Continue reading …MIAMI (Associated Press / The Huffington Post) — A South Florida woman got a shock when she opened a recent cell phone bill: she owed $201,000. It was no mistake. Celina Aarons has her two deaf-mute brothers on her plan. They communicate by texting and use their phones to watch videos. Normally, that’s not a problem. Aarons has the appropriate data plan and her bill is about $175. But her brothers spent two weeks in Canada and Aarons never changed to an international plan. Her brothers sent over 2,000 texts and also downloaded videos, sometimes racking up $2,000 in data charges. When Aarons read the bill — all 43 pages of it — she realized she owed $201,005.44. “I was freaking out,” Aarons told the news station WSVN. “I was shaking, crying, I couldn’t even talk that much on the phone. I was like my life is over!” Thankfully, T-mobile agreed to lower the bill to a more manageable $2,500 and gave Aarons six months to pay up, WSVN reports. In 2006, a Malaysian man reportedly received a phone bill totaling $218 trillion for calls made on a number he thought he had disconnected after his father’s death.
Continue reading …Check out Coldplay’s new video for their latest song, “Paradise”! The track comes off the band’s latest album, Mylo Xyloto, which will be released on Monday (October 24). “You can now stream Hurts Like Heaven for free in all iTunes Stores where Mylo Xyloto is out 24 Oct (inc UK and US),” the band added on Twitter. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Just Jared Discovery Date : 19/10/2011 04:42 Number of articles : 7
Continue reading …Human Events editor Jason Mattera confronted Vice President Joe Biden on his disgusting reference to rape if Republicans don’t support Obama’s “jobs” bill. Biden stood by his outrageous remarks. Via Human Events: Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 19/10/2011 22:23 Number of articles : 9
Continue reading …After years of walking around with a broken tooth, a 7-year-old Siberian tiger at the Alaska Zoo got a visit from a dentist. Kunali underwent a root canal with a little help from zoo staff and a local endodontist. (Oct. 20)
Continue reading …Alabama’s tough new immigration law isn’t producing farm jobs unemployed Americans want. Many of those who have ventured out into the fields to pick crops have quit after a single day, telling farmers the work is too hard and not worth the pay. (Oct. 20)
Continue reading …After two-day standoff residents walk out of Dale Farm in Essex peacefully, saying they do so with ‘dignity’ and heads held high The beginning of the eviction at Dale Farm was marked by violence, but the end – when it came – was calm and ordered. After seeing the final barrier designed to stop bailiffs entering the site torn down earlier in the day, Travellers and protesters staged a mass “dignified walk out”, leaving the site outside Basildon in Essex together as the sun began to go down on Thursday, chanting “save Dale Farm” as they went. It was an emotional moment for the remaining protesters, many who have lived on the site for months, and residents who expressed their thanks for the support that they had been given. Kathleen McCarthy – who has taken on the role of voice of the community — said: “We and the activists, we are all proud people and we are leaving here with our heads held high. It’s an emotional day. I’m sad but so be it, God will protect each and every one of us.” Good had come from the Dale Farm story, she said. “We showed we are not what they made us out to be, we are not thugs, we are good people.” There had been violent clashes at Dale Farm on Wednesday, when riot police were pelted with missiles and two protesters tasered. But on Thursdayon the site there was a mood of despondency and resignation. The decision to walk out together was taken in a public meeting, held among the ruins of Marianne McCarthy’s pitchIt had earlier been unclear whether the planned departure would happen, when tempers were raised by Basildon council representatives entering the site with riot police to survey what remained. But at 5pm, the walk began. It was the right time to go, said Marie McCarthy. “It’s been worth everything,” she said. “It’s the best thing Travellers have ever done. This time we made a stand and I tell you what, we put up a good fight. We’re going out with dignity at the end of it.” Asked where the Travellers would go now, she said: “We go on the road to nowhere, that’s where we go.” Like much of the story of Dale Farm, the final walk-out was not without theatre. Photographers jostled for the best shot as the walk progressed, with police officers and hard-hatted bailiffs standing sentry while residents and protesters filed out of the gates. Legal observers will remain to make sure bailiffs comply with the law as they start to deconstruct the site. Marina Pepper, who lead much of the protesters’ campaign and had been seen berating bailiffs and police, said it was the right way to go, but that she was disappointed. “It is this idea that you always have to bend to the will of the strongest bully, and what we have seen here is state bullying,” she said. “We have to go because nobody wants to go out of here in a body bag. The end is seen as inevitable now, but if that changes we’ll be back for a massive party.” Soon after they had quit the site, Basildon council issued a statement, in which leader Tony Ball said it was “encouraging” that the Travellers and supporters were leaving Dale Farm in a “peaceful and dignified manner”. He said: “Sadly, this could have been achieved many years ago and without the scenes of violence which we have witnessed over the last 48 hours and the accompanying expense to the taxpayer.” Speaking at a press conference earlier, Ball reiterated that the council had made Travellers aware of sites in other areas of the country, and had made the offer of bricks and morter accommodation for the elderly and young which had not been accepted. It was clear that the end was close from early on Thursday when police removed five protesters who had locked themselves to the gate and a metal barrier and had remained in place for more than 25 hours. Soon after, before the sun had warmed a freezing site, the bailiffs’ heavy machinery got to work, quickly destroying the 40ft barricade that had become symbolic of the struggle at Dale Farm. Before long a Russian military truck, which protesters had been attached to, was also removed – after its owner called the RAC to come and give it a jump start. During the final two-day stand off 39 people were arrested, with one person charged with a public order offence for refusing to take off a face covering, said Superintendent Trevor Roe from Essex police. “As far as I’m aware, the residents have offered no violence whatsoever,” he said. Ten forces had been part of the operation, but police were now keen to scale back the operation and let bailiffs take over. “We now want to return to normal policing as soon as we can,” said Roe. It was the end of a long road for Dale Farm, where the residents had been locked in a battle with Basildon council over housing on a former scrapyard which they own but do not have planning permission for. On Monday, an appeal court judge refused the Travellers’ final attempt to halt the eviction after 10 years of legal wrangling. Caravans in the early evening began pulling off Dale Farm – and on to the legal site alongside. One man said that £18m was a lot of money to move someone a couple of hundred yards. But the council has vowed to prevent Travellers from settling illegally nearby, and after the next few days few know where they will go. Mary Quillgan, mother of five children, said reports that other councils were preparing to prevent Dale Farm Travellers settling in their areas sickened her. She said: “People say we are Travellers and we should travel but the world is changing, our kids need to go to school. They keep pushing us on the road, but where does the road end?” Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Local government Planning policy Protest Human rights Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Libya’s former leader killed by rebels in Sirte in wake of French airstrike, although precise details of his death remain unclear Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was born in Sirte, and when he became the ruler of all Libya, he transformed it from an insignificant fishing village into the country’s sprawling second city. On Thursday, after a brutal – and ultimately hopeless – last stand, it was the place where he died. For the past three weeks, with Gaddafi’s whereabouts still unknown, government fighters had been puzzled by the bitter and determined resistance from loyalist fighters. Trapped in a tiny coastal strip just a few hundred metres wide, they had refused to give up, even when a victory by the forces of Libya’s National Transitional Council seemed inevitable. Here at last was the answer: they had been fighting to the death with their once-great leader in their midst. The emergencies director of Human Rights Watch, Peter Bouckaert, was one of those in Sirte during the final battle. “A very heavy bombardment started at midnight with shelling of the remaining strongholds with Grad rockets that went on until 6am,” he told the Guardian. “I went down to the city centre at 9am and went in with the fighters from Benghazi who said the whole city was free. “I went to the hospital and a fighter arrived with a gold pistol he said he had taken from Gaddafi. He said there had been a fight with a convoy of people trying to flee. Mansour Dhou [Sirte's pro-Gaddafi military commander] was also in the clinic, shot in the stomach. He said they had been trying to flee and were caught in gunfire, which is when he lost consciousness. He confirmed Gaddafi was with him.” While details of the precise circumstances of Gaddafi’s death remained confused and contradictory last night, it appears he was trying to flee the city in a convoy of cars when they came under attack from Nato jets. Last night the French claimed responsibilty for the airstrike. The convoy was then apparently caught in a gun battle with fighters loyal to the National Transitional Council, Libya’s interim government. Possibly wounded in the shootout, Libya’s former ruler crawled into a drain; later he was set upon by revolutionary fighters, one of whom beat him with a shoe. Witnesses said he perished pleading for mercy after being dragged out of a hiding place inside a concrete drain. According to one fighter, the dying Gaddafi demanded: “What have I done to you?” Abdel-Jalil Abdel-Aziz, a doctor who accompanied Gaddafi’s body in an ambulance as it was taken from Sirte, said he died from two shots, to the head and chest. “I can’t describe my happiness,” he told the Associated Press. “The tyranny is gone. Now the Libyan people can rest. Amid the swirl of contradictory reports, one thing was clear: Gaddafi’s death was a humiliating end for a man once used to surrounding himself with cheering crowds of supporters. Video images that emerged showed him being bundled bloodied on to the back of a pick-up truck, surrounded by fighters waving guns and shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is great). At first Gaddafi was apparently able to walk with assistance before being lifted on to the truck’s tailgate. A second clip, however, showed him lifeless. In the second sequence, the tunic over one of his shoulders was heavily bloodstained. Also killed was one of Gaddafi’s sons, Mutassim, a military officer who had commanded the defence of Sirte for his father, according to NTC officials. Gaddafi’s second son, Saif al-Islam, was also said to have been arrested, although the news could not immediately be confirmed. After his death, Gaddafi’s body was taken – accompanied by a huge convoy of celebrating revolutionaries –to Misrata, two hours away. In Misrata – which itself went through a bitter siege during Libya’s eight-month civil war – the body was paraded through the streets on a truck, surrounded by crowds chanting, “The blood of the martyrs will not go in vain.” Bouckaert said: “I followed the convoy with the body to Misrata, where it was displayed. I have seen a lot of celebrations in Libya but never one like this.” Across Libya, as the news broke, there were celebrations. “We have been waiting for this moment for a long time,” the Libyan prime minister, Mahmoud Jibril, told a news conference. In Tripoli there were volleys of celebratory gunfire as vast crowds waving the red, black and green national flag adopted by the NTC gathered in Martyr’s Square – once the setting for mass rallies in praise of the “Brother Leader”. Jibril said: “We confirm that all the evils, plus Gaddafi, have vanished from this beloved country. It’s time to start a new Libya, a united Libya. One people, one future.” A formal declaration of liberation would be made by Friday, he added later. The death of Gaddafi and the fall of Sirte opens the way to national elections which – it had already been announced – would take place eight months after “full liberation” had been achieved. In London, David Cameron hailed Gaddafi’s death as a step towards a “strong and democratic future” for the north African country. Speaking in Downing Street after Jibril officially confirmed the death of the dictator, Cameron said he was proud of the role Britain had played in Nato airstrikes to protect Libyan civilians after the uprising against Gaddafi’s rule began in February. Cameron added that it was a time to remember Gaddafi’s victims, including the policewoman Yvonne Fletcher, who was gunned down in a London street in 1984, the 270 people who died when Pan-Am flight 103 was destroyed by a bomb over Lockerbie in 1988, and all those killed by the IRA using Semtex explosives supplied by the Libyan dictator. Nato commanders will meet on Friday to consider ending the coalition’s campaign in Libya. Gaddafi, 69, is the first leader to be killed in the Arab spring, the wave of popular uprisings that swept the Middle East demanding the end of autocratic rulers and greater democracy. He was one of the world’s most mercurial leaders. He seized power in 1969 and dominated Libya with a regime that often seemed run by his whims. But his acts brought international condemnation and isolation to his country. When the end came for Gaddafi it was not as his son Saif al-Islam once promised, with the regime fighting to “its last bullet”. Instead, the man who once styled himself “the king of the kings” of Africa was cornered while attempting to escape with his entourage in a convoy of cars after a final 90-minute assault on the last few loyalist positions in Sirte’s District Two. Last night the charred remains of 15 pickup trucks lay burned out on a roadside where Gaddafi’s convoy had attempted to punch through NTC lines. Inside the ruined vehicles sat the charred skeletons; other bodies lay strewn on the grass. Gaddafi and a handful of his men appear to have escaped death, and hidden in two drainage pipes choked with rubbish. Government troops gave chase, said Salem Bakeer, a fighter who was on the scene at the last moment. “One of Gaddafi’s men came out waving his rifle in the air and shouting surrender, but as soon as he saw my face he started shooting at me,” he told Reuters. “Then I think Gaddafi must have told them to stop. ‘My master is here, my master is here’, he said, ‘Muammar Gaddafi is here and he is wounded’,” said Bakeer. “We went in and brought Gaddafi out. He was saying ‘What’s wrong? What’s wrong? What’s going on?’. Then we took him and put him in the car.” With its fall, the city of Sirte was transformed from a potent image of Gaddafi’s rule to the symbol of his gruesome end. Even as Gaddafi’s body was being driven away, the drain where he was found was being immortalised in blue aerosol paint. On it, someone wrote: “The hiding place of the vile rat Gaddafi.” Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Nato Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Libya’s former leader killed by rebels in Sirte in wake of French airstrike, although precise details of his death remain unclear Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was born in Sirte, and when he became the ruler of all Libya, he transformed it from an insignificant fishing village into the country’s sprawling second city. On Thursday, after a brutal – and ultimately hopeless – last stand, it was the place where he died. For the past three weeks, with Gaddafi’s whereabouts still unknown, government fighters had been puzzled by the bitter and determined resistance from loyalist fighters. Trapped in a tiny coastal strip just a few hundred metres wide, they had refused to give up, even when a victory by the forces of Libya’s National Transitional Council seemed inevitable. Here at last was the answer: they had been fighting to the death with their once-great leader in their midst. The emergencies director of Human Rights Watch, Peter Bouckaert, was one of those in Sirte during the final battle. “A very heavy bombardment started at midnight with shelling of the remaining strongholds with Grad rockets that went on until 6am,” he told the Guardian. “I went down to the city centre at 9am and went in with the fighters from Benghazi who said the whole city was free. “I went to the hospital and a fighter arrived with a gold pistol he said he had taken from Gaddafi. He said there had been a fight with a convoy of people trying to flee. Mansour Dhou [Sirte's pro-Gaddafi military commander] was also in the clinic, shot in the stomach. He said they had been trying to flee and were caught in gunfire, which is when he lost consciousness. He confirmed Gaddafi was with him.” While details of the precise circumstances of Gaddafi’s death remained confused and contradictory last night, it appears he was trying to flee the city in a convoy of cars when they came under attack from Nato jets. Last night the French claimed responsibilty for the airstrike. The convoy was then apparently caught in a gun battle with fighters loyal to the National Transitional Council, Libya’s interim government. Possibly wounded in the shootout, Libya’s former ruler crawled into a drain; later he was set upon by revolutionary fighters, one of whom beat him with a shoe. Witnesses said he perished pleading for mercy after being dragged out of a hiding place inside a concrete drain. According to one fighter, the dying Gaddafi demanded: “What have I done to you?” Abdel-Jalil Abdel-Aziz, a doctor who accompanied Gaddafi’s body in an ambulance as it was taken from Sirte, said he died from two shots, to the head and chest. “I can’t describe my happiness,” he told the Associated Press. “The tyranny is gone. Now the Libyan people can rest. Amid the swirl of contradictory reports, one thing was clear: Gaddafi’s death was a humiliating end for a man once used to surrounding himself with cheering crowds of supporters. Video images that emerged showed him being bundled bloodied on to the back of a pick-up truck, surrounded by fighters waving guns and shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is great). At first Gaddafi was apparently able to walk with assistance before being lifted on to the truck’s tailgate. A second clip, however, showed him lifeless. In the second sequence, the tunic over one of his shoulders was heavily bloodstained. Also killed was one of Gaddafi’s sons, Mutassim, a military officer who had commanded the defence of Sirte for his father, according to NTC officials. Gaddafi’s second son, Saif al-Islam, was also said to have been arrested, although the news could not immediately be confirmed. After his death, Gaddafi’s body was taken – accompanied by a huge convoy of celebrating revolutionaries –to Misrata, two hours away. In Misrata – which itself went through a bitter siege during Libya’s eight-month civil war – the body was paraded through the streets on a truck, surrounded by crowds chanting, “The blood of the martyrs will not go in vain.” Bouckaert said: “I followed the convoy with the body to Misrata, where it was displayed. I have seen a lot of celebrations in Libya but never one like this.” Across Libya, as the news broke, there were celebrations. “We have been waiting for this moment for a long time,” the Libyan prime minister, Mahmoud Jibril, told a news conference. In Tripoli there were volleys of celebratory gunfire as vast crowds waving the red, black and green national flag adopted by the NTC gathered in Martyr’s Square – once the setting for mass rallies in praise of the “Brother Leader”. Jibril said: “We confirm that all the evils, plus Gaddafi, have vanished from this beloved country. It’s time to start a new Libya, a united Libya. One people, one future.” A formal declaration of liberation would be made by Friday, he added later. The death of Gaddafi and the fall of Sirte opens the way to national elections which – it had already been announced – would take place eight months after “full liberation” had been achieved. In London, David Cameron hailed Gaddafi’s death as a step towards a “strong and democratic future” for the north African country. Speaking in Downing Street after Jibril officially confirmed the death of the dictator, Cameron said he was proud of the role Britain had played in Nato airstrikes to protect Libyan civilians after the uprising against Gaddafi’s rule began in February. Cameron added that it was a time to remember Gaddafi’s victims, including the policewoman Yvonne Fletcher, who was gunned down in a London street in 1984, the 270 people who died when Pan-Am flight 103 was destroyed by a bomb over Lockerbie in 1988, and all those killed by the IRA using Semtex explosives supplied by the Libyan dictator. Nato commanders will meet on Friday to consider ending the coalition’s campaign in Libya. Gaddafi, 69, is the first leader to be killed in the Arab spring, the wave of popular uprisings that swept the Middle East demanding the end of autocratic rulers and greater democracy. He was one of the world’s most mercurial leaders. He seized power in 1969 and dominated Libya with a regime that often seemed run by his whims. But his acts brought international condemnation and isolation to his country. When the end came for Gaddafi it was not as his son Saif al-Islam once promised, with the regime fighting to “its last bullet”. Instead, the man who once styled himself “the king of the kings” of Africa was cornered while attempting to escape with his entourage in a convoy of cars after a final 90-minute assault on the last few loyalist positions in Sirte’s District Two. Last night the charred remains of 15 pickup trucks lay burned out on a roadside where Gaddafi’s convoy had attempted to punch through NTC lines. Inside the ruined vehicles sat the charred skeletons; other bodies lay strewn on the grass. Gaddafi and a handful of his men appear to have escaped death, and hidden in two drainage pipes choked with rubbish. Government troops gave chase, said Salem Bakeer, a fighter who was on the scene at the last moment. “One of Gaddafi’s men came out waving his rifle in the air and shouting surrender, but as soon as he saw my face he started shooting at me,” he told Reuters. “Then I think Gaddafi must have told them to stop. ‘My master is here, my master is here’, he said, ‘Muammar Gaddafi is here and he is wounded’,” said Bakeer. “We went in and brought Gaddafi out. He was saying ‘What’s wrong? What’s wrong? What’s going on?’. Then we took him and put him in the car.” With its fall, the city of Sirte was transformed from a potent image of Gaddafi’s rule to the symbol of his gruesome end. Even as Gaddafi’s body was being driven away, the drain where he was found was being immortalised in blue aerosol paint. On it, someone wrote: “The hiding place of the vile rat Gaddafi.” Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Nato Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Libya’s former leader killed by rebels in Sirte in wake of French airstrike, although precise details of his death remain unclear Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was born in Sirte, and when he became the ruler of all Libya, he transformed it from an insignificant fishing village into the country’s sprawling second city. On Thursday, after a brutal – and ultimately hopeless – last stand, it was the place where he died. For the past three weeks, with Gaddafi’s whereabouts still unknown, government fighters had been puzzled by the bitter and determined resistance from loyalist fighters. Trapped in a tiny coastal strip just a few hundred metres wide, they had refused to give up, even when a victory by the forces of Libya’s National Transitional Council seemed inevitable. Here at last was the answer: they had been fighting to the death with their once-great leader in their midst. The emergencies director of Human Rights Watch, Peter Bouckaert, was one of those in Sirte during the final battle. “A very heavy bombardment started at midnight with shelling of the remaining strongholds with Grad rockets that went on until 6am,” he told the Guardian. “I went down to the city centre at 9am and went in with the fighters from Benghazi who said the whole city was free. “I went to the hospital and a fighter arrived with a gold pistol he said he had taken from Gaddafi. He said there had been a fight with a convoy of people trying to flee. Mansour Dhou [Sirte's pro-Gaddafi military commander] was also in the clinic, shot in the stomach. He said they had been trying to flee and were caught in gunfire, which is when he lost consciousness. He confirmed Gaddafi was with him.” While details of the precise circumstances of Gaddafi’s death remained confused and contradictory last night, it appears he was trying to flee the city in a convoy of cars when they came under attack from Nato jets. Last night the French claimed responsibilty for the airstrike. The convoy was then apparently caught in a gun battle with fighters loyal to the National Transitional Council, Libya’s interim government. Possibly wounded in the shootout, Libya’s former ruler crawled into a drain; later he was set upon by revolutionary fighters, one of whom beat him with a shoe. Witnesses said he perished pleading for mercy after being dragged out of a hiding place inside a concrete drain. According to one fighter, the dying Gaddafi demanded: “What have I done to you?” Abdel-Jalil Abdel-Aziz, a doctor who accompanied Gaddafi’s body in an ambulance as it was taken from Sirte, said he died from two shots, to the head and chest. “I can’t describe my happiness,” he told the Associated Press. “The tyranny is gone. Now the Libyan people can rest. Amid the swirl of contradictory reports, one thing was clear: Gaddafi’s death was a humiliating end for a man once used to surrounding himself with cheering crowds of supporters. Video images that emerged showed him being bundled bloodied on to the back of a pick-up truck, surrounded by fighters waving guns and shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is great). At first Gaddafi was apparently able to walk with assistance before being lifted on to the truck’s tailgate. A second clip, however, showed him lifeless. In the second sequence, the tunic over one of his shoulders was heavily bloodstained. Also killed was one of Gaddafi’s sons, Mutassim, a military officer who had commanded the defence of Sirte for his father, according to NTC officials. Gaddafi’s second son, Saif al-Islam, was also said to have been arrested, although the news could not immediately be confirmed. After his death, Gaddafi’s body was taken – accompanied by a huge convoy of celebrating revolutionaries –to Misrata, two hours away. In Misrata – which itself went through a bitter siege during Libya’s eight-month civil war – the body was paraded through the streets on a truck, surrounded by crowds chanting, “The blood of the martyrs will not go in vain.” Bouckaert said: “I followed the convoy with the body to Misrata, where it was displayed. I have seen a lot of celebrations in Libya but never one like this.” Across Libya, as the news broke, there were celebrations. “We have been waiting for this moment for a long time,” the Libyan prime minister, Mahmoud Jibril, told a news conference. In Tripoli there were volleys of celebratory gunfire as vast crowds waving the red, black and green national flag adopted by the NTC gathered in Martyr’s Square – once the setting for mass rallies in praise of the “Brother Leader”. Jibril said: “We confirm that all the evils, plus Gaddafi, have vanished from this beloved country. It’s time to start a new Libya, a united Libya. One people, one future.” A formal declaration of liberation would be made by Friday, he added later. The death of Gaddafi and the fall of Sirte opens the way to national elections which – it had already been announced – would take place eight months after “full liberation” had been achieved. In London, David Cameron hailed Gaddafi’s death as a step towards a “strong and democratic future” for the north African country. Speaking in Downing Street after Jibril officially confirmed the death of the dictator, Cameron said he was proud of the role Britain had played in Nato airstrikes to protect Libyan civilians after the uprising against Gaddafi’s rule began in February. Cameron added that it was a time to remember Gaddafi’s victims, including the policewoman Yvonne Fletcher, who was gunned down in a London street in 1984, the 270 people who died when Pan-Am flight 103 was destroyed by a bomb over Lockerbie in 1988, and all those killed by the IRA using Semtex explosives supplied by the Libyan dictator. Nato commanders will meet on Friday to consider ending the coalition’s campaign in Libya. Gaddafi, 69, is the first leader to be killed in the Arab spring, the wave of popular uprisings that swept the Middle East demanding the end of autocratic rulers and greater democracy. He was one of the world’s most mercurial leaders. He seized power in 1969 and dominated Libya with a regime that often seemed run by his whims. But his acts brought international condemnation and isolation to his country. When the end came for Gaddafi it was not as his son Saif al-Islam once promised, with the regime fighting to “its last bullet”. Instead, the man who once styled himself “the king of the kings” of Africa was cornered while attempting to escape with his entourage in a convoy of cars after a final 90-minute assault on the last few loyalist positions in Sirte’s District Two. Last night the charred remains of 15 pickup trucks lay burned out on a roadside where Gaddafi’s convoy had attempted to punch through NTC lines. Inside the ruined vehicles sat the charred skeletons; other bodies lay strewn on the grass. Gaddafi and a handful of his men appear to have escaped death, and hidden in two drainage pipes choked with rubbish. Government troops gave chase, said Salem Bakeer, a fighter who was on the scene at the last moment. “One of Gaddafi’s men came out waving his rifle in the air and shouting surrender, but as soon as he saw my face he started shooting at me,” he told Reuters. “Then I think Gaddafi must have told them to stop. ‘My master is here, my master is here’, he said, ‘Muammar Gaddafi is here and he is wounded’,” said Bakeer. “We went in and brought Gaddafi out. He was saying ‘What’s wrong? What’s wrong? What’s going on?’. Then we took him and put him in the car.” With its fall, the city of Sirte was transformed from a potent image of Gaddafi’s rule to the symbol of his gruesome end. Even as Gaddafi’s body was being driven away, the drain where he was found was being immortalised in blue aerosol paint. On it, someone wrote: “The hiding place of the vile rat Gaddafi.” Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Nato Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …