BANI WALID, Libya: Forces loyal to Libya’s government took control of the former Qaddafi stronghold of Bani Walid yesterday, commanders said, but pockets of resistance on the outskirts were reported.
Thousands have fled bloodshed this month between rival militias in the isolated hilltop town that was one of the last to surrender to rebels who overthrew Muammar Qaddafi last year.
The violence in Bani Walid has highlighted continued disorder in the oil-producing North African Arab country.
Pro-government fighters shouted “Bani Walid is free!” yesterday as dozens of pick-up trucks mounted with weapons filled a roundabout and streets in the center of the town some 170 km (105 miles) south of the coastal capital Tripoli.
Bent on making their mark on a town they say still harbors many followers of the late Qaddafi, pro-government forces fired rocket-propelled guns and anti-aircraft weapons at empty buildings. Heavy gunfire thundered non-stop and smoke billowed over part of the town. Shooting also clattered further off.
The fighters cried honked their car horns and blasting patriotic music from their trucks. “On this day — Oct. 24 — Bani Walid is free. There are no more Qaddafi militias inside,” Fathi Shahoud, a commander of the Libya Shield grouping of militias aligned with the Defense Ministry, told Reuters. “Now we control the city and we will stay to ensure safety.”
Tarek Nouri Abu-Shabi, a 21-year-old member of the Free Libya militia, said: “The revolutionaries have been in control since yesterday. These are rebels from Misrata, Tripoli and from other places. There are still small pockets of fighting on the outskirts. We found weapons inside the town.”
Pro-government forces moved in on Bani Walid this month after Omran Shaban, the former rebel fighter who found Qaddafi hiding in a drain pipe in Sirte two months after rebels took Tripoli, died after being in detention there for two months.
Forces answering to the defense and interior ministries set out to find those suspected of abducting and torturing Shaban before he was eventually released, and the national congress gave Bani Walid a deadline to hand them over.
But the swoop on Bani Walid drove home the Tripoli government’s inability to reconcile groups with long-running grievances, as well as its failure to bring many of the militias that deposed Qaddafi fully under its control.
According to the Libyan state news agency, the clashes in Bani Walid have killed at least 22 people and injured hundreds. Thousands of families from Bani Walid fled the violence.
There were unconfirmed reports of retribution against Bani Walid residents by pro-government forces.
“The militias have entered the suburbs with bulldozers and have begun to demolish homes without reason,” Abdel-Hamid Saleh, a member of a Bani Walid civil society group, said by phone on Tuesday. “A woman called me yesterday screaming ‘They have come for me, they have come for me’ in fear.
“The city is falling on our heads.”
Fleeing residents have said that there is no water or electricity inside the city and a shortage of food and medicine.
Pro-govt forces take control of old Qaddafi bastion
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