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  • Blast In Sirte Kills 100

    BLAST IN SIRTE KILLS 100

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    October 25, 2011 - 21:47 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - A fuel tank exploded in Sirte killing more than
    100 people less than a week after Col Muammar Gaddafi was captured
    and killed there.

    "There was an enormous explosion and a huge fire. More than 100
    people were killed and 50 others wounded" in Monday night's blast,
    National Transitional Council commander Leith Mohammed said.

    He said the scene was "a heart wrenching spectacle with dozens of
    charred bodies." The accidental explosion happened as a crowd of
    people waited near the fuel tank to fill up their cars.

    "We are still unable to put out the fire," said Mohammed, adding that
    it had been caused by a spark from a nearby electricity generator.

    Some of the victims had returned to the town, the last bastion of
    resistance by Gaddafi loyalists, which fell on Thursday, to inspect
    the damage to their properties, the NTC commander added.

    No building was spared in the weeks of fierce combat backed by daily
    NATO air strikes that reduced the Mediterranean city to rubble,
    a ghost town filled with the stench of death, where bodies still
    littered the streets on Monday.

    Some of Sirte's residents, who numbered 120,000 before the conflict,
    have returned since Thursday to salvage the remains of their personal
    belongings. But few are expected to stay.

    Human Rights Watch has urged Libya's interim government to investigate
    the killing of 53 people whose decaying bodies were found in Sirte,
    charging that some of the Kadhafi loyalists appeared to have been
    executed.

    On Tuesday, the rights group raised concerns about the vast stockpiles
    of unguarded weapons in the area around the city, and called on the
    NTC to secure these sites to prevent further looting. Officials said
    earlier that the ousted Libyan leader was buried at dawn in a secret
    location, ending a wrangle over his rotting corpse that led many to
    fear for the country's governability. His son Mutassim was buried in
    the same ceremony. A few relatives and officials were in attendance,
    according to a Misurata military council official.

    Yesterday, the government bowed to international pressure and announced
    a commission to determine how Gaddafi died after he was cornered in
    a drain while trying to flee Sirte, his besieged home town.

    Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the chairman of the NTC, and other officials have
    said Gaddafi was killed in crossfire. Mr Jalil said: "In response to
    international calls, we have started to put in place a commission
    tasked with investigating the circumstances of Muammar Gaddafi's
    death in the clash with his circle as he was being captured."

    Mr Jalil also yesterday attempted to reassure the NTC's Western backers
    that the country would be a "moderate" Muslim nation, amid concern
    over its plans to introduce Islamic law. He appeared to soften his
    position less than 24 hours after using the liberation ceremony to
    declare that sharia would be the basis of all legislation.

    His attempt at conciliation hinted at the difficulty the NTC is having
    in balancing the demands of secularists and influential Islamist
    factions who played a strong role in the uprising.

    France and the EU warned the NTC to respect human rights after Mr
    Jalil's speech on Sunday in which he singled out a ban on polygamy
    as legislation which would have to be swept aside. However, Mr Jalil
    said on Monday: "I would like to assure the international community
    that we as Libyans are Muslims, but moderate Muslims."

    Meanwhile on Tuesday in Sirte, a fuel tank explosion killed more than
    100 people less than a week after the despot was captured and killed.

    "There was an enormous explosion and a huge fire. More than 100
    people were killed and 50 others wounded" in Monday night's blast,
    National Transitional Council commander Leith Mohammed said.

    He said the scene was "a heart wrenching spectacle with dozens of
    charred bodies," The Telegraph reported.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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