Libyan rebels reach Tripoli's Green Square - Action News
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Libyan rebels reach Tripoli's Green Square

Libyan rebel fighters have taken control of large swaths of the capital, Tripoli, further weakening longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi's faltering regime.

Tripoli 'slipping from the grasp of a tyrant,' U.S President Barack Obama says

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  • Rebels take control of large swaths of Tripoli
  • Tripoli residents cheer as rebels take Green Square
  • Obama: 'A season of conflict must lead to one of peace'
  • Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam arrested, ICC confirms

Libyan rebel fighters have taken control of large swaths of the capital, Tripoli, further weakening longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi's faltering regime.

Rebelsmoved throughthe capitalcity to thecentral GreenSquare, as Gadhafi's supporters appeared to melt awayafter months of fierce fighting and NATO airstrikes. The square, whichhad been the site of numerous pro-Gadhafi rallies throughout the conflict, would be renamed Martyrs' Square, the rebels said.

Thehighly symbolic seizure is one of severalsigns that Gadhafi's 42-yearrule is teetering on collapse.Two of Gadhafi's sons have been detained,NATO sayshis reign is "crumbling," and the rebel National Transitional Council said the military unit in charge of protecting Gadhafi andthe cityhad surrendered.

As rebels moved into thecapital a government stronghold since the uprising began inlate February revellers in thesquarefired shots in the air, clapped andcheered. Some set fire to the green flag of Gadhafi's regime and shot holes in a poster with the leader's image, while others stomped on images ofGadhafi's face.

Pockets of resistance

Despite the rebels' progress, Al-Jazeera reported that there were some pockets of resistance in the capital city. Early Monday, the network said there were reports of shelling around one of Gadhafi's compounds, though that could not be confirmed.

Earlier, adefiantGadhafi called on Libyans to defendTripoliand lamented the advance of the rebels, whomet little resistanceas they pushed through the capital city.

"How can you allow for Tripoli to be burnt, to be destroyed?"said Gadhafi, who released fouraudiomessages broadcast on state television Sunday. "These buildings we built with our own efforts, these cities and towns that we built with our own sweat?"

Gadhafi, the longest-serving ruler in the Arab world, had previously suggested he would fight to the end, but he was not visible in the televised statements and his whereabouts are unknown.

Swift advance

The head of the rebels' political committee said the opposition's National Transitional Council had been working on the offensive for the past three months, co-ordinating with NATO and rebels within Tripoli. Sleeper cells were set up in the capital, armed by rebel smugglers,The Associated Press reported.On Thursday and Friday, NATO intensified strikes inside the capital, and on Saturday, the sleeper cells began to rise up.

Libyan rebels have taken control of large parts of the capital, Tripoli. The exact whereabouts of longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi are not known. ((Max Rossi/Reuters))

The advance into the capital came after intense gun battles between rebels and Gadhafi's forces were heard Sunday in areas east, west and south of Tripoli's centre, according to residents and foreign reporters in the city.

Mahmoud Shammam, the rebel minister of information, saidthe military unit in charge of protecting Gadhafi and Tripoli had surrendered. When the unit dropped its arms, it essentially opened the way for the rebels to enter the city with little resistance.

In Benghazi, the eastern Libyan city that serves as a base for the rebel forces, ecstatic crowds poured into the main square to cheer the rebel advances.

Tripoli slipping away, Obama says

U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement that Tripoli "is slipping from the grasp of a tyrant."

Obama said Gadhafi and his regime "need to recognize that their rule has come to an end." Hesaid Gadhafi must step down and urged the rebel leadership to respect the rights of Libyans, avoid civilian casualties and protectthe country's institutions.

Canada is also monitoring the situation, a spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office said.

"Canada is hopeful that the end is near for the Gadhafi regime and that authority will soon transition to the National Transitional Council of Libya, the recognized governing body of Libya," PMO spokesman Dimitri Soudas said in a statement Sunday.

Earlier, NATOsaid Gadhafi's rule was "crumbling" and urged him toend the "war against his own people."

1 Gadhafi son arrested, another surrenders

Meanwhile, the rebel National Transitional Council said Gadhafi's eldest son, Muhammad, had surrendered and another son, one-time heir apparent Seif al-Islam, had been captured.

TV host brandishes pistol on air

Video surfaced on Sunday purportedly showing a TV host with Libya's state-run media brandishing a gun during a broadcast. The woman tells viewers she and her colleagues are ready to become martyrs to defend the station from a rebel attack.

"With this weapon I either kill or die today," she says.

The footage was posted to a social media website and could notbe verified.

Moammar Gadhafi, Seif al-Islamand Abdullah Senussi, the country's head of military intelligence, have all been indicted for crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court, which confirmed Seif al-Islam's detention.

Theprosecutorof the International Criminal Court said his office would talk to the rebels on Monday about Seif al-Islam's transfer for trial. "It is time for justice, not revenge," Luis Moreno-Ocampo said.

Rebels have been fighting forces loyal to Gadhafi since the uprising began in February, against a backdrop of popular revolutions across the Arab world.

Early battles in the Libyan civil war focused on areas in the rebel-dominated east, such as the cities of Brega and Ajdabiya. After consolidating their positions in the east, the rebels closed in on Tripoli from there and from Misrata, their foothold in the largely government-held western half of the country.

On March 27, NATO began a bombing campaign against Gadhafi, following a UN Security Council resolution. On July 15, delegates from more than 30 countries, including Canada, declared Gadhafi's regime no longer legitimate, officially recognizing his main opposition the National Transitional Council as the country's governing authority.

With files from The Associated Press