Abdul Jalil Wants Gadhafi 'Captured Alive to Face Fair Trial'
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةLibyan rebel chief Mustafa Abdul Jalil on Monday hailed the end of the four-decade "Gadhafi era," after his fighters took control of most of Tripoli.
But Abdul Jalil also warned that he could quit as head of the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC) if he loses control of the revolution, amid possible revenge acts by insurgents.
"The Gadhafi era is over," he told a news conference in Benghazi, eastern Libya, referring to Libya's veteran leader Moammar Gadhafi.
Abdul Jalil said he hoped Gadhafi, who faces an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court, would be "captured alive so that he will be given a fair trial."
He congratulated the Libyan people "for this historic victory" and thanked NATO for its military support, while cautioning that "the real moment of victory is when Gadhafi is captured."
He acknowledged the whole of Tripoli was not under rebel control and that Gadhafi's whereabouts remained a mystery.
Abdul Jalil, a former justice minister who chairs the NTC, also called upon "our revolutionaries to respect the law and to let justice take its course," rather than to let rip with revenge attacks.
"I hail the leaders of these groups and I trust their words but some actions of some of their followers worry me. This might be the reason or the cause of my resignation," he said.
But he added: "My role after the fall (of Gadhafi) will continue unless I lose control of the goals and inspiration that I aim for ... But I expect that revolutionaries will be up to the responsibility."
He opposed any attempt by insurgents to seek retribution.
"My fear is some outlawed actions which are outside of the framework of orders they get from their leaders, specially acts of revenge ... I object strongly to any execution outside the framework of the law," he said.
"Revolutionaries are the bases of this revolution. They led the revolution against the regime by peaceful demonstrations, and then took the burden of military battles and to provide security within our cities."
The opposition leader, Abdeljalil, has given me more hope that the Arab revolutions are not led by blood thirsty extremists but by decent and just people. Abdel jalil's examplary approach should be praised and encouraged. No matter how brutal was a dictator , once captured he should be treated as a prisoner and judged not lynched.
I respect this man, if you become outlaws then I will resign. Rare leaders are like this man, Iraq is pro-western, Libya is pro-western, Syria is next and to be freed from the terrorist regime that abused power for many years.