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HomeNEWSWORLD NEWSLibya’s interim leader arrives in Tripoli for first time since Qaddafi’s ouster

Libya’s interim leader arrives in Tripoli for first time since Qaddafi’s ouster

By Al Arabiya, Tripoli/Dubai, 10 Sept 2011 – Head of Libyan National Transitional Council Mustafa Abdel Jalil arrived in the capital Tripoli on Saturday for the first time since his forces seized the city last month from Colonel Muammar Qaddafi’s combatant loyalists.


Abdel Jalil’s plane landed in the Metiga military base in eastern Tripoli. TV footage showed hundreds of people waiting to receive him and thick chain of armed men trying to protect him.
His arrival was eagerly awaited in Tripoli, in hopes he will tackle rivalries emerging among rebel groups that overthrew Qaddafi and begin mapping out a transition.


“This is a huge symbol, because it means the end of Qaddafi’s era,” said Ahmed Darrad, the interim interior minister inside the National Transitional Council headed by Abdel Jalil.


“There is no one else who can lead this revolution, except Abdel Jalil, and we give him our full trust,” said Ahmed Farj al-Dersi, a 19-year-old dentistry student and brigade leader in Tripoli.


Before his arrival in Tripoli, Abdel Jalil told AFP his visit from NTC headquarters in Benghazi was temporary, and that the council he heads would be transferred to Tripoli only “after the (full) liberation” of the country.
Mahmud Jibril, NTC number two and the council’s main spokesman abroad, was at the airport together with several other council members to receive Abdel Jalil.


“(This visit) is very important and I think it is correct timing,” said Italian consul Guido De Sanctis, adding that Abdel Jalil is one of the key faces in the struggle against Qaddafi’s regime.


“It is huge. This is what the country has been waiting for but we still have to see who is coming with Abdel Jalil and what he will say,” said a Western observer.


Many NTC members, including half of the executive committee, moved to the capital shortly after the fall of Tripoli late last month. But the council’s two top leaders were slower on the scene due to logistical and security reasons.


“This is a move he has to do so that Tripoli can confirm that they, too, are happy with his leadership,” De Sanctis added.


Even with combat underway in pro-Qaddafi strongholds, political tensions are already surfacing between the capital Tripoli and other NTC strongholds, including Benghazi in the east and Misrata in the west.


Anti-Qaddafi fighters in Misrata, Libya’s third city, say they feel overlooked by the NTC. They are already starting to challenge its authority, refusing to turn over abandoned tanks to the ministry of defense, still based in Benghazi.


And in Tripoli, power relations are in a state of flux with new bodies and councils created every other day, generating rivalries, complicating the chain of command and adding layers of complexity to Libya’s emerging bureaucracy.


Many in Tripoli stress the importance of the NTC resettling its base in the traditional capital early so that the transition can get underway, regardless of whether Libya is fully liberated.

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